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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Activin, a member of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF beta) cytokine family, acts as a pituitary cell mitogen via a novel family of receptor-linked serine/threonine (Ser/Thr) kinases. Pituitary tumors synthesize
activin
subunits, and the autocrine action of these growth factors may modulate tumor proliferation. We, therefore, investigated the expression of
activin
/TGF beta type I receptor messenger ribonucleic acids (mRNAs), designated ALK1 through ALK5 (
ALK
= activin receptor-like kinase), and type II receptor mRNAs using RT-PCR in 34 human pituitary adenomas of all phenotypes and normal pituitary tissue. ALK2 and ALK5, specific mediators of
activin
and TGF beta signals, respectively, were found to be expressed only in tumor and not in normal pituitary cells, and ALK2 expression was found only in tumors of a mammosomatotroph cell lineage. ALK1, ALK3, and ALK4 mRNAs were found in both normal and neoplastic pituitary cells. The alternatively spliced cytoplasmic domain of ALK4 consists of 11 kinase subdomains, that are critical for modulating receptor function and intracellular signaling. Truncated forms of the ALK4 cytoplasmic domain lacking these subdomains may attenuate
activin
signal transduction and affect both tumor phenotype and proliferation via the formation of inactive type I/type II complexes. Three truncated ALK4 receptor mRNAs generated by alternate splicing of the cytoplasmic Ser/Thr kinase domain were found to be tumor specific. One of these truncated receptor mRNAs, ALK4-5, is a novel splice variant that has not been previously described. Expression of the ActRII and T beta RII type II receptor mRNAs, which specifically bind
activin
and TGF beta, respectively, was highly prevalent among all tumor subtypes and normal pituitary tissue. However, ActRIIB, an
activin
-specific type II receptor that displays a 3- to 4-fold higher affinity for ligand than ActRII, was expressed in 94% of tumors, but was not prevalent in normal tissue. These data are the first to demonstrate tumor-specific expression of Ser/Thr kinase receptors mRNAs and their splice variants in human pituitary adenomas.
...
PMID:Tumor-specific expression and alternate splicing of messenger ribonucleic acid encoding activin/transforming growth factor-beta receptors in human pituitary adenomas. 863 4
Receptor serine-threonine kinases (RSTK) mediate inhibitory as well as stimulatory signals for growth and differentiation by binding to members of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) superfamily. Over 12 different RSTKs have been isolated so far, displaying wide expression in peripheral tissues and in the nervous system. Here we report the isolation and characterization of a novel type I RSTK termed activin receptor-like kinase-7 (ALK-7) that, unlike other members of this receptor family, is predominantly expressed in the adult central nervous system. The ALK-7 gene encodes a 55-kDa cell-surface protein that exhibits up to 78% amino acid sequence identity in the kinase domain to previously isolated type I receptors for TGF-beta and
activin
. In the extracellular domain, however, ALK-7 is more divergent, displaying comparable similarities with all members of the
ALK
subfamily. RNase protection and in situ hybridization studies demonstrated a highly specific mRNA distribution restricted to neurons in several regions of the adult rat central nervous system, including cerebellum, hippocampus, and nuclei of the brainstem. Receptor reconstitution and cross-linking experiments indicated that ALK-7 can form complexes with type II RSTKs for TGF-beta and
activin
in a ligand-dependent manner, although direct binding of ALK-7 to ligand in these complexes could not be demonstrated. The specific expression pattern of ALK-7, restricted to the postnatal central nervous system, indicates that this receptor may play an important role in the maturation and maintenance of several neuronal subpopulations.
...
PMID:A novel type I receptor serine-threonine kinase predominantly expressed in the adult central nervous system. 894 33
The TGFbeta family member
activin
induces different mesodermal cell types in a dose-dependent fashion in the Xenopus animal cap assay. High concentrations of
activin
induce dorsal and anterior cell types such as notochord and muscle, while low concentrations induce ventral and posterior tissues such as mesenchyme and mesothelium. In this paper we investigate whether this threshold phenomenon involves the differential effects of the two type I
activin
receptors ALK-2 and ALK-4. Injection of RNA encoding constitutively active forms of the receptors (here designated
ALK
-2* and
ALK
-4*) reveals that
ALK
-4* strongly induces the more posterior mesodermal marker Xbra and the dorsoanterior marker goosecoid in animal cap explants. Maximal levels of Xbra expression are attained using lower concentrations of RNA than are required for the strongest activation of goosecoid, and at the highest doses of
ALK
-4*, levels of Xbra transcription decrease, as is seen with high concentrations of
activin
. By contrast, the
ALK
-2* receptor activates Xbra but fails to induce goosecoid to significant levels. Analysis at later stages reveals that
ALK
-4* signalling induces the formation of a variety of mesodermal derivatives, including dorsal cell types, in a dose-dependent fashion, and that high levels also induce endoderm. By contrast, the
ALK
-2* receptor induces only ventral mesodermal markers. Consistent with these observations,
ALK
-4* is capable of inducing a secondary axis when injected into the ventral side of 32-cell stage embryos whilst
ALK
-2* cannot. Co-injection of RNAs encoding constitutively active forms of both receptors reveals that ventralising signals from
ALK
-2* antagonise the dorsal mesoderm-inducing signal derived from
ALK
-4*, suggesting that the two receptors use distinct and interfering signalling pathways. Together, these results show that although
ALK
-2* and
ALK
-4* transduce distinct signals, the threshold responses characteristic of
activin
cannot be due to interactions between these two pathways; rather, thresholds can be established by
ALK
-4* alone. Furthermore, the effects of
ALK
-2* signalling are at odds with it behaving as an activin receptor in the early Xenopus embryo.
...
PMID:The ALK-2 and ALK-4 activin receptors transduce distinct mesoderm-inducing signals during early Xenopus development but do not co-operate to establish thresholds. 936 35
Activin, a member of the transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) superfamily, signals through a heteromeric complex of type I and type II serine-threonine kinase receptors. The two
activin
type I receptors previously identified, ALK-2 (ActR-I) and ALK-4 (ActR-IB), have distinct effects on gene expression, differentiation and morphogenesis in the Xenopus animal cap assay. ALK-4 reproduces the effects of
activin
treatment including the dose-dependent induction of progressively more dorso-anterior mesodermal and endodermal markers, whereas ALK-2 induces only ventral mesodermal markers and counteracts the effects of ALK-4. To identify regions of the receptors that determine signaling specificity we have generated chimeras of the constitutively active ALK-2 and ALK-4 receptors (termed
ALK
-2* and
ALK
-4*). The effects of these chimeric receptors on gene expression and morphogenetic movements implicate the loop between kinase subdomains IV and V in mediating the strong dorsal gene-inducing properties of
ALK
-4*; when the seven amino acids comprising this loop are transferred from
ALK
-4* to
ALK
-2*, the resulting chimeric receptor is capable of inducing the expression of dorsal-specific genes. In contrast, when the equivalent region of
ALK
-2* is transferred to the
ALK
-4* backbone it cannot effectively counteract the dorsalizing effects of
ALK
-4*, suggesting that other regions of type I receptors are also involved in determining signal specificity.
...
PMID:A short loop on the ALK-2 and ALK-4 activin receptors regulates signaling specificity but cannot account for all their effects on early Xenopus development. 1007 88
Secondary palate formation is a complex process that is frequently disturbed in mammals, resulting in the birth defect cleft palate. Gene targeting has identified components of cytokine/growth factor signalling systems such as Tgf-alpha/Egfr, Eph receptors B2 and B3 (Ephb2 and Ephb3, respectively), Tgf-beta2, Tgf-beta3 and
activin
-betaA (ref. 3) as regulators of secondary palate development. Here we demonstrate that the mouse orphan receptor 'related to tyrosine kinases' (Ryk) is essential for normal development and morphogenesis of craniofacial structures including the secondary palate. Ryk belongs to a subclass of catalytically inactive, but otherwise distantly related, receptor protein tyrosine kinases (RTKs). Mice homozygous for a null allele of Ryk have a distinctive craniofacial appearance, shortened limbs and postnatal mortality due to feeding and respiratory complications associated with a complete cleft of the secondary palate. Consistent with cleft palate phenocopy in Ephb2/Ephb3-deficient mice and the role of a Drosophila melanogaster Ryk orthologue, Derailed, in the transduction of repulsive axon pathfinding cues, our biochemical data implicate Ryk in signalling mediated by Eph receptors and the cell-junction-associated Af-6 (also known as Afadin). Our findings highlight the importance of signal crosstalk between members of different
RTK
subfamilies.
...
PMID:Ryk-deficient mice exhibit craniofacial defects associated with perturbed Eph receptor crosstalk. 1093 85
Primary intraosseous vascular anomaly, previously called intraosseous hemangioma, is a very rare malformation that is usually seen in the vertebral column and in the skull. It is exclusively described in sporadic cases and no hereditary component has yet been reported. The most commonly affected bones in the skull are the mandible and the maxilla, and life-threatening bleeding after a simple tooth extraction is frequently observed. Here, we report two consanguineous families containing a total of four affected patients manifesting primary intraosseous vascular malformation (VMOS (vascular malformation osseous)) of the craniofacial region. The phenotypic expression is remarkably similar in both families. The characteristic findings include severe blood vessel expansions within the craniofacial bones and midline abnormalities such as diastasis recti, supraumbilical raphe, and hiatus hernia. Malformation is restricted to the mandibular and maxillary area in the prepubertal age, and rapid expansion starts after age 12 or 13. A 15-year follow-up of one of the patients demonstrated that the vascular malformation did not extend beyond the craniofacial region despite severe involvement of almost all bones in the skull. Detailed clinical and radiological evaluation provided neither evidence of soft-tissue involvement nor any sign of gross arterial, venous, or combined malformations, indicating that bone changes are a primary rather than a secondary effect due to any other vascular anomaly in the craniofacial region. An antibody against a universal proliferation marker, Ki-67, detected nonproliferative, single-layered endothelial cells, suggesting that this abnormality is a vascular malformation rather than a hemangioma. alpha-actin staining (antibody against perivascular tissue such as smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and/or pericytes) demonstrated that pathologic vessels lost their surrounding supportive tissues, as was previously seen in other types of vascular anomaly. Homozygosity mapping excluded the following loci and/or genes: multiple cutaneous venous malformation (VMCM1; gene,
TIE2
) on chromosome 9p21; venous malformation with glomus cells (VMGLOM) on chromosome 1p22-p21; hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia type 1 (HHT1; gene, endoglin) and type 2 (HHT2; gene,
activin
) on chromosomes 9q34.1 and 12q11-q14, respectively; and cerebral cavernous malformation type 1 (CCM1; gene, KRIT1), type 2 (CCM2), and type 3 (CCM3) on chromosomes 7q11.2-q21, 7p15-p13, and 3q35.2-q27, respectively. To the best of our knowledge, this is a new disorder, which we call hereditary intraosseous vascular malformation of the craniofacial region.
...
PMID:Hereditary intraosseous vascular malformation of the craniofacial region: an apparently novel disorder. 1193 89
Small molecule inhibitors have proven extremely useful for investigating signal transduction pathways and have the potential for development into therapeutics for inhibiting signal transduction pathways whose activities contribute to human diseases. Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) is a member of a large family of pleiotropic cytokines that are involved in many biological processes, including growth control, differentiation, migration, cell survival, adhesion, and specification of developmental fate, in both normal and diseased states. TGF-beta superfamily members signal through a receptor complex comprising a type II and type I receptor, both serine/threonine kinases. Here, we characterize a small molecule inhibitor (SB-431542) that was identified as an inhibitor of activin receptor-like kinase (ALK)5 (the TGF-beta type I receptor). We demonstrate that it inhibits ALK5 and also the activin type I receptor ALK4 and the nodal type I receptor ALK7, which are very highly related to ALK5 in their kinase domains. It has no effect on the other, more divergent ALK family members that recognize bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs). Consistent with this, we demonstrate that SB-431542 is a selective inhibitor of endogenous
activin
and TGF-beta signaling but has no effect on BMP signaling. To demonstrate the specificity of SB-431542, we tested its effect on several other signal transduction pathways whose activities depend on the concerted activation of multiple kinases. SB-431542 has no effect on components of the
ERK
, JNK, or p38 MAP kinase pathways or on components of the signaling pathways activated in response to serum.
...
PMID:SB-431542 is a potent and specific inhibitor of transforming growth factor-beta superfamily type I activin receptor-like kinase (ALK) receptors ALK4, ALK5, and ALK7. 1206 56
Components of the transforming growth factor-beta and mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways interact in controlling cell growth and differentiation. We show that phosphorylation of Smad2, a mediator of the
activin
/transforming growth factor-beta signal, by activated extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1) increases the amount of Smad2 protein and leads to enhanced transcriptional activity. Epidermal growth factor increased phosphorylation of Smad2 in COS7 cells, and Smad2-dependent transcription in a mink lung epithelial cell line, L17, was enhanced by co-transfection of a constitutively active MEK1. In addition, transfection of Smad2 mutants lacking
ERK
sites resulted in reduced transcription, whereas mutants that mimicked
ERK
phosphorylation stimulated transcription. The amount of Smad2 protein was increased by transfection with a constitutively active MEK1 and reduced by co-transfection with the
ERK
phosphatase, HVH2. The elevation of Smad2 protein levels was because of increased half-life and resulted in increased complex formation with Smad4. A site of
ERK
-dependent phosphorylation on Smad2 was located to Thr(8), a site that overlaps with the calmodulin binding region. We show that calmodulin inhibits Smad2 phosphorylation by ERK1, and overexpressing calmodulin, or stimulating calmodulin activity with ionomycin, reduces Smad2 levels. These findings suggest that the
ERK
pathway positively regulates Smad2 signaling by phosphorylating Smad2 and that negative regulation of Smad2 signaling by calmodulin is achieved in part by inhibiting this phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Modulation of Smad2-mediated signaling by extracellular signal-regulated kinase. 1219 95
Neurohormones similar to those of mammals are carried in fish by hypothalamic nerve fibers to regulate directly follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH). Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) stimulates the secretion of FSH and LH and the expression of the glycoprotein hormone alpha (GPalpha), FSHbeta, and LHbeta, as well as their secretion. Its signal transduction leading to LH release is similar to that in mammals although the involvement of cyclic AMP-protein kinase A (cAMP-PKA) cannot be ruled out. Dopamine (DA) acting through DA D2 type receptors may inhibit LH release, but not that of FSH, at sites distal to activation of protein kinase C (PKC) and PKA. GnRH increases the steady-state levels of GPalpha, LHbeta, and FSHbeta mRNAs. Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) 38 and neuropeptide Y (NPY) potentiate GnRH effect on gonadotropic cells, and also act directly on the pituitary cells. Whereas PACAP increases all three subunit mRNAs, NPY has no effect on that of FSHbeta. The effect of these peptides on the expression of the gonadotropin subunit genes is transduced differentially; GnRH regulates GPalpha and LHbeta via PKC-
ERK
and PKA-
ERK
cascades, while affecting the FSHbeta transcript through a PKA-dependent but
ERK
-independent cascade. The signals of both NPY and PACAP are transduced via PKC and PKA, each converging at the
ERK
level. NPY regulates only GPalpha- and LHbeta-subunit genes whereas PACAP regulates the FSHbeta subunit as well. Like those of the mammalian counterparts, the coho salmon LHbeta gene promoter is driven by a strong proximal tripartite element to which three different transcription factors bind. These include Sf-1 and Pitx-1 as in mammals, but the function of the Egr-1 appears to have been replaced by the estrogen receptor (ER). The GnRH responsive region in tilapia FSHbeta 5' flanking region spans the canonical AP1 and CRE motifs implicating both elements in conferring GnRH responsiveness. Generally, high levels of gonadal steroids are associated with high LHbeta transcript levels whereas those of FSHbeta are reduced when pituitary cells are exposed to high steroid levels. Gonadal or hypophyseal
activin
also participate in the regulation of FSHbeta and LHbeta mRNA levels. However, gonadal effects are dependent on the gender and stage of maturity of the fish.
...
PMID:Regulation of fish gonadotropins. 1269 92
The molecular basis of testicular germ cell tumourigenesis are not well elucidated. Growth factors regulate cell growth, differentiation and apoptosis. Major families of growth factors are present in the male gonad from early fetal development to adult life. They are involved in germ cell proliferation and differentiation. Growth signalling pathways suffer deregulation in many human malignancies. Given the importance of growth signals in normal testicular development and their acquired deregulation in most human cancers, growth factors and signalling molecules that have been implicated in the genesis of testicular germ cell tumours, are reviewed. We detected a somatic mutation of SMAD4 gene, responsible for loss of protein function in seminomas. This mutational inactivation may affect the activity of several members of TGFbeta superfamily (TGFbeta,
activin
, inhibin, BMP). VEGF expression has been shown to predict metastasis in seminomas. A significant association of HST-1 expression, a member of fibroblast growth factors, with the nonseminomatous phenotype and with tumour stage has been described. In contrast, C-KIT is expressed by seminomas only, from the preinvasive stage. Despite intense expression in almost all seminomas, activating mutation of C-KIT gene is seldom reported. Recently, the first animal model of classical testicular seminoma has been identified in transgenic mouse overexpressing GDNF.
RET
(GDNF receptor) expression is demonstrated in human seminomas, and not in nonseminomatous tumours. However, the exact molecular alterations of GDNF/
RET
/GFRalpha1 complex in germ cell tumours are not known. Finally, beside growth factors, other signalling molecules such as peptide hormones may be involved in testicular carcinogenesis. We have demonstrated a specific pattern of somatostatin receptors expression in each type of testicular germ cell tumours, with a loss of sst3 and sst4 in seminomas and loss of sst4 and expression of sst1 in nonseminomas only. These data suggest an antiproliferative action of somatostatin in testicular cancers. In summary, many growth factors and signalling molecules seem to represent specific markers for different histological types of germ cell tumours (seminomas versus nonseminomas) and may play a role in the differentiation of germ cell tumours. Despite a complex signalling pathway involved in the physiological functions of male gonad, little is known about the implication of this signalling network in testicular malignancies. From a practical stand-point, further studies on the role of growth factors in human germ cell tumours may offer a new therapeutical perspective with the development of specific pharmacological signalling modulators that could be used as therapeutic agents.
...
PMID:Growth regulatory factors and signalling proteins in testicular germ cell tumours. 1275 64
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