Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

The receptor for Hepatocyte Growth Factor is a transmembrane tyrosine kinase encoded by the c-MET oncogene. We have previously shown that the Met protein is expressed in several human epithelial tissues. The receptor is barely detectable, however, in normal thyroids and in specimens from patients affected by non-neoplastic thyroid diseases. Now we report that the expression of the Met/HGF receptor is increased a hundred fold in 22 out of 41 human carcinomas derived from the thyroid follicular epithelium. A comprehensive analysis of 15 cases showed that the overexpressing carcinomas belong to histotype variants correlated with negative prognosis and in all but one case there were evidences of locally advanced disease and/or distant metastases. The 11 benign adenomas and the 5 medullary carcinomas tested were negative. Western blot analysis with monoclonal antibodies directed against either the intracellular or the extracellular receptor domains failed to reveal major structural alterations. Southern blot analysis also demonstrated that the c-MET gene was not amplified nor rearranged. These data suggest a role for the overexpression of c-MET oncogene in the pathogenesis and progression of thyroid tumors derived from the follicular epithelium.
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PMID:Overexpression of the c-MET/HGF receptor gene in human thyroid carcinomas. 133 53

By using the polymerase chain reaction with degenerate oligonucleotides based on highly conserved motifs held in common between all members of the protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) family, a PTK-related sequence was isolated from murine peritoneal macrophage cDNA. Full-length clones have been isolated that encompass the entire coding region of the mRNA, and the predicted amino acid sequence indicates that the protein encoded has the structure of a growth factor receptor PTK (RTK). We have dubbed this molecule RYK (for related to tyrosine kinase). The RYK-encoded protein bears a transmembrane domain, with a relatively small (183 amino acid) extracellular domain, containing five potential N-linked glycosylation sites. The intracellular domain of RYK is unique among the broader family of RTKs and has several unusual sequence idiosyncrasies in some of the most highly conserved elements of the PTK domain. These sequence differences call into question the potential catalytic activity of the RYK protein.
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PMID:RYK, a receptor tyrosine kinase-related molecule with unusual kinase domain motifs. 133 48

Ligand-induced dimerization of growth factor receptors is crucial for stimulation of their intrinsic protein tyrosine kinase activity promoting receptor autophosphorylation by an intermolecular mechanism. Moreover, the suppressive and negative dominant action of defective epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) was shown to be caused by formation of inactive heterodimers with normal EGFR leading to diminished biological signaling. In this report we explore the structural requirements and functional significance of heterodimerization between EGFR and HER2. HER2 (also called c-erbB-2 or neu) is a member of the EGFR family whose natural ligand is still unknown. We show that in response to EGF, wild type EGFR and various EGFR mutants were able to undergo heterodimerization with HER2. Addition of EGF to transfected cells co-expressing HER2 with a kinase negative point mutant of EGFR (K721A) stimulated heterodimer formation, tyrosine phosphorylation of K721A and HER2, and tyrosine phosphorylation of one of their known substrates, phospholipase C gamma. However, the binding of EGF to transfected cells co-expressing HER2 together with another EGFR mutant CD533 (a deletion mutant lacking most of the cytoplasmic domain of EGFR) caused heterodimerization and inhibition of tyrosine kinase activity. It appears therefore that EGF-induced heterodimerization of EGFR and HER2 can promote either stimulatory or inhibitory influences on kinase activity. We propose that the nature of receptor interactions on the cell surface can either activate or inhibit the initiation of growth factor-controlled cellular signaling.
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PMID:Heterodimerization of c-erbB2 with different epidermal growth factor receptor mutants elicits stimulatory or inhibitory responses. 134 15

The proto-oncogene designated erbB2 or HER2 encodes a 185-kilodalton transmembrane tyrosine kinase (p185erbB2), whose overexpression has been correlated with a poor prognosis in several human malignancies. A 45-kilodalton protein heregulin-alpha (HRG-alpha) that specifically induced phosphorylation of p185erbB2 was purified from the conditioned medium of a human breast tumor cell line. Several complementary DNA clones encoding related HRGs were identified, all of which are similar to proteins in the epidermal growth factor family. Scatchard analysis of the binding of recombinant HRG to a breast tumor cell line expressing p185erbB2 showed a single high affinity binding site [dissociation constant (Kd) = 105 +/- 15 picomolar]. Heregulin transcripts were identified in several normal tissues and cancer cell lines. The HRGs may represent the natural ligands for p185erbB2.
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PMID:Identification of heregulin, a specific activator of p185erbB2. 135 Mar 81

The neu protooncogene encodes a tyrosine kinase receptor that is involved in the regulation of normal growth and malignant transformation. To circumvent the use of the incompletely characterized ligand of Neu, we constructed a chimeric protein composed of the ligand-binding domain of the epidermal growth factor receptor and the transmembrane and cytoplasmic portions of Neu. By expressing this Neu-epidermal growth factor receptor chimera (termed NEC), we found that following stimulation by the heterologous ligand, the tyrosine kinase of Neu became associated with a phosphatidylinositol (PI) kinase activity. The association was dependent on the concentration of the ligand and was almost maximal within 30 s after ligand binding. The lipid kinase was identified as a type I PI 3'-kinase on the basis of its inhibition by Nonidet P-40 and high pressure liquid chromatography of the phosphorylated product. To confirm the identification of PI 3'-kinase as an effector of Neu, we raised antibodies to the alpha-isoform of the regulatory subunit of PI 3'-kinase (p85). Using these antibodies, it was possible to directly demonstrate ligand-dependent formation of a tyrosine-phosphorylated complex of NEC and PI 3'-kinase. Apparently, both PI 3'-kinase and phospholipase C gamma, another substrate of the Neu kinase, simultaneously associated with the same activated NEC molecule. Nevertheless, immunofluorescence localization of PI 3'-kinase revealed no significant cellular redistribution of the enzyme after activation of the Neu kinase. Interestingly, PI 3'-kinase was localized primarily to the cell nucleus and to confined regions of the plasma membrane. Analysis of mutants of the Neu protein indicated that the oncogenic point-mutated Neu (Glu664) was permanently coupled to PI 3'-kinase; but two nontransforming versions of the oncoprotein, a kinase-defective protein and a carboxyl-terminally deleted Neu, were devoid of the constitutive association with PI 3'-kinase. Hence, we concluded that phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase is a physiological substrate of the Neu receptor, but the regulation of this coupling is released upon oncogenic activation.
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PMID:Regulated coupling of the Neu receptor to phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase and its release by oncogenic activation. 135 Oct 56

As the factor binding to the neu protein has been unknown, it has not been possible to confirm experimentally the proposed growth-factor receptor like functions of the neu protein. To approach this problem we constructed a recombinant receptor which enabled ligand regulation of the neu tyrosine kinase. The hybrid receptor consisted of the extracellular ligand binding, transmembrane and protein kinase C-substrate domains joined to the intracellular tyrosine kinase and carboxyl-terminal domains of the neu protein. Several properties of NIH3T3 cells carrying this construct were tested. We obtained the first experimental evidence that the neu proto-oncogene has mitogenic and transforming activities only in the presence of a ligand stimulating its tyrosine kinase activity. Various cellular and molecular biological parameters indicated that the chimeric receptor behaved very similarly to the EGFR. Also, this chimeric receptor has allowed us to compare the constitutive oncogenic and the ligand-activated non-oncogenic activities of the neu tyrosine kinase. In the future we plan to focus on characterization of possible differences between EGFR and neu signalling in more differentiated cellular backgrounds.
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PMID:A chimeric EGFR/neu receptor in functional analysis of the neu oncoprotein. 135 54

The present study was conducted to investigate the presence of expression products of c-erbB-1 and c-erbB-2/HER2 genes on mammalian sperm cell, and study the effects of their antibodies on fertilization. The mature sperm cells from various mammalian species (human, mouse, rabbit and rat) were found to have EGF-receptors but not the p185HER2 molecules by indirect immunofluorescence technique (IFT) and Western blot procedure. Though the EGF-receptors present on sperm cells were functionally active and responded to ligand binding, their activation by EGF or blocking by antibodies did not affect the sperm cells in acquiring their fertilization potential. These results indicate that the products of c-erbB-1 and c-erbB-2/HER2 genes, though they have been shown to have tyrosine kinase enzyme activity, do not seem to play a major role in the development of the fertilizing capacity of sperm cells.
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PMID:Presence of expression products of c-erbB-1 and c-erbB-2/HER2 genes on mammalian sperm cell, and effects of their regulation on fertilization. 135 95

Overexpression and amplification of the neu (c-erbB2, ERBB2) protooncogene have been implicated in the development of aggressive human breast cancer. To directly assess the effect of mammary gland-specific expression of the neu protooncogene, transgenic mice carrying unactivated neu under the transcriptional control of the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter/enhancer were established. By contrast to the rapid tumor progression observed in several transgenic strains carrying the activated neu transgene, expression of unactivated neu in the mammary epithelium resulted in the development of focal mammary tumors after long latency. The majority of the mammary tumors analyzed expressed elevated levels of neu-encoded mRNA and protein. Overexpression of neu in the mammary tumors was also associated with elevated neu intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity and the de novo tyrosine phosphorylation of several cellular proteins. Interestingly, many of the tumor-bearing transgenic mice developed secondary metastatic tumors in the lung. These observations suggest that overexpression of the unactivated neu protein can induce metastatic disease after long latency.
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PMID:Expression of the neu protooncogene in the mammary epithelium of transgenic mice induces metastatic disease. 135 41

Cytogeneticists first proposed that the karyotypic abnormalities identified on chromosomes 1, 3, 6, 11, 13, 16, 17, and 18 supported a genetic basis for breast cancer. Such abnormal banding patterns, however, may represent either loss-of-function or gain-of-function molecular events. RFLP analyses have since confirmed that 20-60% of primary and spontaneous human breast tumors exhibit allelic losses on these same chromosomes, although the exact genes involved at these chromosomal sites remain largely unknown. Knowledge gained about the Rb-1 and p53 tumor suppressor genes at 13q14 and 17p13 in breast and other human tumors supports the paradigm that for any chromosomal locus, allelic loss associated with a mutation in the remaining tumor allele signifies an involved tumor suppressor gene. Given this paradigm, there are nearly a dozen putative breast tumor suppressor genes under active investigation, with most investigators now focusing on various chromosome 17 loci. Among the known proto-oncogenes found activated in breast cancer, amplification of c-erbB-2 at 17q21 is the most widely studied and clinically significant gain-of-function event uncovered to date, occurring in about 20% of all primary breast tumors. The involvement of this overexpressed membrane receptor has engendered interest in related tyrosine kinase receptors, such as EGFR, IR, and IGF-I-R, as well as their respective ligands, which may be overexpressed in a greater fraction of tumors, contributing to the autocrine and paracrine regulation of breast cancer growth and metastasis. New attention is being given to the potentially oncogenic function of structurally altered nuclear transactivating steroid hormone receptors, such as ER, whose overexpression has long been used to determine endocrine therapy and prognosis for individual breast cancer patients. While c-myc was one of the first known proto-oncogenes to be found amplified and overexpressed in human breast cancers, the actual incidence and clinical significance of its activation remain disputed and in need of further study. Lastly, we can expect greater clarification about the importance of various 11q13 genes found coamplified in nearly 20% of primary breast cancers, and pursuit into the intriguing possibility that a cyclin-encoding gene represents the overexpressed locus of real interest in this amplicon. Virtually all of these important genetic abnormalities identified thus far are associated with but not restricted to human breast cancers. The absence of identifiable molecular defects relating to the tissue specificity of this malignancy must be considered a substantial gap in our basic understanding of breast carcinogenesis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Activated oncogenes and putative tumor suppressor genes involved in human breast cancers. 136 56

The c-kit proto-oncogene encodes a transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptor. It belongs to receptor tyrosine kinase subclass III, which also includes the colony-stimulating factor I receptor (c-fms), platelet-derived growth factor receptors A and B (PDGFRA and PDGFRB), as well as FLT1 and FLT3/FLK2. c-kit and PDGFRA, c-fms and PDGFRB, FLT1 and FLT3/FLK2 are grouped by pair in three clusters in man on chromosome 4 band q11-q13, chromosome 5 band q31-q33 and chromosome 13 band q12 respectively. Here, we report the genomic organization of the human c-kit gene, which is composed of 21 small coding exons, distributed over 80 kb. Comparison of the c-kit and c-fms oncogenes shows that they share identified exon/intron boundaries in their two kinase domains, as well as a similar exon/intron organization in the extracytoplasmic domain. Comparison with the kinase domains of tyrosine kinase genes not belonging to subclass III suggests that the exon/intron organization of c-kit and c-fms is a characteristic feature of subclass III. The genomic similarities between c-kit and c-fms, in conjunction with the location in pairs on different chromosomes of the subclass III genes, has led us to hypothesize that cis and trans duplications gave rise to this group of genes.
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PMID:Genomic organization of the human c-kit gene: evolution of the receptor tyrosine kinase subclass III. 137 82


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