Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (
focal adhesion kinase
)
44,029
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Porcelain-
fused
-to-metal restorations are fixed several hundred degrees above the glass-transition temperature and cooled rapidly through the glass-transition temperature range. Thermal expansion data from room temperature to above the glass-transition temperature range are important for the thermal expansion of the porcelain to be matched to the alloy. The effect of heating rate during measurement of thermal expansion was determined for NBS
SRM
710 glass and four commercial opaque and body porcelain products. Thermal expansion data were obtained at heating rates of from 3 to 30 degrees C/min after the porcelain was cooled at the same rate. By use of the Moynihan equation (where Tg systematically increases in temperature with an increase in cooling/heating rate), the glass-transition temperatures (Tg) derived from these data were shown to be related to the heating rate.
...
PMID:The effect of thermal history on porcelain expansion behavior. 277 74
Streptomycin (SM)- or erythromycin (EM)-resistant lysogenic and non-lysogenic substrains were produced from two Staphylococcus aureus L-form strains lysogenic for different prophages, namely,
EMT
-L (prophage alpha) and 209P (prophage beta). Cells of these L-form substrains were
fused
in various combinations using polyethylene glycol (PEG), and the frequency of recombinants selected as double resistance to both SM and EM and the prophage types of these recombinants were examined. In all the combinations, the frequency of recombinants was greater when the cells were treated with PEG than when they were not, and the difference was statistically significant (p less than 0.01) in 13 combinations. Combination between the lysogenic SM-resistant
EMT
-L substrain [
EMT
(Smr-alpha)] and lysogenic EM-resistant 209P-L substrain [209P(Emr-beta)] and the reverse combination, between 209P(Smr-beta) and
EMT
(Emr-alpha), resulted in a majority of recombinants harboring prophage beta. The former combination yielded recombinants that all held both prophage alpha and beta.
...
PMID:Prophage type of recombinants produced by cell fusion between various combinations of lysogenic or non-lysogenic substrains from two Staphylococcus aureus L-forms. 294 36
A method has been developed for the direct coupling of supercritical fluid extractions with gas chromatography (SFE-GC) that yields good chromatographic peak shapes and quantitative recovery of analytes from environmental solids with a total extraction and analysis time of less than one hour. Maximum sensitivity is achieved and analyte degradation or loss is minimized since the extracted species are quantitatively transferred into a
fused
-silica capillary gas chromatographic column for cryogenic focusing followed by normal GC analysis using flame ionization, electron-capture, or mass spectrometric (MS) detection. Coupled SFE-GC-MS determinations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from National Bureau of Standards urban dust (
SRM
1649) gave excellent agreement with certified values.
...
PMID:Directly coupled supercritical fluid extraction-gas chromatographic analysis of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and polychlorinated biphenyls from environmental solids. 311 44
A DNA region on chromosome 22, designated M-BCR, contains the chromosomal breakpoint of the Philadelphia (Ph) translocation in all Ph positive CML patients studied to date. M-BCR is part of a gene, BCR, oriented with its 5' end towards the centromere of chromosome 22. All of the CML DNAs analysed have a breakpoint within introns of the BCR gene. As a consequence of the Ph translocation the 3' end of the BCR gene has been translocated to chromosome 9, while the 5' part remains on the Ph chromosome. The remaining BCR sequences act as an acceptor for a chromosome 9 gene, the
ABL
oncogene: the
ABL
oncogene is
fused
in a head-to-tail fashion to the chromosome 22 sequences. This genomic configuration results in the transcription of a novel chimeric mRNA consisting of 5' BCR sequences and 3'
ABL
oncogene sequences. In K562, a cell line derived from a CML patient, and in five CML patients such chimeric BCR/ABL transcripts have been demonstrated. An abnormally sized
ABL
protein has been detected in the cell line K562 and in leukaemic cells from patients. This protein represents the translational product of the chimeric mRNA. The role of the BCR part of the fusion protein is unknown; it is possible that the BCR moiety could alter the structure of the
ABL
protein and unmask its tyrosine kinase activity. By analogy with the gag/v-abl polyprotein, the CML-specific BCR/ABL protein might have transforming activity and could play an essential role in the generation and/or maintenance of CML.
...
PMID:The BCR/ABL hybrid gene. 333 59
Thin-layer chromatography (TLC) was used to separate components in the basic and tar fractions of solvent refined coal (
SRC
-I) process solvent (PS) to obtain materials suitable for biological and chemical analysis. Those fractions eluted from TLC plates which were mutagenically active in the Ames/Salmonella assay were analyzed by gas chromatographic mass spectrometry (GCMS) for polycyclic azaarenes, polyaromatic primary amines (PAA) and carbazoles. In all materials tested, a strong correlation was observed between the concentration of PAAs in a given TLC region and the mutagenicity of that region in the Ames assay system. Conversely, azaarenes having 2--4
fused
rings and carbazoles were present in both mutagenic and non-mutagenic TLC eluates. No PAAs were detected in mutagenically inactive TLC eluates. In comparison to the mutagenic tar fractions, the PS basic fraction contained relatively larger concentrations of 2- and 3-ringed components such as aminonaphthalenes and aminoanthracenes or aminophenanthrenes. The tar fractions, which were essentially devoid of aminonaphthalenes, had a higher average molecular weight and contained relatively higher concentrations of aminopyrenes.
...
PMID:Relative concentrations of polyaromatic primary amines and azaarenes in mutagenically active nitrogen fractions from a coal liquid. 617 60
Growth hormone (GH) has been shown to stimulate the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases designated ERKs (extracellular signal regulated kinases) 1 and 2. One pathway by which ERKs 1 and 2 are activated by tyrosine kinases involves the Src homology (SH)-2 containing proteins SHC and Grb2. To gain insight into pathways coupling GH receptor (GHR) to MAP kinase activation and signaling molecules that might interact with GHR and its associated tyrosine kinase
JAK2
, we examined whether SHC and Grb2 proteins serve as signaling molecules for GH. Human GH was shown to promote the rapid tyrosyl phosphorylation of 66-, 52-, and 46-kDa SHC proteins in 3T3-F442A fibroblasts. GH also promoted binding of GHR and
JAK2
to the SH2 domain of 46/52-kDa SHC protein
fused
to glutathione S-transferase (GST). Constitutively phosphorylated
JAK2
, from COS-7 cells transiently transfected with murine
JAK2
cDNA, bound to SHC SH2-GST fusion protein, demonstrating that the SHC SH2 domain can bind tyrosyl-phosphorylated
JAK2
in the absence of GHR. Regions of GHR required for GH-dependent tyrosyl phosphorylation of SHC were examined using Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing mutated rat GHR. In cells expressing GHR1-638 and GHR1-638(Y333,338F), GH stimulated phosphorylation of all 3 SHC proteins whereas GH stimulated phosphorylation of only the 66- and 52-kDa SHC proteins in cells expressing GHR1-454. GH had no effect on SHC phosphorylation in cells expressing GHR1-294 or GHR delta P, the latter lacking amino acids 297-311 containing the proline-rich motif required for
JAK2
activation by GH. In contrast to SHC, Grb2 appeared not to interact directly with GHR or
JAK2
. However, Grb2 was shown to associate rapidly with SHC proteins in a GH-dependent manner. These findings suggest that GH stimulates: 1) the association of SHC proteins with
JAK2
.GHR complexes via the SHC-SH2 domain, 2) tyrosyl phosphorylation of SHC proteins, and 3) subsequent Grb2 association with SHC proteins. These events are likely to be early events in GH activation of MAP kinases and possibly of other responses to GH.
...
PMID:Growth hormone-promoted tyrosyl phosphorylation of SHC proteins and SHC association with Grb2. 753 73
We report the molecular cytogenetic analysis of a case of Philadelphia (Ph)-negative, BCR-positive chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) which appeared by conventional cytogenetics to have a t(6;9)(p23;q34) as the sole cytogenetic abnormality. Neither conventional nor pulse-field Southern blots detected any rearrangement of the DEK or CAN genes which are often
fused
in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) with t(6;9)(p23;q34). However, rearrangements of both BCR and
ABL
genes were detected. The breakpoint in BCR was located in the major translocation cluster region between exons b1 and b3.
ABL
rearrangements were detected with an
ABL
exon 1B probe and with a probe located 5' of the entire
ABL
gene. Comigration between the rearranged fragments obtained with M-bcr-5' and
ABL
exon 1B probes was observed, implying that the entire
ABL
gene was
fused
to the 5' part of the BCR gene. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analyses using BCR and
ABL
probes showed that in 20% of metaphases BCR and
ABL
signals were present on one chromosome 6 at 6p23, whilst in 80% of metaphases BCR and
ABL
signals were identified on both copies of chromosome 6. Furthermore, FISH analysis with a whole-chromosome 22 paint demonstrated that chromosome 22 material was present on both copies of chromosome 6. These data indicate a complex Philadelphia translocation involving chromosome band 6p23 and duplication of the whole aberrant chromosome. The nature of the gene locus on 6p23, involved in this rearrangement, remains unknown. A similar translocation has been previously reported in a case of CML, which also lacked DEK and CAN gene rearrangements implying that abnormalities of 6p23 involving genes other than DEK may be a recurrent abnormality in CML.
...
PMID:Molecular cytogenetics of chronic myeloid leukemia with atypical t(6;9) (p23;q34) translocation. 759 89
Ferritin, the major intracellular iron storage protein of eucaryotic cells, is regulated during inflammation and malignancy. We previously reported that transcription of the H subunit of ferritin (ferritin H) is negatively regulated by the adenovirus E1A oncogene in mouse NIH 3T3 fibroblasts (Y. Tsuji, E. Kwak, T. Saika, S. V. Torti, and F. M. Torti, J. Biol. Chem. 268:7270-7275, 1993). To elucidate the mechanism of transcriptional repression of the ferritin H gene by E1A, a series of deletions in the 5' flanking region of the mouse ferritin H gene were constructed,
fused
to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene, and transiently cotransfected into NIH 3T3 cells with an E1A expression plasmid. The results indicate that the E1A-responsive region is located approximately 4.1 kb 5' to the transcription initiation site of the ferritin H gene. Further analyses revealed that a 37-bp region, termed
FER
-1, is the target of E1A-mediated repression. This region also serves as an enhancer, augmenting ferritin H transcription independently of position and orientation.
FER
-1 was dissected into two component elements, i.e., a 22-bp dyad symmetry element and a 7-bp AP1-like sequence. Insertion of these DNA sequences into a ferritin H-CAT chimeric gene lacking an E1A-responsive region indicated that (i) the 22-bp dyad symmetry sequence by itself has no enhancer activity, (ii) the AP1-like sequence has moderate enhancer activity which is repressed by E1A, and (iii) the combination of the dyad symmetry element and the AP1-like sequence is required for maximal enhancer activity and repression by E1A. Gel retardation assays and cotransfection experiments with c-fos and c-jun expression vectors suggested that members of the Fos and Jun families bind to the AP1-like element of
FER
-1 and contribute to its regulation. In addition, gel retardation assays showed that E1A reduces the ability of nuclear proteins to bind to the AP1-like sequence without affecting the levels of nuclear factors that recognize the 22-bp dyad symmetry element. Taken together, these results demonstrate that
FER
-1 serves as both an enhancer of ferritin H transcription and a target for E1A-mediated repression.
...
PMID:FER-1, an enhancer of the ferritin H gene and a target of E1A-mediated transcriptional repression. 765 32
Cytogenetic studies of Ph-positive leukemic patients and their parents have indicated that chromosome 22 involved in the formation of the t(9;22) is of maternal origin, whereas chromosome 9 is preferentially of paternal origin. These data have suggested that the two genes BCR and
ABL
, which become
fused
through the translocation, might be imprinted, ie expressed in a parental-specific manner. Recent molecular genetic studies however, have shown that BCR and
ABL
are expressed on both alleles and that the maternal and paternal
ABL
genes contribute equally often to the BCR-ABL fusion messenger. The findings make imprinting of these genes unlikely as an explanatory model and necessitate a combined cytogenetic and molecular genetic study.
...
PMID:Standpoint on imprinting of BCR and ABL. 772 14
Ferritin is a ubiquitously distributed iron-binding protein that plays a key role in cellular iron homeostasis. It is composed of two subunits, termed H (heavy or heart) and L (light or liver). In fibroblasts and other cells, the cytokine tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) specifically induces synthesis of the ferritin H subunit. Using nuclear run-off assays, we demonstrate that this TNF-dependent increase in ferritin H is mediated by a selective increase in ferritin H transcription. Transfection of murine fibroblasts with chimeric genes containing the 5'-flanking region of murine ferritin H
fused
to the human growth hormone reporter gene reveals that the cis-acting element that mediates this response is located approximately 4.8 kilobases distal to the start site of transcription. Deletion analyses delimit the TNF-responsive region to a 40-nucleotide sequence located between nucleotides -4776 and -4736, which we term
FER
-2. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays and site-specific mutations indicate that this region contains two independent elements: one contains a sequence that binds a member of the NF-kappa B family of transcription factors, and a second contains a novel sequence that partially conforms to the NF-kappa B consensus sequence and may bind a different member of the NF-kappa B/Rel transcription factor family. Thus, effects of an inflammatory cytokine on ferritin are mediated by a family of transcription factors responsive to oxidative stress.
...
PMID:Role for NF-kappa B in the regulation of ferritin H by tumor necrosis factor-alpha. 779 15
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>