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Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (
focal adhesion kinase
)
44,029
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Interleukin-4 (IL-4) is an important cytokine for B and T lymphocyte function and mediates its effects via a receptor that contains gammac. B cells derived from patients with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (X-SCID) are deficient in gammac and provide a useful model in which to dissect the role of this subunit in IL-4-mediated signaling. We found that although IL-4 stimulation of X-
SCID
B cells did not result in Janus tyrosine kinase-3 (JAK3) phosphorylation, other IL-4 substrates including
JAK1
and IRS-1 were phosphorylated. Additionally, we detected signal transducers and activators of transcription 6 (STAT6) tyrosine phosphorylation and DNA binding activity in X-
SCID
B cells with a wide range of gammac mutations. However, reconstitution of these X-
SCID
B cells with gammac enhanced IL-4-mediated responses including STAT6 phosphorylation and DNA binding activity and resulted in increased CD23 expression. Thus, gammac is not necessary to trigger IL-4-mediated responses in B cells, but its presence is important for optimal IL-4-signaling. These results suggest that two distinct IL-4 signaling pathways exist.
...
PMID:Interleukin-4 signaling in B lymphocytes from patients with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency. 905 29
We cloned
JAK3
, the most recently described member of the JAK family of intracellular tyrosine kinases, from normal human CD34+ RNA.
JAK3
is involved in the signal transduction pathways of the IL-2, IL-4, IL7, IL-9, and IL-15 receptors by association with their common gamma-chain (gamma[c]).
JAK3
is critical to lymphoid development, as recently established by the linking of mutations in
JAK3
to a subgroup of patients with
SCID
and the generation of
JAK3
-null mice with severe disruptions in normal lymphocytic development. However,
JAK3
expression is not restricted to the lymphocytic compartment of bone marrow but is found in a wide range of tissues of both hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic origin. Northern blot analysis indicates that
JAK3
is also expressed in adult placenta, lung, liver, kidney, pancreas, spleen, thymus, ovary, and small intestine. RNAse protection assays and RT-PCR indicate that
JAK3
is expressed in a variety of leukemic-derived hematopoietic cell lines with myeloid and/or lymphoid phenotypes. In normal human bone marrow,
JAK3
is expressed in the CD34+/lineage- fraction, which is highly enriched in hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. In addition, we found a splice variant of
JAK3
which is formed by the splicing of
JAK3
with exon II of the leydig insulin-like (LEY I-L) hormone. RT-PCR and RNAse protection assay analyses indicate that this variant (termed I-
JAK3
) is normally expressed in almost all hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic tissues shown to express
JAK3
. Using fluorescence in situ hybridization we have localized
JAK3
to 19p12-13.1, the same region of chromosome 19 to which the LEY I-L hormone maps (19p12-13.2).
...
PMID:JAK3: expression and mapping to chromosome 19p12-13.1. 916 59
JAK3
is a protein tyrosine kinase that specifically associates with the common gamma chain (gammac), a shared subunit of receptors for interleukin (IL) 2, 4, 7, 9, and 15. Patients deficient in either
JAK3
or gammac presented with virtually identical forms of
severe combined immunodeficiency
(
SCID
), underscoring the importance of the
JAK3
-gammac interaction. Despite the key roles of
JAK3
and gammac in lymphocytic development and function, the molecular basis of this interaction remains poorly understood. In this study, we have characterized the regions of
JAK3
involved in gammac association. By developing a number of chimeric
JAK3
-
JAK2
constructs, we show that the binding specificity to gammac can be conferred to
JAK2
by transferring the N-terminal domains of
JAK3
. Moreover, those
JAK3
-
JAK2
chimeras capable of binding gammac were also capable of reconstituting IL-2 signaling as measured by inducible phosphorylation of the chimeric
JAK3
-JAK2 protein,
JAK1
, the IL-2 receptor beta chain, and signal transducer and activator of transcription 5A. Subsequent deletion analyses of
JAK3
have identified the N-terminal JH7-6 domains as a minimal region sufficient for gammac association. Furthermore, expression of the mutant containing only the JH7-6 domains effectively competed with full-length
JAK3
for binding to gammac. We conclude that the JH7-6 domains of
JAK3
are necessary and sufficient for gammac association. These studies offer clues toward a broader understanding of JAK-mediated cytokine signaling and may provide a target for the development of novel therapeutic modalities in immunologically mediated diseases.
...
PMID:The amino terminus of JAK3 is necessary and sufficient for binding to the common gamma chain and confers the ability to transmit interleukin 2-mediated signals. 919 65
Ex vivo culture of human hematopoietic cells is a crucial component of many therapeutic applications. Although current culture conditions have been optimized using quantitative in vitro progenitor assays, knowledge of the conditions that permit maintenance of primitive human repopulating cells is lacking. We report that primitive human cells capable of repopulating nonobese diabetic (NOD)/
severe combined immunodeficiency
(
SCID
) mice (
SCID
-repopulating cells;
SRC
) can be maintained and/or modestly increased after culture of CD34+CD38- cord blood cells in serum-free conditions. Quantitative analysis demonstrated a 4- and 10-fold increase in the number of CD34+CD38- cells and colony-forming cells, respectively, as well as a 2- to 4-fold increase in
SRC
after 4 d of culture. However, after 9 d of culture, all
SRC
were lost, despite further increases in total cells, CFC content, and CD34+ cells. These studies indicate that caution must be exercised in extending the duration of ex vivo cultures used for transplantation, and demonstrate the importance of the
SRC
assay in the development of culture conditions that support primitive cells.
...
PMID:Quantitative analysis reveals expansion of human hematopoietic repopulating cells after short-term ex vivo culture. 925 60
Mutations of the Janus family kinase
JAK3
have been found to be responsible for autosomal recessive
severe combined immunodeficiency
(
SCID
) in humans. We report here the analysis of four new unrelated patients affected by
JAK3
-deficient
SCID
. The genetic defects were heterogeneous and included a large intragenic deletion as well as different point mutations, leading to missense substitutions, early stop codons, or splicing defects. We performed a series of studies of the biochemical events induced by cytokines on lymphoblastoid B-cell lines obtained from these patients. Abnormalities in tyrosine phosphorylation of
JAK3
in response to interleukin-2 (IL-2) and IL-4 were present in all patients. Accordingly, IL-2-mediated phosphorylation of STAT5 was also absent or barely detectable. On the contrary, in all cases, we could show reduced but clear phosphorylation of STAT6 upon IL-4 stimulation. In one patient carrying a single amino acid change (Glu481Gly) in the JH3 domain of
JAK3
, we observed partially conserved IL-2 responses resulting in reduced but detectable levels of
JAK3
and STAT5 phosphorylation. Interestingly, the patient bearing this mutation developed a substantial number of circulating CD4(+)/CD45RO+ activated T lymphocytes that were functionally impaired. In two cases, patients' cells expressed
JAK3
proteins with mutations in the JH2 pseudo-kinase domain. A single cysteine to arginine substitution (Cys759Arg) in this region resulted in high basal levels of constitutive
JAK3
tyrosine phosphorylation unresponsive to either downregulation by serum starvation or cytokine-mediated upregulation. The characterization of the genetic defects and biochemical abnormalities in these
JAK3
-deficient patients will help define the role of
JAK3
in the ontogeny of a competent immune system and may lead to a better understanding of the
JAK3
functional domains.
...
PMID:Structural and functional basis for JAK3-deficient severe combined immunodeficiency. 935 68
The ETV6 (TEL) locus at chromosome band 12p 13 is a major site of translocations in acute leukemia, particularly in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). In cases with translocations involving ETV6, the normal ETV6 allele is often deleted. In addition, loss of heterozygosity of ETV6 is frequently observed in childhood'ALL. Thus, it has been suggested that ETV6 may have an anti-oncogenic role to play, in addition to its oncogenic role. We have described an unusual case of ALL in which ETV6 is found fused to the
ABL
gene;
ABL
is normally activated by fusion to the BCR gene in the 9:22 translocation. We expanded the primary cells from this ETV6/
ABL
rearranged case of ALL in
SCID
animals and analyzed them for expression of both ETV6/
ABL
and the normal ETV6 mRNA. We found that both the rearranged and normal ETV6 mRNAs are expressed in the expanded cell population. Furthermore, sequence analysis of the ETV6 PCR product revealed no point mutations which would influence the amino acid sequence. Thus, deletion of the second ETV6 allele is not necessary for the transformation to leukemia by ETV6/
ABL
.
...
PMID:The second ETV6 allele is not necessarily deleted in acute leukemias with a ETV6/ABL fusion. 952 2
To destroy both tumor blood vessels and adjacent tumor cells, an alpha-particle emitter, 213Bi, has been targeted with a monoclonal antibody (MAb) to vessels that feed lung tumors in mice. Animals, bearing approximately 100
EMT
-6 carcinomas each of 50-400 cells in size in the lung, that were treated with 120 muCi of 213Bi-MAb 201B were all cured of their disease. Animals treated when tumors were larger (10(3)-10(4) cells) had extended life spans, but a small number of residual tumors eventually killed the animals. Significant extension of life span was also induced with another tumor model-rat tracheal carcinoma growing in the lungs of
SCID
mice that were then treated with 136 muCi 213Bi-MAb 201B. These studies indicate that attack of both blood vessels and tumor cells simultaneously is an effective mode of cancer treatment.
...
PMID:Vascular targeted radioimmunotherapy with 213Bi--an alpha-particle emitter. 962 Jun 29
In vitro studies have provided little consensus on the kinetic abnormality underlying the myeloid expansion of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). Transplantation of human CML cells into non-obese diabetic mice with severe immunodeficiency disease (NOD/
SCID
mice) may therefore be a useful model. A CML cell line (BV173) and peripheral blood cells collected from CML patients in chronic phase (CP), accelerated phase (AP), or blastic phase (BP) were injected into preirradiated NOD/
SCID
mice. Animals were killed at serial intervals; cell suspensions and/or tissue sections from different organs were studied by immunohistochemistry and/or flow cytometry using antihuman CD45 monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs), and by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) for the BCR-ABL fusion gene. One hour after injection, cells were sequestered in the lungs and liver, but 2 weeks later they were no longer detectable in either site. Similar short-term kinetics were observed using 51Cr-labeled cells. The first signs of engraftment for BV173, AP, and BP cells were detected in the bone marrow (BM) at 4 weeks. At 8 weeks the median percentages of human cells in murine marrow were 4% (range, 1 to 9) for CP, 11% (range, 5 to 36) for AP, 38.5% (range, 18 to 79) for BP, and 54% (range, 31 to 69) for BV173. CP cells progressively infiltrated BM (21%) and spleen (6%) by 18 to 20 weeks; no animals injected with the cell line or BP cells survived beyond 12 weeks. The rate of increase in human cell numbers was higher for BP (7.3%/week) as compared with CP (0.9%/week) and AP (0. 5%/week). FISH analysis with BCR and
ABL
probes showed that some of the human cells engrafting after injection of CP cells lacked a BCR-
ABL
gene and were presumably normal. We conclude that CML cells proliferate in NOD/
SCID
mice with kinetics that recapitulate the phase of the donor's disease, thus providing an in vivo model of CML biology.
...
PMID:The kinetics and extent of engraftment of chronic myelogenous leukemia cells in non-obese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency mice reflect the phase of the donor's disease: an in vivo model of chronic myelogenous leukemia biology. 969 28
The detection of primitive hematopoietic cells based on repopulation of immune-deficient mice is a powerful tool to characterize the human stem-cell compartment. Here, we identify a newly discovered human repopulating cell, distinct from previously identified repopulating cells, that initiates multilineage hematopoiesis in NOD/
SCID
mice. We call such cells CD34neg-
SCID
repopulating cells, or CD34neg-
SRC
. CD34neg-
SRC
are restricted to a Lin-CD34-CD38- population without detectable surface markers for multiple lineages and CD38 or those previously associated with stem cells (HLA-DR, Thy-1 and CD34). In contrast to CD34+ subfractions, Lin-CD34-CD38- cells have low clonogenicity in short-and long-term in vitro assays. The number of CD34neg-
SRC
increased in short-term suspension cultures in conditions that did not maintain
SRC
derived from CD34+ populations, providing independent biological evidence of their distinctiveness. The identification of this newly discovered cell demonstrates complexity of the organization of the human stem-cell compartment and has important implications for clinical applications involving stem-cell transplantation.
...
PMID:A newly discovered class of human hematopoietic cells with SCID-repopulating activity. 973 90
Severe combined immunodeficiency
(
SCID
) comprises a heterogenous group of disorders that are fatal unless treated by bone marrow transplantation (BMT). The most common form of
SCID
(T-B+
SCID
) is due to mutations of either the common gamma chain (gammac) or of gammac-coupled
JAK3
kinase. We report an unusual
JAK3
defect in a female who was successfully treated > 20 years ago with a BMT using her HLA-identical father as the donor. Persistence of genetically and biochemically defective autologous B cells, associated with reconstitution of cellular and humoral immunity, suggests that integrity of the gammac-
JAK3
signalling pathway is not strictly required for immunoglobulin production.
...
PMID:Molecular and biochemical characterization of JAK3 deficiency in a patient with severe combined immunodeficiency over 20 years after bone marrow transplantation: implications for treatment. 975 72
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