Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

The focal adhesion kinase (FAK) gene encodes a tyrosine kinase (p125FAK) thought to be involved in signal transduction pathways used in cell adhesion, motility, and anchorage-independent growth. Because alterations in these cellular processes occur in tumor invasion and metastasis, we studied the protein expression of FAK in a variety of human tumors and found that in the 119 samples studied, increased levels of p125FAK correlated with the invasive potential of a tumor. By comparing FAK expression in tumors with normal tissue from the same patient, we found that p125FAK was significantly elevated in 17 (100%) of 17 invasive and metastatic colonic lesions and in 22 (88%) of 25 invasive and metastatic breast tumors. Additional studies of FAK expression in 13 high grade sarcomas showed high levels in all samples compared to benign, noninvasive mesenchymal specimens. Furthermore, FAK protein levels were elevated in preinvasive lesions, such as large (> 2 cm) colonic villous adenomas, whereas noninvasive, yet hypercellular, neoplastic tissues such as parathyroid and hepatocellular adenomas did not overexpress FAK. These data provide evidence that both epithelial and mesenchymal tumor progression are accompanied by increased p125FAK expression and suggest that the level of FAK expression might be a marker for the invasive potential of a tumor.
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PMID:Overexpression of the focal adhesion kinase (p125FAK) in invasive human tumors. 779 99

Protein tyrosine kinases have been implicated in tumor initiation and progression. Here we used Northern blotting to study expression of their genes in cultured normal melanocytes and 19 melanoma cell lines from different stages of tumor progression. We detected transcripts for 2 cytoplasmic (ABL and FES) and 6 receptor (ECK, ERB-B2, FGF-R4, IGFI-R, KDR and TIE) kinases but not for receptors RET or TRK-A. Genes for ECK, FGF-R4 and TIE were expressed ectopically in melanomas (not in normal melanocytes). Similarly, ECK protein was detected by immunoblotting in metastatic melanomas but not in normal melanocytes. ECK mRNA levels tended to increase again during late melanoma progression. ECK and TIE mRNAs were also detected in highly metastatic variant cells but not in the corresponding poorly metastatic parental lines. Conversely, FES and KDR gene expression was lost in most advanced primary and metastatic melanomas. These findings suggest positive and negative roles for specific tyrosine kinases during progression.
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PMID:Abnormal protein tyrosine kinase gene expression during melanoma progression and metastasis. 781 45

Leukemias induced with the v-abl or BCR/ABL oncogene undergo a process of tumor progression which suggests that the ABL oncogene is required but not sufficient for full transformation. In order to identify cellular changes that correlate with progression to full transformation in v-abl transformed lymphoblasts Abelson virus (A-MuLV)-infected murine bone marrow was plated over a pre-established stromal feeder layer. Shortly after A-MuLV infection, transformed lymphoblasts were poorly oncogenic, but over time, progressed in a stepwide manner to a more oncogenic state. The transformants first acquired the ability to grow efficiently in agar, but only over the feeder layer. They next progressed to efficient feeder-independent growth in liquid culture, and then to efficient feeder-independent growth in soft agar. Cell lines that reached the advanced stage of feeder-independent agar growth showed increased detection by antiphosphotyrosine Western blot of the GAP-associated p62 phosphoprotein as well as of a 55 kDa phosphoprotein while detection of the P160 v-abl phosphoprotein remained constant throughout all stages of progression. Although the identity of the p55 phosphoprotein and the mechanism by which detection of p55 and p62 phosphoproteins change on the Western blots during tumor progression are unknown, the data demonstrate that these changes strongly correlate with the stage of progression of v-abl-transformed cells and raise the possibility that these changes may play a role in tumor progression in this model.
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PMID:Increased detection of specific tyrosine phosphoproteins correlates with tumor progression of Abelson virus-infected lymphocytes. 784 13

Initially, lymphoid cells transformed by v-abl or BCR/ABL oncogenes are poorly oncogenic but progress to full transformation over time. Although expression of the oncogene is necessary to initiate and maintain transformation, other molecular mechanisms are thought to be required for full transformation. To determine whether tumor progression in ABL oncogene-transformed lymphoid cells has a genetic basis, we examined whether progression of the malignant phenotype of transformed clones correlates with particular cytogenetic abnormalities. A modified in vitro bone marrow transformation model was used to obtain clonal Abelson murine leukemia virus-transformed B lymphoid cells that were poorly oncogenic. Multiple subclones were then derived from each clone and maintained over a marrow-derived stromal cell line for several weeks. Over time, clonally related Abelson murine leukemia virus-transformed subclones progressed asynchronously to full transformation. The data show that tumor progression can occur in the absence of detectable cytogenetic changes but, more importantly, that certain cytogenetic abnormalities appear reproducibly in highly malignant subclones. Therefore, three independent subclones showed deletion in a common region of chromosome 13. Other highly malignant cells carried a common breakpoint in the X chromosome, and, finally, two subclones carried an additional chromosome 5. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that ABL oncogenes are sufficient for the initial transformation of cells but that additional genetic events can drive oncogenic progression. These observations further suggest that diverse genetic mechanisms may be able to drive tumor progression in cells transformed with ABL oncogenes.
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PMID:Nonrandom cytogenetic changes accompany malignant progression in clonal lines abelson virus-infected lymphocytes. 799 46

Cell motility, a primary component of tumor cell invasion, is a continuum of sequential events in which the cell extends pseudopodia, forms nascent attachments, assembles and contracts the cytoskeleton, and finally, as it translocates forward, disengages distal adhesions. What triggers cells to move? Substratum contact mediated by integrin adhesion receptors is important, but other signals such as chemokinetic factors appear to be required for continued crawling. It is now apparent that integrins do not simply bind cells to matrix in a Velcro-like fashion, but also are potent signaling molecules. Initial engagement of integrins induces their condensation into focal contacts, forming anchors to the extracellular matrix and discrete signal-transducing complexes on the cytoplasmic surface. A number of growth factors, through either autocrine or paracrine pathways, can activate the cellular machinery that mobilizes the cell. Thus, these two classes of receptors--the integrin receptors that bind specific extracellular adhesion molecules, and growth factor receptors that bind their respective ligands--can regulate cell locomotion. Not surprisingly, there is 'cross-talk' between integrin and growth factor receptors that occurs through their common intracellular signaling pathways. In this way, each receptor type can either amplify or attenuate the other's signal and downstream response. An example of growth factor-induced motility is the epithelial-mesenchymal transition induced by hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF). When bound to its receptor, the c-met proto-oncogene product, HGF/SF induces a phenotypic conversion that appears to be an important aspect of tumor progression in malignant carcinomas. The motogenic response produced by HGF/SF in carcinoma cells occurs in discrete steps in which integrins and focal adhesion kinase (p125FAK) are first recruited to focal contacts. This is rapidly followed by cell spreading, disruption of focal adhesions and cell-cell contacts, and, finally, cell crawling. The precise mechanism by which growth factors such as HGF/SF and its receptor induce this motogenic response and modulate integrin function has not been clearly defined but appears to involve several signaling pathways. Understanding the process by which growth factor and integrin receptors interact and regulate motility may suggest novel targets for therapeutic intervention.
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PMID:Growth factor regulation of integrin-mediated cell motility. 854 69

Adaptation to hypoxia represents an important aspect of tumor progression. Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) is a transcription factor that mediates essential homeostatic responses to cellular and systemic hypoxia by activating transcription of multiple genes including those encoding glycolytic enzymes and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). In this report, we demonstrate that whereas C-SRC expression is not required for expression of HIF-1 or transcriptional activation of genes encoding VEGF and enolase 1 (ENO1), cells expressing the v-Src oncogene have increased expression of HIF-1, VEGF, and ENO1 under both hypoxic and nonhypoxic conditions. Expression of V-SRC was associated with increased transcription of reporter genes containing cis-acting hypoxia-response elements from the VEGF and ENO1 genes, and this transcriptional activation required an intact HIF-1 binding site. When three rat hepatoma subclones that differed with respect to the level of HIF-1 expression were injected into nude mice, tumor growth correlated with HIF-1 expression, suggesting that HIF-1 may be generally involved in tumor progression. These studies link an oncogene to the induction of HIF-1 expression, thus providing a mechanism for hypoxic adaptation by tumor cells.
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PMID:V-SRC induces expression of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) and transcription of genes encoding vascular endothelial growth factor and enolase 1: involvement of HIF-1 in tumor progression. 939 57

Xiphophorus fish have been the subject of intensive genetic research for more than 60 yr, primarily because of the availability of a number of interspecific hybrids that are malignant melanoma models with apparently simple oncogene and tumor suppressor gene determinants. The gene map of Xiphophorus is one of the most extensive among nonhuman vertebrates, with about 100 genes assigned to at least 20 independently assorting linkage groups (LGs), as well as more than 250 anonymous DNA sequence markers, providing coverage for most of the genome for genetic mapping studies. This characteristic has resulted in the mapping of a tumor suppressor locus, DIFF, which is one of two genetic determinants of melanoma formation in the best-studied hybrid melanoma, the Gordon-Kosswig melanoma model. The other gene responsible for melanoma formation in this model is a sex-linked tyrosine kinase gene related to EGFR and called Xiphophorus melanoma receptor kinase (Xmrk). The cellular oncogene homologues of the non-receptor tyrosine kinase family orthologous toyes and fyn have also been found to be overexpressed in malignant melanomas of Xiphophorus and may be involved in tumor progression. We report here the map location of a Xiphophorus yes gene, YES1, in LG VI, closest to the EGFR gene and the assignment of a fyn gene homologue to newly designated LG XV, linked to the gene for cytosolic alpha-galactosidase. We also confirmed that an EGFR-related sequence (EGFRL1) that we previously assigned to Xiphophorus LG VI by cross-hybridization to a viral erbB probe was the EGFR orthologue. Our results suggest that the presence of expressed duplicates of members of the tyrosine kinase gene family in teleost fishes may increase the potential number of targets in oncogenic cascades in fish tumor models.
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PMID:Mapping of tyrosine kinase gene family members in a Xiphophorus melanoma model. 968 40

PTEN/MMAC1 is a major new tumor suppressor gene that encodes a dual-specificity phosphatase with sequence similarity to the cytoskeletal protein tensin. Recently, we reported that PTEN dephosphorylates focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and inhibits cell migration, spreading, and focal adhesion formation. Here, the effects of PTEN on cell invasion, migration, and growth as well as the involvement of FAK and p130 Crk-associated substrate (p130Cas) were investigated in U87MG glioblastoma cells missing PTEN. Cell invasion, migration, and growth were down-regulated by expression of phosphatase-active forms of PTEN but not by PTEN with an inactive phosphatase domain; these effects were correlated with decreased tyrosine phosphorylation levels of FAK and p130Cas. Overexpression of FAK concomitant with PTEN resulted in increased total tyrosine phosphorylation levels of FAK and p130Cas and effectively antagonized the effects of PTEN on cell invasion and migration and partially on cell growth. Overexpression of p130Cas increased total tyrosine phosphorylation levels of p130Cas without affecting those of FAK; however, although p130Cas could reverse PTEN inhibition of cell invasion and migration, it did not rescue cell growth in U87MG cells. In contrast to FAK, p130Cas could not be shown to interact with PTEN in cells, and it was not dephosphorylated directly by PTEN in vitro. These results suggest important roles of PTEN in the phenotype of tumor progression, and that the effects of PTEN on cell invasion, migration, and growth are mediated by distinct downstream pathways that diverge at the level of FAK.
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PMID:Tumor suppressor PTEN inhibition of cell invasion, migration, and growth: differential involvement of focal adhesion kinase and p130Cas. 992 60

In the present study, we investigated the time-dependent interactive effects of daily injections of prolactin (PRL) and corticosterone (CORT) on the activation of lymphocyte function and inhibition of tumor growth in vivo in mice. BALB/c mice were injected subcutaneously with EMT-6 fibrosarcoma cells (a murine connective tissue tumor cell derived from mammary gland), and then different groups of animals were treated with PRL (1 microg/g body weight [BW] ip) at Oh, 4h, 8h, 12h, 16h, or 20h after CRT (1 microg/g BW ip) daily for 10 days. Different control groups were vehicle treated or treated with either hormone alone. Mice were kept in constant light 1 week before and during injections and in a 14:10 light-dark cycle thereafter. Tumor progression was monitored for up to 21 days after the cessation of treatment, and thereafter spleen lymphocytes were harvested and tested for mitogen-triggered proliferation. Prolactin administration at 8h or 16-20h after corticosteroid treatment reduced tumor volume by 77% and 49%, respectively, relative to vehicle-treated controls. Other time relations of hormone treatment were ineffectual. Further studies indicated that the immunosuppressant cyclosporin A (CSA) substantially stimulated tumor growth; this effect was completely abrogated by a simultaneous 8h related hormone treatment. How ever, the 8h hormone treatment was ineffective in inhibiting tumor growth in T-cell-deficient nude mice. Spleen lymphocytes from tumor-bearing (TB) mice showed an elevated basal proliferative capacity stimulated by concanavalin A (ConA; a stimulus for T-cell proliferation) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS; a stimulus for B-cell proliferation) compared to non-TB mice. Spleen lymphocytes from TB mice treated with CORT and PRL at 8h intervals exhibited an increased spontaneous (as well as LPS- and ConA- triggered) proliferation (by 104%, 48%, and 70%, respectively) compared with vehicle control TB mice. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis of splenocytes from hormone-treated animals indicated a 34-100% increase in the CD4+ (e.g., T helper cell) population. Treatment of animals with either hormone alone did not inhibit tumor growth or stimulate immune function relative to vehicle controls. The daily rhythms of plasma PRL, CORT, and thyroxine were all substantially altered by the presence of tumor in these mice. These results indicate that appropriately timed daily treatment of PRL and CORT can attenuate tumor growth, in part, via activation of antitumor immune mechanisms. Collectively, these data suggest that circadian neuroendocrine activities must be temporally organized appropriately to inhibit tumor growth.
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PMID:Timed daily administration of prolactin and corticosteroid hormone reduces murine tumor growth and enhances immune reactivity. 1037 1

We analyzed eight samples of xenografted human pancreatic tumors and two metastases developed in mice by comparative genomic hybridization (CGH). The most recurrent changes were: gains on chromosomes 8 (8q24-qter; 7/8 cases), 15 (15q25-q26; 6/8 cases), 16 (16p in 6/8 cases; 16q in 5/8 cases), 20 (20q; 6/8 cases), and 19 (19q; 5/8 cases); and losses on chromosomes 18 (18q21; 6/8 cases), 6 (6q16-q21 and 6q24-qter; 5/8 cases each), and 9 (9p23-pter; 5/8 cases). The two metastases maintained the aberrations of the original pancreatic tumor plus gain of 11q12-q13 and 22q. Loss of heterozygosity analysis was carried out for 10p14-pter, a region that was lost in 3/8 samples. All of them presented allelic imbalance for all the informative loci. Fluorescence in situ hybridization and Southern analysis were performed to test some candidate oncogenes in 8q24 (MYC) and 15q25-qter (IGF1R and FES). Two of seven tumors showed high-level amplification of MYC relative to the centromere (> 3-fold), another two tumors had low-level amplification (1.5- to 3.0-fold), and one displayed 5.5 MYC signals/cell. In relation to the FES gene, low-level amplification was found in three tumors. Southern analysis showed five cases with a low-level amplification of IGF1R. Our data suggest that either few extra gene copies may be enough for cancer progression or other genes located in these regions are responsible for the amplifications found by CGH.
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PMID:DNA copy number changes and evaluation of MYC, IGF1R, and FES amplification in xenografts of pancreatic adenocarcinoma. 1064 Jan 45


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