Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (focal adhesion kinase)
44,029 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty six patients with Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1) positive chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) treated with IFN-alpha were classified on the basis of the fusion pattern of BCR/ABL chimeric mRNA determined by a reverse-transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) method. The relationship between the fusion pattern of BCR/ABL mRNA and the clinical outcome was also analysed. Twelve patients showed M-bcr exon 3/ABL exon 2 (B3/A2) chimeric mRNA and nine had M-bcr exon 2/ABL exon 2 (B2/A2) mRNA. Eleven of the 12 patients with B3/A2 achieved complete hematological response with IFN-alpha therapy, as did three of the nine patients with B2/A2. The mean duration to blastic crisis was significantly longer in the B3/A2 patients (mean 52.4 months) than in the B2/A2 patients (mean 26.2 months) (p less than 0.01). These results suggest that the fusion pattern of BCR/ABL mRNA may affect the therapeutic response to IFN-alpha and clinical outcome in CML patients.
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PMID:Possible correlation between fusion pattern of BCR/ABL mRNA and clinical response to alpha-interferon in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 151 6

A link between ABL oncogenes and MYC is suggested by the transformation synergy that is observed when MYC is expressed at high levels. Dominant negative MYC proteins were overexpressed in fibroblasts to determine if MYC complements ABL oncogene transformation or is essential for this process. Transformation by both v-abl and BCR-ABL oncogenes was reduced 5- to 10-fold, whereas transformation by the serine/threonine kinase oncogene v-mos was unaffected. Using a retrovirus construct modified to express BCR-ABL and MYC genes simultaneously, we show that dominant negative MYC suppressed transformation of primary mouse bone marrow pre-B cells by BCR-ABL. These observations demonstrate that c-MYC is essential for transformation and help define the pathway by which these proteins cause transformation.
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PMID:Dominant negative MYC blocks transformation by ABL oncogenes. 152 28

We report the biological characteristics of leukaemic blasts from two cases of acute leukaemia with an interstitial deletion of the long arm of chromosome 9 (9q-). Case 1 (FAB: M1) showed del(9)(q12q22) as the sole karyotypic anomaly, and case 2 (FAB: M1) presented del(9) (q12q22) in association with trisomy 10. In both cases, leukaemic blasts presented unique cytological features, such as prominent vacuoles on Giemsa staining, or strong localization of myeloperoxidase resembling 'pseudo-Chediak-Higashi' granules. Immunophenotyping of blasts revealed the biphenotypic expression of T-lymphoid/myeloid antigens (CD2, CD7/CD33) in addition to CD34. Neither T-cell receptor beta (TCRB), T-cell receptor gamma (TCRG) nor Ig heavy chain (IGH) genes were clonally rearranged. Furthermore, there was neither rearrangement nor expression of ABL, which is located at 9q34, indicating that the deletion involved bands centrometric to 9q34 did not induce the activation of ABL. DNA synthesis of the blasts was stimulated (stimulation index greater than 2.0) in the presence of interleukin (IL)-3, IL-4, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor or erythropoietin (Epo). IL-3 and IL-4 could also support the in vitro growth of leukaemic blast colonies, and the IL-3- or IL-4-dependent blast colony growth was synergistically enhanced by the addition of IL-6 or Epo. These observations imply that T-lymphoid/myeloid or pluripotent stem cells may be closely involved in the development of 9q- AML.
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PMID:Interstitial 9q deletion in T-lymphoid/myeloid biphenotypic leukaemia. 155 Jul 72

ABL-MYC, a murine retrovirus that encodes the v-abl and c-myc oncogenes, was constructed from Abelson murine leukemia virus (A-MuLV) in order to assess the biological consequences of co-expression of these genes in lymphoid cells. When inoculated into mice this retrovirus induced plasmacytomas in up to 100% of infected mice and less frequently induced pre-B lymphomas. Both tumor types contained genome-length proviruses in one or a few chromosomal locations, were mono- or oligoclonal as judged by immunoglobulin gene rearrangement and had unrearranged endogenous c-myc loci. The type of tumor induced depended upon the age and strain of mouse, and whether helper virus was present in the inoculated virus pool. ABL-MYC induced plasmacytomas with or without helper virus, with or without pretreatment of the mice with pristane, and in strains of mice resistant to pristane-induced plasmacytomas. Pristane treatment prior to ABL-MYC infection shortened the latent period of plasmacytomagenesis and produced mostly IgM-secreting tumors rather than IgA-secreting tumors, which predominantly arose in the absence of pristane. Control viruses for ABL-MYC with either a deletion in v-abl or a frameshift mutation in c-myc caused predominantly monocyte/macrophage tumors and pre-B-cell lymphomas respectively. Histopathological analysis of ABL-MYC-infected mice showed foci of transformed plasma cells as early as 14 days after infection. These results indicate that v-abl and c-myc act synergistically to transform mature B cells with high efficiency.
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PMID:A retrovirus that expresses v-abl and c-myc oncogenes rapidly induces plasmacytomas. 156 79

The Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1), detected in virtually all cases of chronic myelogenous leukemia, is formed by a reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 9 and 22 that fuses BCR encoded sequences upstream of exon 2 of c-ABL. This oncogene produces a fusion protein (p210BCR/ABL) in which the ABL tyrosine kinase activity is elevated. This elevated kinase activity is essential for transformation, but the mechanisms involved are unknown. We report here that p21ras GTPase activating protein (rasGAP) or rasGAP-associated proteins p190 and p62 are phosphorylated on tyrosine in Ph1 (+) cell lines. Further, rasGAP coimmunoprecipitates with p210BCR/ABL in these cell lines. These results suggest that rasGAP or associated proteins are potential substrates for p210BCR/ABL kinase and thus directly link p210BCR/ABL with a signal transduction pathway known to be activated by hematopoietic growth factors (p21ras).
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PMID:Tyrosine phosphorylation of rasGAP and associated proteins in chronic myelogenous leukemia cell lines. 157 36

It is generally accepted that patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia in chronic phase under the age of 50 years who have HLA-identical siblings, should be offered bone marrow transplantation within the first year of diagnosis. The projected disease-free survival for these patients is 70% to 80% at 4 years, and most of these will prove to have been cured. Results of bone marrow transplantation for patients with more advanced disease are less promising. For transplant conditioning there is no important difference between cyclophosphamide plus total-body irradiation and busulphan plus cyclophosphamide. Nonenlarged spleens require neither splenectomy nor additional radiotherapy. The use of cyclosporine and methotrexate is currently the optimal approach to graft-versus-host disease prevention. Fewer good results are obtained with "matched" volunteer marrow donors. Use of the polymerase chain reaction to monitor residual BCR-ABL transcripts after bone marrow transplantation may prove useful in identifying patients at increased risk for relapse. Autografting may offer the prospect of prolonged life or even cure for patients without suitable allogeneic donors.
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PMID:Bone marrow transplantation for chronic myelogenous leukemia. 159

The Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome can be detected in the vast majority of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). We performed a long-range analysis of chromosomal translocation junction by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) techniques, to examine whether molecular evidence of a reciprocal Ph translocation exists in Ph-positive CML as well as Ph-negative, M-BCR rearrangement-positive CML. The rearrangement within M-BCR and ABL was detected in all patients including nine Ph-positive CML, and three Ph-negative CML. The rearranged 3'-abl fragments showed comigration with rearranged 5'-bcr fragment in rare-cutting restriction enzyme digests in all patients with Ph-positive CML. Thus, the physical linkage of the 3' part of ABL to the 5' side of M-BCR on 22q-chromosome was shown. The same linkage was also demonstrated in all three patients with Ph-negative CML. Meanwhile, the rearranged 3'-bcr fragments showed comigration with rearranged pHabl5' (or T39-1-2) fragments in all patients with Ph-positive CML, indicating the linkage of the 5' end of ABL to the 3' part of M-BCR on 9q+ chromosome. However, this linkage was absent in two Ph-negative CML patients who could be studied. The results suggest that a genomic insertion of 3' ABL into M-BCR in Ph-negative CML occurs by a single cytogenetic event rather than a two-translocation mechanism.
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PMID:Absence in Ph-negative, M-BCR rearrangement-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia of linkage between 5' ABL and 3' M-BCR sequences in Philadelphia translocation. 159 4

The Philadelphia (Ph) translocation is the most common cytogenetic abnormality in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and is associated with an adverse prognosis. Using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology we recently observed a remarkably high incidence (55%) of BCR-ABL rearrangements in adult common ALL patients. In the present study we asked whether a subset of Ph-negative cALL, similarly to Ph-negative chronic myelocytic leukemia (CML) patients, exhibit BCR-ABL transcripts. PCR analysis of 58 adult Ph-negative cALL patients, including 47 cases with a normal karyotype revealed no evidence of chimeric BCR-ABL genes. We conclude that Ph-negative BCR/ABL-positive ALL is very rare entity if existing at all.
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PMID:Polymerase chain reaction analysis of BCR-ABL sequences in adult Philadelphia chromosome-negative acute lymphoblastic leukemia patients. 159 11

The amygdaloid complex participates in the modulation of endocrine functions, and contains measurable amounts of noradrenaline (NA) and dopamine (DA). This study examined the contribution of the amygdaloid catecholaminergic systems to the regulation of the adrenal medulla and the ovary. To accomplish this the neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) was bilaterally injected into the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala (ABL) in cycling rats. The contents of NA and DA in right and left amygdala decreased significantly in lesioned animals with respect to sham lesioned animals, but hypothalamic levels were not different between groups. Administration of 6-OHDA to rats increased the NA, DA and adrenaline (A) contents of the adrenals compared to vehicle treated rats. In addition, lesioned animals showed a significant increase of NA and DA contents in the ovary, although A levels did not differ between groups. Serum oestradiol (O) concentrations were significantly lower in lesioned animals than in controls. These data suggest that the amygdaloid catecholaminergic systems exert an inhibitory effect on catecholamine content of the adrenals and the ovary, and influence the ovarian oestradiol secretion mechanism.
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PMID:Influence of amygdala catecholamines on ovarian and adrenal medullary secretion. 162 26

Therapy with interferon-alpha results in complete cytogenetic remission in 15-20% of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia. Even during prolonged clinical follow-up, most of these patients do not relapse. However, because of the limited sensitivity of cytogenetic techniques (approximately 5%) and Southern blots (approximately 1%), it is uncertain whether the residual malignant clone becomes extinct or persists below the limit of detection in these patients. We used polymerase chain reaction to amplify the chimeric BCR-ABL transcripts in 18 patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia who became Ph1 chromosome negative while receiving treatment with interferon-alpha, either alone or in combination with interferon-gamma. At the time of study, these patients had been Ph1-negative for a median of 22+ months. Fifteen patients were positive for residual BCR-ABL transcripts. No residual BCR-ABL message was detected on analysis of multiple serial samples in three patients. In order to confirm these results, the samples from these three patients, along with positive and negative controls, were analyzed by two independent laboratories in a blinded fashion. In the first laboratory, RNA specimens from all three patients were considered negative using chemiluminescent acidinium-ester-labeled probes. In the second laboratory, samples from all three patients were also negative by conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR). However, when a second round of amplification was carried out on the amplified samples using a different combination of primers, samples from two of the three patients were positive. The results confirm the presence of a small proportion of BCR-ABL-positive cells in the majority of patients who are in complete remission and highlight some of the potential problems of PCR-based analysis. There is a need to standardize PCR methodology and potential confounding factors need to be addressed before PCR can be generally applied to analysis of minimal residual disease in CML. The implications of BCR-ABL positivity for these patients are discussed.
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PMID:Minimal residual disease in interferon-treated chronic myelogenous leukemia: results and pitfalls of analysis based on polymerase chain reaction. 164 Jul 25


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