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Query: EC:2.7.11.1 (
protein kinase
)
81,284
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sequences encoded by the first exon of
BCR
that bind to the ABL SH2 domain are essential for the activation of the ABL tyrosine kinase and transforming potential of the chimeric
BCR
-ABL oncogene. The normal cellular BCR gene encodes a 160,000 dalton phosphoprotein associated with a serine/threonine kinase activity, but it shows only weak dispersed homologies to protein kinases. p160c-
BCR
was purified to apparent homogeneity as an oligomer of greater than 600,000 daltons that contains autophosphorylation activity and transphosphorylation activity for several protein substrates. A region containing paired cysteine residues within the 426 amino acids encoded by the first exon of
BCR
is essential for its novel phosphotransferase activity, which overlaps with the strong SH2-binding regions. The recent demonstration of a GTPase-activating function within the C-terminal portion of
BCR
suggests that the
protein kinase
and SH2-binding domains may work in concert with other regions of the molecule in intracellular signalling processes.
...
PMID:The BCR gene encodes a novel serine/threonine kinase activity within a single exon. 165 98
The BCR gene (Groffen et al., 1984) plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of human leukemias that involve the Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1) (Rowley, 1973; Nowell & Hungerford, 1960). Cells containing the Ph1 contain a chimeric gene formed from the fusion of
BCR
(Collins et al., 1987; Lifshitz et al. 1988) and ABL genes that results from the reciprocal translocation of segments of chromosomes 9 and 22 (Shtivelman et al., 1985). The product of this chimera is a 210 kDa protein, termed P210
BCR
-ABL, that possesses an activated tyrosine kinase activity (Konopka et al., 1984; Kloetzer et al., 1985). Studies using long-term marrow culture systems and retrovirus-mediated gene transfer have documented that P210
BCR
-ABL can stimulate the growth of immature hematopoietic precursor cell types (McLaughlin et al., 1987; Young & Witte, 1984). We have previously reported that P210
BCR
-ABL exists in cytoplasmic complexes in association with a 53 kDa protein termed ph-P53 (Maxwell et al., 1987; Li et al. 1988). Similarly,
BCR
proteins have been found in cytoplasmic complexes containing ph-P53 in cells lacking the Ph1 (Li et al., 1989). These BCR protein complexes possess an associated ser/thr
protein kinase
activity. In this same study, we found that P210-containing complexes phosphorylate
BCR
proteins on tyrosine residues in vitro (Li et al., 1989). We now present results which demonstrate that P210
BCR
-ABL is tightly associated with P160
BCR
and ph-P53 proteins in cytoplasmic complexes from cells containing the Ph1.
...
PMID:P210 BCR-ABL is complexed to P160 BCR and ph-P53 proteins in K562 cells. 214 May 98
BCR
is an interesting signaling protein, whose cellular function is currently unknown. Its biochemical properties include
serine kinase
activity, SH2-binding activity, and a GTPase-activating activity. The SH2-binding activity is particularly interesting because it may link
BCR
to signaling pathways involving SH2-containing molecules. Since tyrosine phosphorylation of
BCR
has been detected in CML-derived cell lines and since tyrosine-phosphorylated
BCR
shows increased affinity toward certain SH2 domains, it seems particularly important to further characterize this activity. This chapter described a simple purification scheme for partial purification of
BCR
, which can be used to assess in vitro kinase and SH2-binding activities.
...
PMID:Characterization of breakpoint cluster region kinase and SH2-binding activities. 747 25
Interleukin 6 (IL-6) induces in M1 myeloblastic cells growth arrest and terminal differentiation toward monocytes. It is reported here that IL-6 reduced by 5- to 20-fold the tyrosine phosphorylation of cellular proteins in these cells. The same-fold reduction was also observed in M1 cells that were transfected with the
BCR
-ABL deregulated
protein kinase
. In these stable clones, the levels of tyrosine phosphorylation of cellular proteins were 30- to 100-fold higher than in the parental cells. IL-6 did not reduce the expression levels or the inherent tyrosine kinase activity of
BCR
-ABL p210. By measuring the protein-tyrosine-phosphatase (PTPase; protein-tyrosine-phosphate phosphohydrolase, EC 3.1.3.48) activity in crude cell lysates, we found that protein dephosphorylation resulted, at least partially, from induction of PTPase activity by IL-6. The induction of PTPase in the
BCR
-ABL-transfected clones was not sufficient to confer the minimal protein phosphorylation levels characteristic of IL-6-treated cells. Yet, the transfected M1 clones showed normal growth and differentiation responses to IL-6. None of the gene responses to IL-6 including suppression in the levels of c-myc, c-myb, and cyclin A mRNA; junB and c-jun mRNA induction; and dephosphorylation of retinoblastoma protein were rescued by the
BCR
-ABL oncogene. The functional relevance of PTPase induction by IL-6 is discussed.
...
PMID:Induction of protein-tyrosine-phosphatase activity by interleukin 6 in M1 myeloblastic cells and analysis of possible counteractions by the BCR-ABL oncogene. 842 78
The role of BCR gene sequences in Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome-positive leukemia is not well understood. Our previous studies demonstrated that P210
BCR
-ABL co-precipitates with P160
BCR
following immunoprecipitation with antibodies to the C-terminal domain of P160
BCR
, sequences lacking in P210
BCR
-ABL. We now report that tryptic peptides shared by both P160
BCR
and P210
BCR
-ABL are phosphorylated on tyrosine in vitro either when using immune complexes containing P160
BCR
complexed to
BCR
-ABL or when P160
BCR
is phosphorylated in trans by P210
BCR
-ABL immune complexes from cells lacking functional P160
BCR
. P185
BCR
-ABL produced in a cell line derived from a Ph chromosome-positive acute lymphocytic leukemia patient also co-immunoprecipitated with P160
BCR
. As with P210
BCR
-ABL, P160
BCR
tyrosine phosphopeptides were shared with P185
BCR
-ABL, indicating that the major sites of tyrosine phosphorylation in vitro are contained within the first exon of P160
BCR
. Similarly,
BCR
-ABL autophosphorylation was found to occur predominantly at tyrosines within
BCR
exon 1 sequences. These results raise the possibility that the activated ABL
protein kinase
of
BCR
-ABL proteins modulates the putative signal transduction activities of P160
BCR
by tyrosine phosphorylation of exon 1 sequences.
...
PMID:BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase is autophosphorylated or transphosphorylates P160 BCR on tyrosine predominantly within the first BCR exon. 842 87
A human myeloid leukemia cell line, KBM-7, was developed from a patient in the blastic phase of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). We characterized its morphology, immunophenotype, cytogenetics, and proliferative capacity. Developed in the absence of exogenous lymphokines, KBM-7 in vitro cloning capacity actually decreased when colony-stimulating factors were added. The cells had an aberrant immature myeloid phenotype, a doubling time of 22 h in suspension cultures and a high cloning efficiency in semisolid system (24 +/- 3)%. Early passages contained one near-haploid (predominant) and one hyperdiploid stem line. Gradually the hyperdiploid stem line became predominant, reaching an average of 49 chromosomes per cell. Cells from passage 89 had two Philadelphia chromosomes [t(9;22)(q34;q11)] and lacked normal copies of chromosomes 9 and 22. Detailed molecular characterization of the breakpoint in the t(9;22)(q34;q11) revealed that KBM-7 had the
BCR
2/ABL II splice junction. The cells had high
protein kinase
(p210BCR-ABL) activity and carried two identified variants of an ABL-
BCR
message. There was no evidence that normal
BCR
or c-ABL messages were expressed, assessed with the reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. When KBM-7 cells were heterotransplanted into nude mice without immunosuppressive pretreatment, one of three mice injected with 1 x 10(7) cells and all mice injected with 1 x 10(8) cells developed slowly growing granulocytic sarcomas within 6-8 weeks. These tumors were locally invasive but did not metastasize. We conclude that the KBM-7 cell line will be of value for investigating molecular events underlying neoplastic transformation in CML, in particular for studying the effects of
BCR
-ABL and ABL-
BCR
on the proliferation of CML cells in the absence of normal
BCR
and c-ABL messages.
...
PMID:KBM-7, a human myeloid leukemia cell line with double Philadelphia chromosomes lacking normal c-ABL and BCR transcripts. 860 23
The first exon of the BCR gene encodes a new
serine/threonine protein kinase
. Abnormal fusion of the
BCR
and ABL genes, resulting from the formation of the Philadelphia chromosome (Ph), is the hallmark of Ph-positive leukemia. We have previously demonstrated that the Bcr protein is tyrosine phosphorylated within first-exon sequences by the Bcr-Abl oncoprotein. Here we report that in addition to tyrose 177 (Y-177), Y-360 and Y283 are phosphorylated in Bcr-Abl proteins in vitro. Moreover, Bcr tyrosine 360 is phosphorylated in vivo within both Bcr-Abl and Bcr. Bcr mutant Y177F had a greatly reduced ability to transphosphorylate casein and histone H1, whereas Bcr mutants Y177F and Y283F had wild-type activities. In contrast, the Y360F mutation had little effect on Bcr's autophosphorylation activity. Tyrosine-phosphorylated Bcr, phosphorylated in vitro by Bcr-Abl, was greatly inhibited in its serine/threonine kinase activity, impairing both auto- and transkinase activities of Bcr. Similarly, the isolation of Bcr from cells expressing Bcr-Abl under conditions that preserve phosphotyrosine residues also reduced Bcr's kinase activity. These results indicate that tyrosine 360 of Bcr is critical for the transphosphorylation activity of Bcr and that in Ph-positive leukemia, Bcr serine/threonine kinase activity is seriously impaired.
...
PMID:Inhibition of Bcr serine kinase by tyrosine phosphorylation. 862 3
Using chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) as a model, we tested the hypothesis that cytokine-independent growth of leukemia cells results from aberrant activation of cytokine signaling pathways. The STAT5 (signal transducer and activator of transcription) protein, which is activated transiently in normal myeloid cells by cytokines such as GM-CSF (granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor), was constitutively activated in cell lines derived from CML patients, even in the absence of GM-CSF. STAT5 was also activated in primary mouse bone marrow cells acutely transformed by the CML-specific
BCR
-ABL oncogene, but not by the
serine kinase
oncogene v-MOS. Reconstitution experiments in non-hematopoietic cells show that STAT5 activation by
BCR
-ABL occurs independent of cytokines. Results using
BCR
-ABL mutants which specifically uncouple connections to known signal transduction pathways show that STAT5 activation is kinase dependent and correlates directly with ability to confer cytokine independent growth in hematopoietic cells.
BCR
-ABL also activates JAK kinases, which may provide a mechanism for STAT activation. These findings are consistent with a role for STAT5 in hematopoietic transformation by
BCR
-ABL.
...
PMID:Constitutive activation of STAT5 by the BCR-ABL oncogene in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 871 Mar 63
The BCR/ABL fusion protein transforms myeloid stem cells. Both chronic myelogenous leukemias (CML) and a subset of acute lymphoblastic leukemias (ALL) are associated with the expression of BCR/ABL proteins. This knowledge has not yet been translated into any specific tool to control ABL driven neoplastic cells growth. CGP57148B is an ATP-competitive inhibitor of the ABL
protein kinase
; it has been shown to inhibit the kinase activity of ABL both in vitro and in vivo and to inhibit the growth of v-abl and bcr/abl transfectants, as well as the in vitro formation of bone marrow (BM)-derived colonies in the presence of growth factors in some CML patients. These studies were performed to investigate the activity of CGP57148B on the spontaneous proliferation of both fresh and cultured, leukemic and normal, BCR/ABL positive and negative cells, and to study its mechanism of action. Six cell lines derived from
BCR
/ABL+ leukemias (K562, BV173, KCL22, KU812, MC3, LAMA84), thirteen BCR/ABL negative lines, both neoplastic (KG1, SU-DHL-1, U937, Daudi, NB4, NB4.306) and derived from normal cells (PHA blasts, LAK, fibroblasts, LCL, renal epithelial cells, endothelial cells, CD34(+) cells), and 14 fresh leukemic samples were tested using a tritiated thymidine uptake assay. The in vivo phosphorylation of the BCR/ABL protein was evaluated by western blot, while apoptosis was detected by the annexin V/propidium binding test. The induction of differentiation was assayed by immunofluorescence using multiple antibodies. All six
BCR
/ABL+ lines showed a dose dependent inhibition of their spontaneous proliferative rate, which was not accompanied by differentiation. The treatment caused, within minutes, dephosphorylation of the BCR/ABL protein, followed in 16-24 hours by a decrease in cycling cells and induction of apoptosis. No significant inhibition of DNA synthesis was observed in any BCR/ABL negative normal or neoplastic line at concentrations </=3 microM, with the exception of fibroblasts and CD34 cells. Proliferation inhibition was observed also when using fresh samples obtained from two Ph+ ALL and 12 consecutive CML patients. Induction of apoptosis was observed in these samples too. The activity of CGP57148B can be monitored in ex vivo isolated or cultured cells using a simple and reproducible assay, without the need for exogenously added growth factors. This molecule possibly exerts its effects through the inhibition of the kinase activity of BCR/ABL and the subsequent initiation of apoptosis, without inducing cell differentiation. Some normal cells are also affected. These data support the use of CGP57148B in initial clinical studies; possible toxic effects on BM and fibroblast-derived cells will have to be closely monitored. The in vivo monitoring of patients will have to be focused on the induction of apoptosis in leukemic cells.
...
PMID:Inhibition of the ABL kinase activity blocks the proliferation of BCR/ABL+ leukemic cells and induces apoptosis. 944 52
The DNA binding activity of FUS (also known as TLS), a nuclear pro-oncogene involved in multiple translocations, is regulated by
BCR
-ABL in a
protein kinase
CbetaII (PKCbetaII)-dependent manner. We show here that in normal myeloid progenitor cells FUS, although not visibly ubiquitinated, undergoes proteasome-dependent degradation, whereas in
BCR
-ABL-expressing cells, degradation is suppressed by PKCbetaII phosphorylation. Replacement of serine 256 with the phosphomimetic aspartic acid prevents proteasome-dependent proteolysis of FUS, while the serine-256-to-alanine FUS mutant is unstable and susceptible to degradation. Ectopic expression of the phosphomimetic S256D FUS mutant in granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-treated 32Dcl3 cells induces massive apoptosis and inhibits the differentiation of the cells escaping cell death, while the degradation-prone S256A mutant has no effect on either survival or differentiation. FUS proteolysis is induced by c-Jun, is suppressed by
BCR
-ABL or Jun kinase 1, and does not depend on c-Jun transactivation potential, ubiquitination, or its interaction with Jun kinase 1. In addition, c-Jun-induced FUS proteasome-dependent degradation is enhanced by heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) A1 and depends on the formation of a FUS-Jun-hnRNP A1-containing complex and on lack of PKCbetaII phosphorylation at serine 256 but not on FUS ubiquitination. Thus, novel mechanisms appear to be involved in the degradation of FUS in normal myeloid cells; moreover, the ability of the
BCR
-ABL oncoprotein to suppress FUS degradation by the induction of posttranslational modifications might contribute to the phenotype of
BCR
-ABL-expressing hematopoietic cells.
...
PMID:BCR-ABL prevents c-jun-mediated and proteasome-dependent FUS (TLS) proteolysis through a protein kinase CbetaII-dependent pathway. 1091 97
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