Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.4.3 (phospholipase C)
18,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The HER2/neu gene encodes a receptor tyrosine kinase that is highly homologous to the epidermal growth factor receptor. Overexpression of the receptor in mammary and ovarian carcinoma correlates with poor patient prognosis. To determine how the overexpression of a normal receptor leads to the generation of an oncogenic signal, we compared the patterns of tyrosine phosphorylation in tumor-derived human cell lines expressing high levels of p185HER2/neu. In intact SKBR3 cells, basal phosphorylation of p185HER2/neu was not detected. However, pretreatment of cells with the tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor, sodium orthovanadate, led to the detection of phosphotyrosine on phospholipase C-gamma (PLC-gamma), GTPase-activating protein but not on the RAF-1 kinase. Strikingly, PLC-gamma was detected in a complex which contained multiple tyrosine-phosphorylated polypeptides. This complex was detected only in cytoplasmic fractions and had a distinct composition in different p185HER2/neu-overexpressing cell lines. Although GTPase-activating protein has been found previously in association with proteins of 190 and 62 kDa in fibroblasts, in SKBR3 cells it was found associated with multiple additional tyrosine-phosphorylated polypeptides. These experiments show that SKBR3 cells possess high levels of protein tyrosine phosphatase that can act upon p185HER2/neu. Moreover, they reveal, for the first time, the presence of PLC-gamma and GTPase-activating protein in cytosolic complexes containing a variety of other tyrosine-phosphorylated polypeptides. These observations suggest novel possibilities for the specific definition of receptor-generated signals in tumor cells.
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PMID:Tyrosine phosphatase inhibition permits analysis of signal transduction complexes in p185HER2/neu-overexpressing human tumor cells. 134 42

Ligand-induced dimerization of growth factor receptors is crucial for stimulation of their intrinsic protein tyrosine kinase activity promoting receptor autophosphorylation by an intermolecular mechanism. Moreover, the suppressive and negative dominant action of defective epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) was shown to be caused by formation of inactive heterodimers with normal EGFR leading to diminished biological signaling. In this report we explore the structural requirements and functional significance of heterodimerization between EGFR and HER2. HER2 (also called c-erbB-2 or neu) is a member of the EGFR family whose natural ligand is still unknown. We show that in response to EGF, wild type EGFR and various EGFR mutants were able to undergo heterodimerization with HER2. Addition of EGF to transfected cells co-expressing HER2 with a kinase negative point mutant of EGFR (K721A) stimulated heterodimer formation, tyrosine phosphorylation of K721A and HER2, and tyrosine phosphorylation of one of their known substrates, phospholipase C gamma. However, the binding of EGF to transfected cells co-expressing HER2 together with another EGFR mutant CD533 (a deletion mutant lacking most of the cytoplasmic domain of EGFR) caused heterodimerization and inhibition of tyrosine kinase activity. It appears therefore that EGF-induced heterodimerization of EGFR and HER2 can promote either stimulatory or inhibitory influences on kinase activity. We propose that the nature of receptor interactions on the cell surface can either activate or inhibit the initiation of growth factor-controlled cellular signaling.
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PMID:Heterodimerization of c-erbB2 with different epidermal growth factor receptor mutants elicits stimulatory or inhibitory responses. 134 15

The neu protooncogene encodes a tyrosine kinase receptor that is involved in the regulation of normal growth and malignant transformation. To circumvent the use of the incompletely characterized ligand of Neu, we constructed a chimeric protein composed of the ligand-binding domain of the epidermal growth factor receptor and the transmembrane and cytoplasmic portions of Neu. By expressing this Neu-epidermal growth factor receptor chimera (termed NEC), we found that following stimulation by the heterologous ligand, the tyrosine kinase of Neu became associated with a phosphatidylinositol (PI) kinase activity. The association was dependent on the concentration of the ligand and was almost maximal within 30 s after ligand binding. The lipid kinase was identified as a type I PI 3'-kinase on the basis of its inhibition by Nonidet P-40 and high pressure liquid chromatography of the phosphorylated product. To confirm the identification of PI 3'-kinase as an effector of Neu, we raised antibodies to the alpha-isoform of the regulatory subunit of PI 3'-kinase (p85). Using these antibodies, it was possible to directly demonstrate ligand-dependent formation of a tyrosine-phosphorylated complex of NEC and PI 3'-kinase. Apparently, both PI 3'-kinase and phospholipase C gamma, another substrate of the Neu kinase, simultaneously associated with the same activated NEC molecule. Nevertheless, immunofluorescence localization of PI 3'-kinase revealed no significant cellular redistribution of the enzyme after activation of the Neu kinase. Interestingly, PI 3'-kinase was localized primarily to the cell nucleus and to confined regions of the plasma membrane. Analysis of mutants of the Neu protein indicated that the oncogenic point-mutated Neu (Glu664) was permanently coupled to PI 3'-kinase; but two nontransforming versions of the oncoprotein, a kinase-defective protein and a carboxyl-terminally deleted Neu, were devoid of the constitutive association with PI 3'-kinase. Hence, we concluded that phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase is a physiological substrate of the Neu receptor, but the regulation of this coupling is released upon oncogenic activation.
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PMID:Regulated coupling of the Neu receptor to phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase and its release by oncogenic activation. 135 Oct 56

The neu/erbB-2 protooncogene encodes a transmembrane tyrosine kinase homologous to receptors for polypeptide growth factors. The oncogenic potential of the presumed receptor is released through multiple genetic mechanisms including a point mutation, truncation of non-catalytic sequences and overexpression. The latter mechanism appears to be relevant to human cancers as elevated expression of the neu/erbB-2 gene is frequently observed in solid tumors of various adenocarcinomas. It is therefore conceivable that strategies aimed at the biochemical mechanism of action of the neu/erbB-2 tyrosine kinase may contribute to the treatment of certain human cancers. To this aim we undertook a multiple research approach consisting of the following directions: (i) The neu/erbB-2 ligand--a systematic screening of potential biological sources of the hypothetical hormone molecule, that presumably binds to the neu/erbB-2 protein, resulted in detection of a candidate activity in the medium of certain cultured transformed cells. Partial purification indicated that the factor is a 30-35 kDa glycoprotein. Further studies revealed several biochemical characteristics of the factor that may be helpful for complete purification and structural analysis of this novel hormone. (ii) Signal transduction by neu/erbB-2--using a chimeric receptor approach and various mutants we found that all the oncogenic forms of the neu/erbB-2 are constitutively coupled, both physically and functionally, to a multi-protein complex of signaling molecules. The latter includes the phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C gamma and a phosphatidylinositol kinase. Thus, the metabolism of inositol lipids is probably a major biochemical pathway utilized by the neu/erbB-2 tyrosine kinase. (iii) Tumor inhibitory antibodies--we generated a panel of monoclonal antibodies to the presumed receptor. Surprisingly, some antibodies almost completely inhibited the growth of tumor cells in athymic mice, whereas one antibody significantly accelerated the rate of tumor growth in animals. Interestingly, the inhibitory antibodies conferred a mature phenotype to cultured breast cancer cells, implicating terminal differentiation in tumor retardation.
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PMID:Signal transduction by the neu/erbB-2 receptor: a potential target for anti-tumor therapy. 135 18

This paper has reviewed, in a broad sense, the potential involvement of the oncogenes and their progenitors, the protooncogenes, in signal transduction pathways. The membrane-associated oncogene products appear to be connected with the generation and/or regulation of secondary messengers, particularly those associated with Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent activation of the serine/threonine kinase protein kinase C. Activation of transmembrane receptors, either through binding their native ligand or through point mutations that lead to constitutive expression, results in the expression of their intrinsic tyrosine-specific protein kinases. In PDGF-stimulated cells, this results in the increased turnover of phosphatidylinositols and the subsequent release of IP3 (Habenicht et al., 1981; Berridge et al., 1984). This coincides with activation of a PI kinase activity (Kaplan et al., 1987). Likewise, the fms product, which is the receptor for CSF-1, induces a guanine nucleotide-dependent activation of phospholipase C (Jackowski et al., 1986). Receptor functions are potentially regulated through differential binding of ligands (as proposed with PDGF), through interactions with other receptors, and through the "feedback" regulation mediated by protein kinase C. PDGF stimulation leads to modulation of the EGF receptor through protein kinase C (Bowen-Pope et al., 1983; Collins et al., 1983; Davis and Czech, 1985). Similarly, the neu product becomes phosphorylated on tyrosine residues following treatment of cells with EGF, although the neu protein does not bind EGF itself (King et al., 1988; Stern and Kamps, 1988). The tyrosine kinases of the src family are not receptors themselves, although they may mediate specific receptor-generated signals. The clck product is physically and functionally associated with the T-cell receptors CD4 and CD8, and becomes active upon specific stimulation of cells expressing those markers (Veillette et al., 1988a,b). The precise physiological role of the src family products has not been established, but their kinase activity is intrinsic to that function. The v- and c-src products are hyperphosphorylated during mitosis (Chackalaparampil and Shalloway, 1988), which correlates with periods of reduced cell-to-cell adhesion and communication (Warren and Nelson, 1987; Azarnia et al., 1988). Furthermore, pp60c-src is associated with a PI kinase activity when complexed with MTAg of polyoma virus, suggesting a function in stimulating increased turnover of the phosphatidylinositols (Heber and Courtneidge, 1987; Kaplan et al., 1987).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Oncogenes, protooncogenes, and signal transduction: toward a unified theory? 269 May 95

The functional significance of phospholipase D (PLD) could most easily be investigated using selective inhibitors. We have isolated a family of fungal metabolites, ketoepoxides, that inhibit chemotactic peptide (formyl-Met-Leu-Phe)-stimulated PLD activation and superoxide generation in granulocytes in the low micromolar range (SCH 49210 having an IC50 of 1.6 microM). Unlike receptor-mediated PLD activation, ketoepoxides were poor inhibitors of phorbol ester-induced PLD activity in granulocytes (IC50 = 43 microM for SCH 49210). Ketoepoxides did not inhibit platelet-derived growth factor-stimulated PLD activity in fibroblasts at up to 50 microM. We also tested the effect of ketoepoxides on in vitro epidermal growth factor receptor and neu tyrosine kinase activities. SCH 49210 (and 49209) did not inhibit the tyrosine kinases at up to 100 microM. These results suggest that ketoepoxides do not inhibit PLD activation due to effects on tyrosine kinase activity. fMLP-induced phospholipase A2 (PLA2) activation is also inhibited by ketoepoxides in the low micromolar range (SCH 49210 having an IC50 of 3.2 microM), but the ketoepoxides were poorer inhibitors of Ca2+ ionophore A23187-induced PLA2 (SCH 49210 having an IC50 of 83 microM). As a measure of phospholipase C (PLC) activity, the generation of inositol-1,4,5 triphosphate in thrombin-stimulated platelets was measured. The ketoepoxides did not inhibit PLC activation indicating that, unlike the aminosteroid U73122, ketoepoxides exhibit some selectivity among receptor-linked phospholipases. The ketoepoxides were also effective inhibitors of tumor cell invasion, as measured by penetration of HT1080 human fibrosarcoma cells into a reconstituted basement membrane matrix. Interestingly, both PLD inhibition and anti-tumor invasion activity correlate closely. These ketoepoxides are, therefore, potential anti-metastatic compounds and may be useful probes to study the role of PLD in cell function.
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PMID:Novel ketoepoxides block phospholipase D activation and tumor cell invasion. 791 2

Stable clones of NIH 3T3 fibroblasts transfected with the cDNA of either the wild-type or deletion forms of the rat type I (or cerebellar) inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) receptor (IP3R) were investigated. The delta form, missing the NH2-terminal sequence that includes the IP3-binding site, is expected to be still assembled with wild-type subunits to yield a tetrameric Ca2+ channel across the endoplasmic reticulum membrane; the s form, missing the membrane-spanning sequences, is expected to remain as a soluble monomer in the cytosol. With respect to control clones transfected with the vector only, the synthesis fo IP3Rs was markedly stimulated in the receptor-transfected clones. The mass accumulation, however, was increased only moderately (deletion forms = 15-30% of the endogenous IP3R), apparently because of a compensatory increase in receptor turnover. Coordinate changes in IP3 generation and Ca2+ release were revealed in the delta clones by experiments in both intact and permeabilized cells. In these clones, the IP3R was more sensitive to IP3, and IP3 generation at the ATP P2u surface receptor was decreased. This latter effect was due neither to a defect in G protein coupling nor to changes in phospholipase C expression, but to down-regulation of the P2u receptor. In the cells expressing the s- and delta-IP3R subunits, no differences with respect to the controls were observed in epidermal growth factor-induced DNA synthesis, whereas long-term growth stimulated by serum was reduced. Even more marked, especially in the delta clones (-90%), was the inhibition of cell transformation induced by autocrine stimulation with transforming growth factor alpha of the overexpressed epidermal growth factor receptors or by other growth factor receptors and oncogenes (platelet-derived growth factor/platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta, HER2/neu, and v-erbB). These effects appear not to be connected to the signaling processes mediated by tyrosine phosphorylation since the latter was unchanged in the delta clones. These results demonstrate for the first time (a) that the changes in cellular homeostasis directly induced by deleted IP3R subunits (increased receptor synthesis and increased IP3R sensitivity) are largely compensated by indirect coordinate changes apparently aimed to keep near normal the signaling properties of the cells; (b) that modulation of intracellular Ca2+ channels induces profound consequences that differentially affect growth and oncogenesis; and (c) that IP3Rs and the Ca2+ stores are important cross-roads of intracellular signaling pathways.
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PMID:Stable expression of truncated inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor subunits in 3T3 fibroblasts. Coordinate signaling changes and differential suppression of cell growth and transformation. 803 82

Formation of mesoderm and posterior structures in early Xenopus embryos is dependent on fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling. Although several FGF receptors (FGFRs) are expressed in the early embryo, their respective role in these processes remains poorly understood. We provide evidence that FGFR-1 and FGFR-4 signals elicit distinct responses both in naive and neuralized ectodermal cells. We show that naive ectodermal cells expressing a constitutively active chimeric torso-FGFR-1 (t-R1) are converted into mesoderm in a Ras-dependent manner, while those expressing torso-FGFR-4 (t-R4) differentiate into epidermis without significant activation of Erk-1. In neuralized ectoderm, expression of t-R4 causes the up-regulation of the midbrain markers En-2 and Wnt-1, but not of the hindbrain nor the spinal cord markers Krox20 and Hoxb9. Mutation of tyr(776) in the phospholipase C-(gamma) binding consensus sequence YLDL of t-R4 completely abolishes En-2 and Wnt-1 induction. In contrast to t-R4, platelet derived growth factor (PDGF)-dependent FGFR-1 activation in neuralized ectodermal cells expressing a chimeric PDGFR-FGFR-1 receptor results in the expression of Krox20 and Hoxb9. A similar effect is observed when an inducible form of oncogenic Raf is expressed, therefore implicating FGFR-1 and Raf in the transduction of FGF-caudalizing signals in neural tissue. Our results suggest that FGFR-1 and FGFR-4 transduce distinct signals in embryonic cells, and mainly differ in their ability to activate the Ras/MAPK pathway.
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PMID:Signaling specificities of fibroblast growth factor receptors in early Xenopus embryo. 1091 Jul 71

Brevican is a neural-specific proteoglycan of the brain extracellular matrix, which is particularly abundant in the terminally differentiated CNS. It is expressed by neuronal and glial cells, and as a component of the perineuronal nets it decorates the surface of large neuronal somata and primary dendrites. One brevican isoform harbors a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor attachment site and, as shown by ethanolamine incorporation studies, is indeed glypiated in stably transfected HEK293 cells as well as in oligodendrocyte precursor Oli-neu cells. The major isoform is secreted into the extracellular space, although a significant amount appears to be tightly attached to the cell membrane, as it floats up in sucrose gradients. Flotation is sensitive to detergent treatment. Brevican is most prominent in the microsomal, light membrane and synaptosomal fractions of rat brain membrane preparations. The association with the particulate fraction is in part sensitive to chondroitinase ABC and phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C treatment. Furthermore, brevican staining on the surface of hippocampal neurons in culture is diminished after hyaluronidase or chondroitinase ABC treatment. Taken together, this could provide a mechanism by which perineuronal nets are anchored on neuronal surfaces.
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PMID:Brevican isoforms associate with neural membranes. 1239 May 35