Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.24.11 (CD10)
9,792 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The c-kit proto-oncogene product is a member of the family of growth factor receptors with intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity. In the mouse c-kit maps to the W locus, which is known to be of central importance in hematopoiesis. Monoclonal antibody (MoAb) YB5.B8, which was raised against peripheral blood blast cells from a patient with acute myeloid leukemia (AML), was recently shown to bind to the extracellular domain of the c-kit product. This antibody does not bind detectably to normal peripheral blood cells and identifies a sub-group of AML patients with poor prognosis. We have used MoAb YB5.B8 to study the expression of c-kit by normal human bone marrow cells by immunofluorescence and flow cytometry, and to isolate multipotential and erythroid colony-forming cells. In a series of 11 normal adult bone marrow specimens, MoAb YB5.B8 bound to 4.0% +/- 1.8% of the cells in the low-density fraction. Dual-labeling experiments were performed with YB5.B8, and CD33, CD34, and CD10 MoAbs. Three populations of cells binding YB5.B8 could be identified based on their pattern of coexpression of the other markers; ie, YB5.B8+/CD34+/CD33-, YB5.B8+/CD34+/CD33+ and YB5.B8+/CD34+/CD33+. These populations had distinctive two-dimensional light scatter characteristics and are likely to correspond to precursor colony-forming cells, colony-forming cells, and maturing mast cells, respectively. No cells binding both YB5.B8 and an MoAb to the early lymphoid marker CD10 were found, implying that most early lymphoid cells do not express c-kit. MoAbs to the c-kit protein should prove valuable in multimarker studies of human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. Definition of a reference range of c-kit expression in normal human bone marrow will provide a sound basis for further studies of this marker in diagnosis and prognosis in AML.
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PMID:Expression of the YB5.B8 antigen (c-kit proto-oncogene product) in normal human bone marrow. 171 44

L-selectin is a leukocyte cell surface glycoprotein involved in carbohydrate-specific ligand binding which mediates rolling of leukocytes along endothelial surfaces. In addition to its role in adhesion, an intracellular signaling role for L-selectin has recently been recognized. In particular, cross-linking L-selectin leads to increased cytosolic Ca2+ levels and potentiation of the oxidative burst. As several cell surface glycoproteins have been shown to be linked to tyrosine kinases, we examined the hypothesis that L-selectin may be linked to pathways involving tyrosine phosphorylation in human neutrophils. Ligation of L-selectin by three different antibodies recognizing separate epitopes led to increased tyrosine phosphorylation of several cellular proteins as judged by anti-phosphotyrosine immunoblots of whole cell lysates with prominent bands at 40-42, 55-60, 70-72, and 105-120 kDa. The 42-kDa band comigrated with mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase as determined by immunoblotting with anti-MAP kinase antibody. This effect was specific for L-selectin, because antibodies against CD18, CD45, and CD10 did not increase tyrosine phosphorylation. Phosphorylation was not due to Fc binding, since F(ab')2 fragments of the anti-L-selectin antibodies were similarly effective, and the response was unaffected by Fc receptor blockade. Cross-linking of L-selectin was not required for enhanced tyrosine phosphorylation, because monovalent Fab fragments also increased tyrosine phosphorylation. The response to L-selectin antibodies was not inhibited by cytochalasin, suggesting that reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton was not required for this response. Sulfatides, sulfated glycolipids which may be natural ligands for L-selectin, also induced a rapid, dose-dependent increase in tyrosine phosphorylation. In addition, sulfatides, but not control glycolipids, resulted in enhanced tyrosine phosphorylation of MAP kinase. Both sulfatides and anti-L-selectin antibodies increased kinase activity of MAP kinase as determined by gel renaturation assay. The tyrosine kinase inhibitor, genistein, blocked the transient increase in intracellular Ca2+ and the oxidative burst induced by sulfatides, suggesting that this tyrosine phosphorylation is functionally important. We conclude that L-selectin is able to transmit intracellular signals, including increased tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of MAP kinase in neutrophils. We speculate that these events may contribute to the activation of neutrophils during adhesion.
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PMID:Signaling functions of L-selectin. Enhancement of tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of MAP kinase. 754 Oct 41

Human cord blood or bone marrow cells expressing the CD34 surface antigen include a population of pluripotent progenitors. We identified and isolated a subpopulation of cells coexpressing CD34 and c-kit, a transmembrane receptor with tyrosine kinase activity. Novel monoclonal antibodies (16A6, 14A3, 3D6) directed against the extracellular domain of c-kit were used for immunofluorescence labeling and sorting of low-density mononuclear cells (MNCs) from umbilical cord blood and bone marrow. The frequency of c-kit-labeled MNCs from cord blood (mean 5.0% +/- 2.1%, n = 16) was similar to that from adult bone marrow (mean 3.7% +/- 1.3%, n = 4). On average, 1.4% of CD34-positive cells were recorded in cord blood and 2.1% in bone marrow MNCs. Roughly 60% of CD34-positive cells coexpressed c-kit. The ability of CD34+/c-kit+ cells to form multilineage colonies (CFU-GEMM) was assayed after sorting with an antibody that did not show any significant effect on c-kit ligand (RL) or granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF)-induced colony formation. For CD34+/c-kit+ cells, we found a 20- to 50-fold enrichment as against total MNCs, and a 2-fold enrichment if compared with the CD34+/c-kit-population. To study expression of c-kit in lymphocytic precursors, monoclonal anti-CD7 or anti-CD10 antibodies were used simultaneously. In contrast to CD34-expressing cells, however, no consistent double-labeled subpopulation of lymphocytic cells was detected. Furthermore, coexpression of CD38 (73% +/- 14%, n = 4) or CD33 (29% +/- 12%, n = 5) on a majority of c-kit-positive cells showed their lineage commitment to erythropoiesis and granulocytopoiesis.
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PMID:Characterization of hemopoietic cell populations from human cord blood expressing c-kit. 767 90

We employed a highly sensitive method to assay protein tyrosine kinase activity in extracts of subpopulations of CD34+ bone marrow progenitor cells isolated by fluorescence activated cell sorting in an attempt to better define how growth-factor induction of enzymatic activity relates to progenitor cell maturation. FACS analysis confirmed that, under the conditions employed, essentially all of the CD34+ cells in adult human marrow that lacked the CD38 antigen were devoid of the myeloid maturation marker CD33 as well as the lineage antigens: CD10, 13, 14, 15, 16, 19, 71 and glycophorin A. A variable portion (50-90%) of these CD34+, CD38- progenitor cells expressed HLA-DR. CD34+, CD38- cells that did not express HLA-DR were found to lack detectable levels of either membrane or cytosolic tyrosine kinase activity. HLA-DR+ progenitor cells that lacked CD38 possessed elevated levels of cytosolic tyrosine kinase activity but only low levels of plasma membrane activity. In contrast, CD34+ cells that expressed CD38 (and HLA-DR) possessed high levels of membrane-associated tyrosine kinase activity. A cocktail of haemopoietic growth factors that included IL-3, IL-6 and stem cell factor effectively induced tyrosine kinase activity in CD34+, CD38-, HLA-DR- progenitor cells. Growth factor induction of tyrosine kinase activity in these cells was not inhibited by actinomycin D or cyclohexamide. Most of the tyrosine kinase activity induced by these growth factors was recovered from the cytosolic fraction of disrupted cells. Thus, induction of cytosolic tyrosine kinase activity is an early event in the response of uncommitted haemopoietic cells to haemopoietic growth factors. Subsequent activation of membrane tyrosine kinases may initiate key transduction processes as these cells begin to differentiate.
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PMID:Growth factor induction of cytosolic protein tyrosine kinase activity in human haemopoietic progenitor cells isolated by flow cytometry. 865 68

The cytoplasmic spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) is a key regulator of signal transduction events, apoptosis and orderly cell cycle progression in B-lineage lymphoid cells. Although SYK has not been linked to a human disease, defective expression of the closely related T-cell tyrosine kinase ZAP-70 has been associated with severe combined immunodeficiency. Childhood CD19(+)CD10(-) pro-B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is thought to originate from B-cell precursors with a maturational arrest at the pro-B cell stage and it is associated with poor prognosis. Since lethally irradiated mice reconstituted with SYK-deficient fetal liver-derived lymphohematopoietic progenitor cells show a block in B-cell ontogeny at the pro-B to pre-B cell transition, we examined the SYK expression profiles of primary leukemic cells from children with pro-B cell ALL. Here we report that leukemic cells from pediatric CD19(+)CD10(-) pro-B cell ALL patients (but not leukemic cells from patients with CD19(+)CD10(+) common pre-pre-B cell ALL) have markedly reduced SYK activity. Sequencing of the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) products of the Syk mRNA in these pro-B leukemia cells revealed profoundly aberrant coding sequences with deletions or insertions. These mRNA species encode abnormal SYK proteins with a missing or truncated catalytic kinase domain. In contrast to pro-B leukemia cells, pre-pre-B leukemia cells from children with CD19(+)CD10(+) common B-lineage ALL and EBV-transformed B-cell lines from healthy volunteers expressed wild-type Syk coding sequences. Examination of the genomic structure of the Syk gene by inter-exonic PCR and genomic cloning demonstrated that the deletions and insertions in the abnormal mRNA species of pro-B leukemia cells are caused by aberrant splicing resulting in either mis-splicing, exon skipping or inclusion of alternative exons, consistent with an abnormal posttranscriptional regulation of alternative splicing of Syk pre-mRNA. Our findings link for the first time specific molecular defects involving the Syk gene to an immunophenotypically distinct category of childhood ALL. To our knowledge, this is the first discovery of a specific tyrosine kinase deficiency in a human hematologic malignancy.
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PMID:Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) deficiency in childhood pro-B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 1149 25

The mechanism by which neurotensin (NT) promotes the growth of prostate cancer epithelial cells is not yet defined. Here, androgen-independent PC3 cells, which express high levels of the type 1 NT-receptor (NTR1), are used to examine the involvement of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), mitogen-activated protein kinases (ERK, SAPK/JNK and p38), PI3 kinase and PKC in the mitogenic effect of NT. NT dose dependently (0.1-30 nM) enhanced phosphorylation of EGFR, ERK and Akt, reaching maximal levels within 3 min as measured by Western blotting. These effects were associated with an accumulation of EGF-like substance(s) in the medium (assayed by EGFR binding) and a 2-fold increase in DNA synthesis (assayed by [3H]thymidine incorporation). The DNA synthesis enhancement by NT was non-additive with that of EGF. The NT-induced stimulation of EGFR/ERK/Akt phosphorylation and DNA synthesis was inhibited by EGFR-tyrosine kinase inhibitors (AG1478, PD153035), metallo-endopeptidase inhibitor phosphoramidon and by heparin, but not by neutralizing anti-EGF antibody. Thus, transactivation of EGFR by NT involved heparin-binding EGF (HB-EGF or amphiregulin) rather than EGF. The effects of NT on EGFR/ERK/Akt activation and DNA synthesis were attenuated by PLC-inhibitor (U73122), PKC-inhibitors (bisindolylmaleimide, staurosporine, rottlerin), MEK inhibitor (U0126) and PI3 kinase inhibitors (wortmannin, LY 294002). We conclude that NT stimulated mitogenesis in PC3 cells by a PKC-dependent ligand-mediated transactivation of EGFR, which led to stimulation of the Raf-MEK-ERK pathway in a PI3 kinase-dependent manner.
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PMID:Involvement of MAP-kinase, PI3-kinase and EGF-receptor in the stimulatory effect of Neurotensin on DNA synthesis in PC3 cells. 1517 34

Controversy still exists over the response to therapy and prognosis of patients with primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma (PMBL). Recent data from the International Extranodal Lymphoma Study Group (IELSG) suggest that a MACOP-B (methotrexate, adriamycin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone, bleomycin) chemotherapy regimen followed by radiotherapy may be a better induction strategy than other previously used treatments. Although the pathobiology of PMBL has been widely studied, its precise histology, phenotype, and molecular characteristics are still not clear. To date, phenotypic analysis has revealed the following phenotype: positivity for CD45 and CD20, but negativity for CD3, CD10, CD21, Class I/II major histocompatibility antigens, and a variety of other immunohistochemical markers. CD79a is generally detected, despite an absence of surface immunoglobulins (Igs). CD30 staining is observed in most cases, but is weaker and less homogeneous than in classic Hodgkin's lymphoma or anaplastic large cell lymphoma. BCL-2 protein is usually expressed but there are few data describing the expression of MUM1/IRF4, PAX5/BSAP, BCL-6, or the B-cell transcription factors BOB.1, Oct-2, and PU.1. Cytogenetic studies reveal gains in segments of chromosome 9p, including amplification of the REL proto-oncogene and the tyrosine kinase gene JAK2. Other molecular findings include: C-myc mutations or rearrangements, p53 mutations, IgV(H), gene mutations, and bcl-2 and mal over-expression. bcl-6 mutations and bcl-2 gene rearrangements are generally absent, suggesting that PMBL is of pre-germinal center (GC) origin. However, two recent reports show isotype-switched Ig genes with a high frequency of somatic hypermutations as well as variants in the 5' noncoding region of the bcl-6 gene. The IELSG collected 137 PMBL cases for extensive pathologic review. Histologically, the lymphomatous growth was predominantly diffuse with sclerosis that induced compartmentalized cell aggregation. It consisted of large cells with varying degrees of nuclear polymorphism and clear to basophilic cytoplasm. Molecular analysis was performed on 40 cases and showed novel findings. More than half of the cases displayed bcl-6 gene mutations, which usually occurred together with functioning somatic IgV(H) gene mutations, and BCL-6 and/or MUM1/IRF4 expression. The present study supports the concept that PBML is derived from activated GC or post-germinal center cells. However, it differs from other aggressive B-cell lymphomas in that it shows defective Ig production despite the expression of Oct-2, BOB.1, and PU.1 transcription factors, and a lack of IgV(H) gene crippling mutations.
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PMID:Pathobiology of primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma. 1520 21

In the literature, sufficient attention has not been paid to the precise subcellular localization of immunohistochemical signals, the knowledge of which is essential for proper interpretation of immunostains and distinction of genuine staining from biotin-associated or other nonspecific stainings. The subcellular localization of the signals can in fact be easily deduced from the known biologic or ultrastructural characteristics of the antigens. Extracellular antigens obviously are located in the extracellular compartment. Cellular antigens fall into 3 major groups: membranous, nuclear, and cytoplasmic. Membranous antigens include cell adhesion molecules (such as E-cadherin, N-CAM), cell surface/transmembrane receptors and proteins (such as tyrosine kinase receptors, most leukocyte antigens, CD10, CEA), and molecules linking surface molecules to cytoskeleton (such as beta-catenin, dystrophin). Nuclear antigens include cell cycle-associated proteins (such as cyclins, p16, Ki-67), nuclear enzymes (such as TdT), transcription factors (such as TTF-1, CDX-2, myogenin, PAX-5), tumor suppressor gene products (such as p53, p63, WT1, Rb), steroid hormone receptors (such as ER, PR), calcium-binding proteins (such as S-100 protein, calretinin), and some viral proteins (such as CMV, herpes). Cytoplasmic antigens can take up a granular pattern due to localization in organelles, granules, or secretory vesicles (such as chromogranin, hormones, lysozyme, HMB-45), fibrillary pattern attributable to the filamentous nature of the molecules (intermediate filaments and microfilaments), or diffuse or patchy pattern due to localization in the cytosol or large vesicles (such as myoglobin, albumin, thyroglobulin). Aberrant localization of the molecules, when present, can provide important insight into disease processes and aid in their diagnosis, such as loss of membranous E-cadherin expression in lobular breast carcinoma, aberrant nuclear localization of beta-catenin in colorectal adenocarcinoma, pattern of ALK staining in anaplastic large cell lymphoma correlating with the different types of chromosomal translocations, presence of additional cytoplasmic CD10 staining in the enterocytes indicative of microvillous inclusion disease, and "reversed" staining for EMA in micropapillary mammary carcinoma.
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PMID:Subcellular localization of immunohistochemical signals: knowledge of the ultrastructural or biologic features of the antigens helps predict the signal localization and proper interpretation of immunostains. 1530 32

Amyloid-beta (Abeta) deposition is a major pathological hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. Gleevec, a known tyrosine kinase inhibitor, has been shown to lower Abeta secretion, and it is considered a potential basis for novel therapies for Alzheimer's disease. Here, we show that Gleevec decreases Abeta levels without the inhibition of Notch cleavage by a mechanism distinct from gamma-secretase inhibition. Gleevec does not influence gamma-secretase activity in vitro; however, treatment of cell lines leads to a dose-dependent increase in the amyloid precursor protein intracellular domain (AICD), whereas secreted Abeta is decreased. This effect is observed even in presence of a potent gamma-secretase inhibitor, suggesting that Gleevec does not activate AICD generation but instead may slow down AICD turnover. Concomitant with the increase in AICD, Gleevec leads to elevated mRNA and protein levels of the Abeta-degrading enzyme neprilysin, a potential target gene of AICD-regulated transcription. Thus, the Gleevec mediated-increase in neprilysin expression may involve enhanced AICD signaling. The finding that Gleevec elevates neprilysin levels suggests that its Abeta-lowering effect may be caused by increased Abeta-degradation.
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PMID:Gleevec increases levels of the amyloid precursor protein intracellular domain and of the amyloid-beta degrading enzyme neprilysin. 1762 63

The beta amyloid (Abeta) cascade has been at the forefront of the hypothesis used to describe the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). It is generally accepted that drugs that can regulate the processing of the amyloid precursor protein (APP) toward the non-amyloidogenic pathway may have a therapeutic potential. Previous studies have shown that protein kinase C (PKC) hypofunction has an important role in AD pathophysiology. Therefore, the effects of a new PKC activator, alpha-APP modulator [(2S,5S)-(E,E)-8-(5-(4-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl)-2,4-pentadienoylamino)benzolactam (TPPB)], on APP processing were investigated. Using PC12 cells and SH-SY5Y(APP695) cells, it was found that TPPB promoted the secretion of sAPPalpha without affecting full-length expression of APP. The increase in sAPPalpha by TPPB was blocked by inhibitors of PKC, extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and tyrosine kinase, suggesting the involvement of these signal transduction pathways. TPPB increased alpha-secretase activity [a disintegrin and metalloproteinase (ADAM)10 and 17], as shown by direct fluorescence activity detection and Western blot analysis. TPPB-induced sAPPalpha release was blocked by the metalloproteinase inhibitor TAPI-2, furin inhibitor CMK and by the protein-trafficking inhibitor brefeldin. The results also showed that TPPB decreased beta-secretase activity, Abeta40 release and beta site APP-cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1) expression, but did not significantly affect neprilysin (NEP) and insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) expression. Our data indicate that TPPB could direct APP processing towards the non-amyloidogenic pathway by increasing alpha-secretase activity, and suggest its therapeutic potential in AD.
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PMID:New protein kinase C activator regulates amyloid precursor protein processing in vitro by increasing alpha-secretase activity. 1765 Jan 13


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