Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A balanced translocation t(8;9) (p11;q34) was present in the peripheral blood, bone marrow, and spleen cells of a patient with Ph negative chronic myeloid leukaemia. Subsequent transformation into acute leukaemia was associated with the emergence of trisomy 8 and der(8)(8qter----cen----8p11::9q34----9qter). This is the third reported case of t(8;9) (p11;q34) and raises the question of the role of c-abl in the pathogenesis of this myeloproliferative disorder.
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PMID:Reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 8 and 9 in atypical chronic myeloid leukaemia. 386 76

Acute nonlymphocytic leukemia associated with the chromosomal translocation t(6;9)(p23;q34) is an entity that is frequently associated with basophilia, which it shares with chronic myelogenous leukemia. The breakpoint on chromosome 9, q34, appears to be cytogenetically identical in both malignancies and is the site of the cellular oncogene c-abl. We investigated the role of c-abl in cells from two patients with the t(6;9) using in situ chromosomal hybridization, Southern hybridization, and in vitro phosphorylation. We showed that c-abl is not translocated from chromosome 9, resulting in a breakpoint that is on the 3' side of this gene. The t(6;9) translocation does not appear to result in the production of an aberrantly sized protein product or in the acquisition of in vitro tyrosine kinase activity. This is in direct contrast to the findings in chronic myelogenous leukemia, in which c-abl is translocated, leading to the production of a structurally altered c-abl protein with activated tyrosine kinase. Lastly, we demonstrated that the cells of one patient contain sequences from chromosome 9 inserted at the junction of a reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 4 and 10 on the 4q+ chromosome. This insertion, which is at least 100 kilobase pairs in length, represents a duplication and translocation of the protein coding region of c-abl.
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PMID:Chromosomal localization and characterization of c-abl in the t(6;9) of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. 386 48

The v-abl protein of Abelson murine leukemia virus is a tyrosine-specific kinase. Its normal cellular homolog, murine c-abl, does not possess detectable tyrosine kinase activity in vitro. Previously, we have detected tyrosine kinase activity in vitro for an altered c-abl gene product (c-abl P210) in the K562 human chronic myelogenous leukemia cell line. The expression of this variant c-abl gene product correlates with chromosomal translocation and amplification of the c-abl gene in K562 cells. Like v-abl, c-abl P210 is a fusion protein containing non-abl sequences near the amino terminus of c-abl. We compared the in vitro tyrosine kinase activity of c-abl P210 with that of wild-type murine v-abl. The remarkable similarities of these two proteins with respect to cis-acting autophosphorylation, trans-acting phosphorylation of exogenous substrates, and kinase inhibition, using site-directed abl-specific antisera, suggested that c-abl P210 could function similarly to v-abl in vivo. In addition, c-abl P210 possessed an associated serine kinase activity in immunoprecipitates. The serine kinase activity was not inhibited by site-directed, abl-specific antisera that inhibit the tyrosine kinase activity, suggesting that the serine kinase activity is not an intrinsic property of c-abl P210. Thus, the activation of the c-abl gene in a human leukemia cell line may have functional consequences analogous to activation of the c-abl gene in Abelson murine leukemia virus.
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PMID:Activation of the c-abl oncogene by viral transduction or chromosomal translocation generates altered c-abl proteins with similar in vitro kinase properties. 403 28

The transforming gene of the Abelson murine leukaemia virus, v-abl, contains two open reading frames (orf). The 5' orf encodes a tyrosine-specific protein kinase while the 3' orf has the capacity to code for an 18,000 Mr protein. However, no 3' orf product has yet been identified. Using probes capable of distinguishing between the 5' and 3' orfs of v-abl, we have examined the abl-related transcripts present in human haematopoietic cells and leukaemia-derived cell lines, including the chronic myeloid leukaemia-derived cell line K562. Our results indicate that transcripts of 6 kb, 7 kb and 8 kb (kilobase, 10(3) base-pairs) show strong homology to v-abl 5' protein kinase-encoding orf sequences, but are devoid of any sequences from the v-abl 3' orf. In addition, transcripts of 5 kb, 3 kb, 1.6 kb and 1.4 kb, reacting with both 5' orf and 3' orf probes, were observed. The latter species, with coding sequences from both the tyrosine kinase and the putative 18,000 Mr protein, must be transcribed from the human c-abl gene as this is apparently the only human gene containing sequences homologous to the v-abl 3' orf. The 6 kb, 7 kb and 8 kb transcripts may arise either from the c-abl gene through differential splicing, or from one of the three other regions of the human genome with sequences homologous to the 5' orf of v-abl. Examination of genomic DNA from the K562 cell line revealed that the amplification of abl-related sequences, which is presumed to result in the elevated levels of the 8 kb transcript found in this cell line, does not involve sequences homologous to the v-abl 3' orf. This lends credence to the idea that the 8 kb transcript may derive from an abl-related gene other than c-abl. While the significance of the 3' orf of v-abl remains unknown, the data presented strongly suggest the existence of at least two distinct abl-related proteins in human haematopoietic cells.
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PMID:Two families of abl-related transcripts in human haematopoietic cells differing in their homology to v-abl. 608 79

The human homologues of several independent viral oncogenes, each of which encodes tyrosine-specific protein kinases, have been identified. Of these, three (v-src, v-yes and v-fes/fps) are known to exhibit considerable sequence homology, particularly in the regions of their phosphorylation acceptor sites. In the present study, sequences encoding the tyrosine phosphorylation acceptor sites of the Abelson murine leukaemia virus oncogene, v-abl, and its human cellular homologue, c-abl, have been identified and their nucleic acid sequences determined. Our results establish extensive homology between this region of c-abl and acceptor domains of the v-src, v-yes and v-fes/fps family of viral oncogenes, as well as more distant relatedness to the catalytic chain of the mammalian cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase. These findings suggest that, of the homologues of retroviral oncogenes with tyrosine protein kinase activity examined to date, all were probably derived from a common progenitor and may represent members of a diverse family of cellular protein kinases.
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PMID:Homology between phosphotyrosine acceptor site of human c-abl and viral oncogene products. 619 Dec 23

The v-abl protein is known to be a tyrosine-specific protein kinase. However, its normal cellular homolog, c-abl P150, is not detectably phosphorylated on tyrosine in vivo or in vitro. The lack of associated tyrosine kinase activity for the c-abl protein seems paradoxical since it is the c-abl-derived sequences of the v-abl protein that encode the kinase activity. We have detected an altered human c-abl protein (P210) with associated tyrosine kinase activity in the K562 leukemia cell line. K562 cells are known to have a 9:22 chromosomal translocation involving the c-abl locus and have amplified the c-able gene 4 to 8 fold. The altered P210 human c-abl is serologically and structurally related to the normal c-abl protein. A structural alteration of the human c-abl protein. K562 cells may have unmasked its associated tyrosine kinase activity. This altered c-abl protein may have important implications for a mechanism of activation of this oncogene.
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PMID:An alteration of the human c-abl protein in K562 leukemia cells unmasks associated tyrosine kinase activity. 620 66

A new acute transforming type C retrovirus was isolated from mice inoculated with a virus stock obtained by iododeoxyuridine induction of methylcholanthrene-transformed C3H/10T1/2 mouse cells. This virus, designated 3611-MSV, transforms embryo fibroblasts and epithelial cells in culture and induces fibrosarcomas in vivo. 3611-MSV is replication defective, requiring a type C helper virus for propagation both in vitro and in vivo. By using endpoint transmission of 3611-MSV to MMCE C17 mouse and FRE 3A rat cells, several nonproductively transformed clonal cell lines have been derived. Pseudotype virus stocks obtained from such clones transform cells in vitro, are highly oncogenic in vivo, and exhibit host range and serological properties that are characteristic of their helper virus component. Analysis of viral antigen expression in 3611-MSV-transformed cells has led to the demonstration of a 90,000-molecular-weight (Mr) polyprotein and a 75,000-Mr probable cleavage product, both containing the amino-terminal murine leukemia virus gag gene proteins p15 and p12. In contrast to gene products of many previously described mammalian transforming viruses, 3611-MSV-encoded polyproteins lack detectable protein kinase activity, and 3611-MSV-transformed cells resemble chemically transformed cell line C3H/MCA-5, from which 3611-MuLV was originally derived, in that they do not exhibit elevated levels of phosphotyrosine. By using molecular hybridization the 3611-MSV transforming gene was found to be distinct from previously described mammalian cellular oncogenic sequences, including c-ras, c-abl, c-fes, c-fms, c-sis, and c-mos.
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PMID:New mammalian transforming retrovirus: demonstration of a polyprotein gene product. 630 Apr 62

To examine the expression of the cellular homolog of the Abelson murine leukemia virus transforming gene (the v-abl sequence), a DNA probe representing the v-abl sequence was prepared. The probe detected two cytoplasmic polyadenylic acid-containing c-abl RNAs of about 6.5 and 5.5 kilobases in a variety of rodent cells, and slightly larger RNAs were detected in human cells. These two RNA species were found in all normal tissues or cell lines examined, but at differing concentrations: liver cells had the least, fibroblastic cell lines had the most. By using a probe able to detect the cellular but not the viral gene, the two RNAs were shown to be present in Abelson murine leukemia virus-transformed cells at levels found either in their untransformed counterparts or in similar cell types transformed by other means. The target cells of the virus have a somewhat elevated level of the two RNAs although expression of the c-abl gene is not restricted to these cells. The v-abl sequence lacks 0.35 and 0.85 kilobases of the c-abl RNA on the 5' and 3' ends, respectively. Thus, the Abelson murine leukemia virus transforming gene is an internal fragment of the transcript of a normal cellular gene.
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PMID:Cellular RNA homologous to the Abelson murine leukemia virus transforming gene: expression and relationship to the viral sequence. 630 46

Structural rearrangements of specific cellular sequences (c-onc genes) homologous to acute transforming retrovirus oncogenes (v-onc genes) have been recently described in various malignancies. Here we show that human cellular sequences (c-abl) homologous to the transforming sequences of the mouse Abelson leukemia virus (v-abl) are amplified some 4- to 8-fold in K-562, a Philadelphia chromosome-positive cell line derived from a patient with chronic myelogenous leukemia in blast crisis. Restriction analysis of K-562 and other human DNA samples reveals a significant rearrangements of the c-abl sequences in this cell line. In addition, investigation of v-abl-related cytoplasmic RNA reveals relatively high levels of these sequences in K-562 compared to other normal and leukemia cells. We have also observed that lambda light chain constant region immunoglobulin genes are amplified in K-562, whereas kappa light chain sequences exhibit no amplification. These results are discussed within the context of the possibility that these Philadelphia chromosome-positive cells exhibit a reciprocal translocation involving chromosome 9 (containing c-abl) and chromosome 22 (containing the lambda light chain genes).
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PMID:Rearrangement and amplification of c-abl sequences in the human chronic myelogenous leukemia cell line K-562. 630 52

Non-random tumour-specific chromosomal abnormalities have been observed in cells of many different human tumours. In Wilms' tumour (WT) and retinoblastoma, a chromosomal deletion occurs germinally or somatically and has been considered an important step in tumour development. One class of potential cellular transforming genes comprises the cellular homologues of the transforming genes of highly oncogenic retroviruses. A remarkable concordance between the chromosomal location of human cellular oncogenes and the breakpoints involved in acquired chromosomal translocations is becoming apparent in various cancers: the oncogenes c-mos, c-myc and c-abl are located at the breakpoints that occur in acute myeloblastic leukaemia, Burkitt's lymphoma and chronic myelocytic leukaemia respectively. Thus when the oncogene c-Ha-ras1 was localized to the short arm of human chromosome 11 (refs 6-8; region 11p11 leads to p15 and not 11p13 as stated in ref. 5), it was proposed as a possible aetiological agent in the aniridia-WT association (AWTA) that results from a deletion of 11p13 (although a transforming gene recently isolated from a WT cell line (G401) was shown not to be homologous to either c-Ha-ras or c-Ki-ras9). We have now looked for deletion or rearrangement of c-Ha-ras1 in the DNA from four subjects with del(11p13)-associated predisposition to Wilms' tumour, aniridia, genitourinary abnormalities and mental retardation. We report here that in no case is c-Ha-ras1 deleted, and we have further refined its location to 11p15.1 leads to 11p15.5. On the basis of enzyme studies and direct gene dosage determination for c-Ha-ras1 and beta-globin in neoplastic and non-neoplastic tissues from one patient, we conclude that deletion of the normal counterpart of 11p cannot account for the development of the tumour.
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PMID:c-Ha-ras1 is not deleted in aniridia-Wilms' tumour association. 631 28


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