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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (leukemia)
93,477 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recently we described the establishment in culture and the immunophenotypic and functional characteristics of a human T-leukemia line TALL-103/2 derived from the T-cell receptor (TCR)-gamma/delta subset of T-lymphocytes. TALL-103/2 cells are absolutely dependent on interleukin 2 (IL-2) for their growth and survival in culture and thus provide a model cell line for studies of IL-2 signal transduction in a TCR-gamma/delta T-cell. In this report, we focus on the regulation of SRC-family protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) by IL-2. TALL-103/2 cells were found to contain p56-LCK, p59-FYN, p62-YES and p53/56-LYN. Stimulation of growth factor-deprived TALL-103/2 cells with IL-2, however, induced increases in the relative activity only of the p56-LCK kinase. This IL-2-mediated increase in LCK kinase activity was manifested both by increased kinase autophosphorylation and by increased phosphorylation of the exogenous substrate enolase during in vitro kinase assays. Furthermore, immunoblot assays determined that the levels of p56-LCK protein were unaltered by IL-2-treatment, indicating that the measured elevations in LCK kinase activity reflected an increase in the specific activity of this PTK. In TALL-103/2 cells, IL-2 stimulated concentration-dependent increases in p56-LCK activity that displayed rapid and transient kinetics: detectable increases occurred within 1 minute after IL-2 stimulation, peaked at 10 minutes, and declined to baseline levels by 30 minutes. Treatment of TALL-103/2 cells with IL-4 abrogated IL-2-initiated proliferation, but did not inhibit IL-2-mediated activation of p56-LCK.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Interleukin 4 inhibits IL-2-induced proliferation of a human T-leukemia cell line without interfering with p56-LCK kinase activation. 142 Sep 98

The BCL-2 (B-cell lymphoma/leukemia-2) gene is frequently involved in t(14;18) translocations in non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and encodes a 26-kDa intracellular, membrane-associated protein. Expression of the BCL-2 gene has previously been correlated with cellular proliferation in normal and neoplastic lymphoid cells under a variety of experimental conditions. To examine the regulation of p26-BCL-2 protein levels during the cell cycle, we utilized the method of counterflow centrifugal elutriation to enrich for cells in various phases of the cell cycle. Relative levels of p26-BCL-2 protein were measured by immunoblotting, and comparisons were made with a cell cycle-regulated protein, p62-CYCLIN-A, and a protein whose levels are constant throughout the cell cycle, p36-PCNA (DNA polymerase-delta auxiliary factor). Relative levels of p26-BCL-2 and p36-PCNA did not vary among cell fractions enriched for specific phases of the cell cycle, whereas p62-CYCLIN-A was elevated in late S- and G2/M-phase cells. Similar results were obtained with lymphoma and leukemia cell lines that have either normal or translocated BCL-2 genes. These results obtained by elutriation were confirmed by pharmacologically inducing cell cycle arrest in proliferating lymphoid cell lines with hydroxyurea, quercetin, and nocodazole which blocked cells at S, G2, and M phases, respectively. Taken together, the data indicate that p26-BCL-2 is not a true cell cycle-regulated protein, although its levels can fluctuate in connection with changes in rates of cellular proliferation under some circumstances.
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PMID:Cell cycle analysis of p26-BCL-2 protein levels in proliferating lymphoma and leukemia cell lines. 158 93

Unlike many other growth factor receptors, the known subunits of the receptors for the Interleukins IL-2 and IL-3 lack intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity, and yet increases in the phosphorylation of proteins on tyrosines is a rapid event in hematolymphoid cells following stimulation with these lymphokines. Here we show that IL-2 and IL-3 regulate the activity of specific members of the SRC-family of non-receptor protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs). In IL-2-dependent T-cell lines, IL-2 induced rapid and transient increases in the activity of the p56-LCK kinase without influencing the activities of other SRC-like PTKs (p59-FYN, p62-YES) in these T-lymphocytes. In contrast to IL-2's effects on p56-LCK in T-cells, studies of an IL-2-responsive cell line of the B-cell lineage that lacks p56-LCK revealed that IL-2 specifically regulates the activity of the p53/56-LYN kinase. Thus, some flexibility exists in the ability of various SRC-like PTKs to functionally couple to IL-2 signalling pathways. In several IL-3-dependent myeloid-committed leukemic cell lines, IL-3 was found to specifically regulate the activity of the p53/56-LYN kinase without affecting the activities of other SRC-like PTKs (p59/64-HCK, p59-FYN, p62-YES) in these hematopoietic cells. This finding that p53/56-LYN can be regulated by both IL-2 in B-lineage cells and IL-3 in myeloid-committed cells demonstrates that the same SRC-family PTK can participate in signal transduction events mediated via two independent receptor systems. Taken together, our findings imply that the specific combinations of lymphokine receptors and SRC-like PTKs available for coupling with those receptors are coordinately controlled during the differentiation of hematopoietic cells.
Leukemia 1992
PMID:Regulation of SRC-family protein tyrosine kinases by interleukins, IL-2, and IL-3. 160 36

The antibody response in cats to feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) reverse transcriptase (RT) was followed for 3 years. Eight of the nine cats used in this study produced reverse transcriptase-inhibiting (RTI) antibodies. Relative inhibitory means of 2.9%, 18.4%, 33%, and 47% were found 6, 12, 24, and 36 months, respectively, after infection with FIV. The enzyme activity was suppressed by greater than or equal to 78% with the use of 100 micrograms of FIV-associated IgG. The RTI antibodies were FIV-specific, as they did not inhibit other mammalian retroviral polymerases, including feline leukemia virus RT. An RT-inhibition assay with sera in the presence of protein A and immunoblot analysis showed that antibody binding to FIV RT protein p62 is independent of antibody ability to block enzyme activity. Viral RT released by detergent-treated virus was stable for more than 6 weeks at 4 degrees C, whereas its activity was reduced by 50% after 2 weeks at 37 degrees C. Because significant concentrations of RTI antibodies are detected only at 1 to 2 years after infection, they can be used to determine the approximate time of virus infection and as a marker for disease progression.
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PMID:Antibody response to reverse transcriptase in cats infected with feline immunodeficiency virus. 172 99

In chicken cells, we previously identified a set of proteins (p58-64) structurally related to, but distinct from, the products encoded by the c-ets proto-oncogene. We report here the isolation and nucleotide sequence of a cDNA encoding nuclear products of mol. wt 58, 60, 62 and 64 kd, indistinguishable from those detected in chicken cells. The p60 and p64 species appear to represent phosphorylated versions on serine and threonine residues of p58 and p62. The homology of p58-64 to other ets-related proteins, including the v-ets encoded domain of the transforming protein of avian leukemia virus E26 and p54c-ets, the translation product of the chicken (Ck) c-ets gene, is confined to two regions of 175 and 96 amino acid residues localized respectively at the carboxy-terminal domain and close to the amino-terminal domain of these molecules. This cDNA corresponds to a gene localized in a locus distinct from that of c-ets which is transcribed as a 4.0-kb RNA species in most chicken tissues. We also identified the human (Hu) c-ets-2-encoded products as two proteins of 60 and 62 kd, highly related to chicken p58-64. This, together with the fact that the amino acid sequence of the cDNA encoding p58-64 is 95% identical to the reported partial sequence of a Hu-c-ets-2 cDNA, indicates that p58-64 are the translation products of the Ck-c-ets-2 gene.
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PMID:Identification in chickens of an evolutionarily conserved cellular ets-2 gene (c-ets-2) encoding nuclear proteins related to the products of the c-ets proto-oncogene. 329 99

Using an antiserum to a bacterially expressed polypeptide corresponding to 56 amino acids of v-ets, we previously identified in chicken tissues a protein of 54 kd (p54c-ets) which shares extensive sequence homology to the v-ets-encoded domain of the E26-transforming protein p135gag-myb-ets and is thus apparently encoded by the c-ets proto-oncogene. We report here that the anti-ets serum specifically identifies in chicken cells a second set of proteins of 60 kd (p60), 62 kd (p62) and 64 kd (p64) which appear to be highly related to each other but display only a limited domain of homology with p54c-ets and p135gag-myb-ets and are thus probably encoded by a gene(s) partially related to, but different from c-ets. In contrast to p54c-ets which is expressed at high levels in chicken lymphoid tissues, prominent syntheses of p62 and p64 were found in both normal and transformed chicken macrophages but not in avian cells corresponding to immature stages of the myeloid differentiation pathway. These observations together with the fact that differentiation of avian myeloblastosis virus-transformed myeloblasts into macrophage-like cells after treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate is accompanied by the synthesis of p62 and p64 suggest a role for these proteins in chicken macrophage differentiation or function. Induction of differentiation of human leukemia cell lines HL60 and U937 into macrophages is also accompanied by the increased synthesis of c-ets-encoded 68 kd, 62 kd and 58 kd proteins.
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PMID:Identification in chicken macrophages of a set of proteins related to, but distinct from, the chicken cellular c-ets-encoded protein p54c-ets. 353 86

An aberrantly expressed and highly active abl tyrosine kinase (p210bcr-abl) appears critical for the development and pathogenesis of chronic myelogenous-leukemia (CML). CML cells and cell lines each displayed a similar spectrum of phosphotyrosyl proteins. Analysis of these proteins by glycerol-gradient ultracentrifugation showed that many apparently existed as multimeric complexes. Confirming this, several of these proteins co-immunoprecipitated, along with the p210bcr-abl, with antibody to abl. Included were co-precipitating proteins identified as the p120 ras GTPase-activating protein (GAP) and the p62 protein that binds both to GAP and to a number of other tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins having peptide regions homologous to the second domain of src. Because p62, ras GAP and ras are involved in growth-factor and oncogene activation of cells, this pathway may also play an important role in CML.
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PMID:Tyrosine phosphorylated proteins in chronic myelogenous leukemia. 750 42

Leukemias induced with the v-abl or BCR/ABL oncogene undergo a process of tumor progression which suggests that the ABL oncogene is required but not sufficient for full transformation. In order to identify cellular changes that correlate with progression to full transformation in v-abl transformed lymphoblasts Abelson virus (A-MuLV)-infected murine bone marrow was plated over a pre-established stromal feeder layer. Shortly after A-MuLV infection, transformed lymphoblasts were poorly oncogenic, but over time, progressed in a stepwide manner to a more oncogenic state. The transformants first acquired the ability to grow efficiently in agar, but only over the feeder layer. They next progressed to efficient feeder-independent growth in liquid culture, and then to efficient feeder-independent growth in soft agar. Cell lines that reached the advanced stage of feeder-independent agar growth showed increased detection by antiphosphotyrosine Western blot of the GAP-associated p62 phosphoprotein as well as of a 55 kDa phosphoprotein while detection of the P160 v-abl phosphoprotein remained constant throughout all stages of progression. Although the identity of the p55 phosphoprotein and the mechanism by which detection of p55 and p62 phosphoproteins change on the Western blots during tumor progression are unknown, the data demonstrate that these changes strongly correlate with the stage of progression of v-abl-transformed cells and raise the possibility that these changes may play a role in tumor progression in this model.
Leukemia 1995 Jan
PMID:Increased detection of specific tyrosine phosphoproteins correlates with tumor progression of Abelson virus-infected lymphocytes. 784 13

Ph+ chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is associated with the reciprocal translocation between chromosomes 9 and 22 culminating in the production of the chimeric p210bcr/abl protein possessing elevated protein tyrosine kinase activity relative to the normal c-abl tyrosine kinase. Our recent studies have revealed subtle differences in the growth, phenotypic and morphologic characteristics of subpopulations of primary lin- Ph+ chronic phase CML blasts and comparable primary normal blasts. In an attempt to correlate these biologic abnormalities and the presence of the p210bcr/abl protein, we initiated studies to identify differences in proteins constitutively phosphorylated on tyrosine in whole cell lysates of comparable primary early blast subpopulations derived from normal and Ph+ chronic phase CML marrows. Immunoblotting with anti-P-tyr Abs demonstrated a prominent 62 kDa phosphotyrosyl protein (pp62) constitutively present in 11/11 Ph+ chronic phase linblasts while being virtually undetectable in equivalent amounts of protein derived from 15/15 and 2/2 comparable normal and Ph-negative chronic phase blast populations, respectively. Immunoblotting with an Ab reportedly specific for the ras GTPase activating protein (GAP) associated p62 protein revealed that the pp62 present in CML blasts is not immunologically related to the former protein. Although the identity of the pp62 is presently not known, its prominent presence in chronic phase CML blasts, in which the only known molecular abnormality is putatively the p210bcr/abl protein, strongly suggests that it may be a critical p210bcr/abl substrate involved in an early stage of expansion of the Ph+ clone.
Leukemia 1994 Apr
PMID:A 62-kilodalton tyrosine phosphoprotein constitutively present in primary chronic phase chronic myelogenous leukemia enriched lineage negative blast populations. 815 67

Constitutive activation of BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase fusion protein has been shown to be an essential step in the pathogenesis of Philadelphia chromosome (Ph)-positive leukemias. We studied the tyrosine phosphorylated proteins which might be involved in the signaling pathway p185BCR-ABL using a Ph-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia cell line. p185BCR-ABL but not p145c-abl was constitutively phosphorylated on tyrosine in this cell line. p21ras GTPase-activating protein (GAP) was physically associated with p185BCR-ABL, but not with p145c-abl, and GAP-associated proteins p62/p190 were found to be tyrosine-phosphorylated. Furthermore, p185BCR-ABL was also physically associated with phospholipase C-gamma 1 (PLC-gamma) and phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase (P13-kinase). Concomitantly, both PLC-gamma and p85 subunit of P13-kinase are tyrosine-phosphorylated in the cells with p185BCR-ABL. These data suggest that GAP, GAP-associated proteins, PLC-gamma, and P13-kinase may participate in downstream signaling for p185BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase.
Leukemia 1994 Jan
PMID:Potential molecules implicated in downstream signaling pathways of p185BCR-ABL in Ph+ ALL involve GTPase-activating protein, phospholipase C-gamma 1, and phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase. 828 76


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