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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have isolated, from a human tumor cDNA library, a gene encoding a putative receptor-like protein-tyrosine kinase that we call TK14. The amino acid sequence of the TK14 protein is closely related to the available partial sequence of the mouse protein bek, and more distantly related to the sequences of a chicken basic fibroblast growth factor receptor (73% sequence homology) and the apparent human equivalent of this receptor, the FLG protein (encoded by the fms-like tyrosine kinase gene). Overexpression of the TK14 protein by transfection of COS-1 cells with the corresponding cDNA in a simian virus 40-based expression vector leads to the appearance of new cell-surface binding sites for both acidic and basic fibroblast growth factors. This has been demonstrated by specific binding assays and chemical cross-linking experiments using 125I-labeled growth factors. It appears, therefore, that the human genome contains at least two distinct genes, for TK14 and FLG, that code for related fibroblast growth factor receptors.
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PMID:Related fibroblast growth factor receptor genes exist in the human genome. 217 78

The c-fgr gene is a member of the tyrosine kinase family of proto-oncogenes and is expressed exclusively in hemopoietic cells. We found that c-fgr was expressed at high levels in a limited subset of murine monocyte/macrophage tumors that were induced by the c-myc oncogene, in cells representing late stages of monocyte differentiation. A cDNA clone was isolated from a library made from a monocyte tumor cell lines using a human c-fgr and v-fgr probe. The composite nucleotide and predicted amino acid sequence of the cDNA indicates that it represents the complete coding sequence for the murine c-fgr gene. Comparison of the N-terminal human and mouse c-fgr amino acid sequences indicates regions of identity that are not homologous to other tyrosine kinases. Interestingly, these regions share a limited but significant homology to two viral proteins, adenovirus E1b and HIV nef. In addition, there are other regions of homology that are shared by several tyrosine kinases and other non-kinase proteins which may be important for subcellular localization.
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PMID:Molecular cloning and sequencing of the murine c-fgr gene. 217 17

CML has provided a model for the genetic basis of human neoplasia. Since 1960 with the discovery of the Ph chromosome, study of this disease has provided a conceptual basis for viewing cancer as a clonal disorder occurring at the stem cell level and associated with intrinsic genetic defects which contribute to abnormal growth regulation. Although several oncogenes have been identified through the study of tumor-producing retroviruses in animals, discovery of the BCR/ABL translocation, the altered 8.5 kb BCR/ABL transcript, and the hybrid BCR/ABL P210 protein with enhanced tyrosine kinase activity has provided one of the first examples of a human neoplasm in which structural alterations in a normal cellular gene might lead to malignant transformation. However, it is likely that P210 is necessary but not sufficient for the full spectrum of malignant behavior observed in this disease. Investigation of the molecular events that are associated with the additional cytogenetic abnormalities of blast phase will most likely reveal alterations of other important growth regulatory genes which contribute to the multistep nature of malignant transformation in CML.
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PMID:Chronic myelogenous leukemia as a model for the genetic basis of cancer. 218 95

The transforming activity of the human fyn protein, p59fyn, which is a kinase of the src family, was investigated by testing the effect of recombinant avian retrovirus (Fyn virus) expressing p59fyn on chickens or cultured chicken embryo fibroblast (CEF) cells. The Fyn virus did not induce transformed foci. After several passages of the virus stock on CEF cells, however, a few foci were detected in the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide. Chickens inoculated with Fyn virus at the stage of 12-day-old embryos developed fibrosarcomas 3 to 6 weeks after hatching. The viruses obtained from these foci and from one of the tumor tissues showed high transforming activity in the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide, suggesting that these viruses carry spontaneous mutations of the fyn gene. Four fyn genes from CEF DNAs infected with transforming viruses were molecularly cloned, and their products were confirmed to possess transforming activity. DNA sequence analysis of the fyn genes showed that two of the four mutants have Thr instead of Ile at position 338 in the kinase domain. The other two mutants carry deletions of 78 and 108 base pairs, respectively, which result in complete loss of region C of SH2. The overall level of proteins containing phosphotyrosine was significantly higher in transformed cells than in normal CEF cells. Our data indicate that when expressed at high levels in a retrovirus, normal p59fyn cannot cause cellular transformation, but that mutant p59fyn with either a single amino acid substitution in the kinase domain or a deletion including region C produces a transforming protein, perhaps due to enhanced tyrosine kinase activity. This is the first observation that deletion of region C can unmask the potential transforming activity of a src family kinase.
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PMID:Transformation of chicken embryo fibroblast cells by avian retroviruses containing the human Fyn gene and its mutated genes. 218 8

The expression of the ret proto-oncogene (proto-ret), which possibly encodes two isoforms of a receptor-type tyrosine kinase, was examined in human tumor cell lines. Expression of the proto-ret mRNA was detected in all 11 neuroblastoma cell lines examined. The level of mRNA varied more than 100-fold in these neuroblastoma cell lines and was particularly high in three of them. On the other hand, 19 non-neuroblastoma tumor cell lines derived from solid tumors and a human diploid fibroblast cell line did not express any detectable levels of proto-ret mRNA. No remarkable amplification of the proto-ret or gross structural changes in the coding region were found in these neuroblastoma cell lines. The specific expression of the proto-ret in neuroblastomas suggests that the proto-ret product may have a role in cellular functions specific to neuroblastoma cells.
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PMID:Specific expression of the ret proto-oncogene in human neuroblastoma cell lines. 221 55

The growth of breast cancer cells is under the regulation of hormones, growth factors, and their receptors. In the present study, we have employed a new, sensitive, and specific radioimmunoassay for the direct measurement of insulin receptors in surgical specimens of breast cancers. In 159 specimens the insulin receptor content was 6.15 +/- 3.69 ng/0.1 mg protein. This value was more than sixfold higher than the mean value found in both 27 normal breast tissues obtained at total mastectomy (0.95 + 0.68, P less than 0.001) and in six normal specimens obtained from reduction mammoplasty (0.84 +/- 0.78, P less than 0.001). The insulin receptor content in breast cancer tissues was also higher than in any normal tissue investigated including liver (Pezzino, V., V. Papa, V. Trischitta, A. Brunetti, P.A. Goodman, M.K. Treutelaar, J.A. Williams, B.A. Maddux, R. Vigneri, and I.D. Goldfine, 1989. Am. J. Physiol. 257:E451-457). The insulin receptor in breast cancer retained its ability to both bind insulin and undergo insulin-induced tyrosine kinase activation. Immunostaining of the specimens revealed that the insulin receptor was present in malignant epithelial cells, but was not detected in stromal and inflammatory cells. Univariant analysis revealed that the insulin receptor content of the tumors correlated positively with tumor size (P = 0.014), histological grading (P = 0.030), and the estrogen receptor content (P = 0.035). There were no significant correlations between insulin receptor content and the age, body weight, menopausal status, and nodal involvement of the patients. These studies indicate, therefore, that the insulin receptor content is increased in breast cancers and raise the possibility that the insulin receptor may have a role in the biology of these tumors.
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PMID:Elevated insulin receptor content in human breast cancer. 224 27

Tyrosine phosphorylation is important in the transmission of growth and differentiation signals; known tyrosine kinases include several oncoproteins and growth factor receptors. Interestingly, some differentiated cell types, such as erythrocytes and platelets contain high amounts of phosphotyrosine. We analyzed tyrosine kinases expressed in the K-562 chronic myelogenous leukemia cell line, which has a bipotential erythroid and megakaryoblastoid differentiation capacity. Analysis of 359 polymerase chain reaction-amplified cDNA clones led to the identification of 14 different tyrosine kinase-related sequences (JTK1-14). Two of the clones (JTK2 and JTK4) represent unusual members of the fibroblast growth factor receptor gene family, and the clones JTK5, JTK11, and JTK14 may also belong to the family of receptor tyrosine kinases but lack a close relationship to any known tyrosine kinase. Each of these different genes has its own characteristic expression pattern in K-562 cells and several other human tumor cell lines. In addition, the JTK11 and JTK14 mRNAs are induced during the megakaryoblastoid differentiation of K-562 cells. These tyrosine kinases may have a role in the differentiation of megakaryoblasts or in the physiology of platelets.
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PMID:Putative tyrosine kinases expressed in K-562 human leukemia cells. 224 64

The presence of Philadelphia chromosome t(9:22) is a hallmark of 95% of clinical cases of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) as well as 20% of adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) and 5% of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The product of t(9;22) is a fusion protein BCR-ABL. The fusion proteins of CML, ALL and AML have increased tyrosine kinase activity and show a transforming potential in vitro and in animal models. The shorter p190 protein is associated almost only with ALL and AML, while the protein p210 is present in both chronic phase and blast crisis of CML and also in 50% of Philadelphia-positive (Ph1+) ALL. In CML the transition from chronic phase to blast crisis is usually accompanied by additional genetic events, e.g. additional chromosomal abnormalities, and oncogene activation(s). The detailed understanding of molecular basis of CML, and Ph1+ ALL and AML provides highly sensitive molecular and serological methods to complement classical cytogenetics. The advantages and limitations of these techniques are described and discussed below.
Tumour Biol 1990
PMID:Molecular pathology of chronic myelogenous leukemia. 224 53

The epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor, a tyrosine kinase which mediates the mitogenic and tumorigenic action of EGF on epithelial cells and fibroblasts, is a target for the regulatory action of other growth-modulating agents. We have identified at least three mechanisms by which heterologous agents such as tumor promoters regulate the EGF receptor: modulation of receptor binding or kinase activity through phosphorylation, down regulation of the receptor through internalization, and enhanced receptor synthesis through transcriptional activation. Both calcium- and sodium-dependent signaling pathways play a role in one or more of these processes.
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PMID:Regulation of the epidermal growth factor receptor by growth-modulating agents. 228 99

TGF alpha is one member of a family of soluble growth factors that are derived from integral-membrane precursors. The mature form of TGF alpha is released from its transmembrane precursor (proTGF alpha) by a protease that, in many tumor cells, is inefficient or limiting. We have previously established that, in the absence of processing, membrane-anchored proTGF alpha is biologically active and can interact with the EGF receptor on adjacent cells, thereby inducing the receptor's intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity. We further showed that this interaction leads to immediate downstream signal transduction as evidenced by Ca2+ mobilization. To extend these observations, and to investigate its transforming potential, we infected normal rat kidney (NRK) cells with retroviral expression vectors that encode mutated forms of proTGF alpha containing amino acid substitutions at the proteolytic cleavage sites. NRK cells harboring these mutant constructs do not secrete mature growth factor, but do express biologically active proTGF alpha on the cell surface as shown by their ability to induce the autophosphorylation of EGF receptor on neighboring A431 cells in co-culture. Expression of the mutant proTGF alpha molecules promoted the anchorage-independent growth of NRK cells in soft agar, and caused them to be tumorigenic when injected into nude mice. These results demonstrate that an interaction between EGF receptor and the integral membrane precursor to TGF alpha can provide a mitogenic stimulus that leads to transformation. They further suggest that the accumulation of proTGF alpha on the surface of some transformed cells has physiological relevance.
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PMID:Expression of the TGF alpha integral membrane precursor induces transformation of NRK cells. 239 25


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