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Query: UMLS:C1261473 (
sarcoma
)
25,952
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A set of genes is rapidly inducible when quiescent fibroblasts are stimulated by growth factors or by the activation of temperature-sensitive retroviral protein-tyrosine kinases. Most of these so-called immediate-early genes were cloned by differential cDNA hybridization. DNA sequence analysis identified many of them as putative members of the growth factor or of the transcription factor gene family, suggesting a role in signal transmission during the G0-to-G1 transition. In this study, we identified one of the genes that are rapidly inducible by the retroviral protein-tyrosine kinases v-Src and v-Fps of
Rous sarcoma
virus and Fujinami
sarcoma
virus, respectively, as the rhoB gene, a member of the ras gene superfamily whose products are GTP-binding proteins, rhoB is transiently activated at the transcriptional level by v-Fps and by epidermal growth factor. Its labile RNA is inducible in the presence of cycloheximide but not of actinomycin D. rhoB is strongly induced by epidermal growth factor and by platelet-derived growth factor both in subconfluent, serum-starved and in density-arrested Rat-2 fibroblasts. Fetal calf serum is a poor inducer, particularly in density-arrested cells, and phorbol esters do not increase rhoB expression at all. These data suggest that rhoB is inducible by protein-tyrosine kinases through a pathway not involving the activation of protein kinase C. Neither the closely related rhoC and rhoA genes nor the distantly related c-H-ras gene is rapidly inducible by mitogens. Thus, rhoB is the first known member of the small GTP-binding proteins among the immediate-early genes.
...
PMID:The ras-related gene rhoB is an immediate-early gene inducible by v-Fps, epidermal growth factor, and platelet-derived growth factor in rat fibroblasts. 171 Jul 70
The stimulation of quiescent murine fibroblasts by growth factors and by phorbol esters results in a rapid and transient transcriptional activation of a large group of so-called immediate early genes. Several such genes were found to be induced in chicken embryo fibroblasts following activation of a temperature sensitive (ts)
Rous sarcoma
virus v-src mutant following temperature shift (Simmons et al., 1989). In contrast, the classical immediate early genes c-myc, c-fos and c-jun were essentially uninducible upon activation of a ts v-src mutant in rat-1 fibroblasts (Welham et al., 1990). We have cloned 9 cDNAs of genes that are rapidly and transiently inducible in rat fibroblasts by ts v-src mutants, and by a ts Fujinami
sarcoma
virus v-fps mutant. Six of these cDNAs are derived from the known immediate early genes NGFI-A, KC, c-fos, tissue factor, PC4 and ornithine decarboxylase; the other three cDNAs have not been described before. These 9 genes showed individual profiles of inducibility by fetal calf serum, epidermal growth factor (EGF) and by phorbol esters. Their response to the retroviral oncogenic protein-tyrosine kinases correlated best with the one to EGF, suggesting a common pathway of signal transduction. c-fos did not respond strongly to this pathway but was well induced by fetal calf serum. NGFI-A, however, was induced to a similar extent by all activators tested. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the induction of several of these genes by the retroviral oncogenic protein-tyrosine kinases is rapid, direct and occurs at the transcriptional level.
...
PMID:The stimulation of quiescent rat fibroblasts by v-src and v-fps oncogenic protein-tyrosine kinases leads to the induction of a subset of immediate early genes. 186 68
A potential substrate of p60v-src in
Rous sarcoma
virus-transformed cells was found to be a 130-kilodalton (kDa) glycoprotein which binds to lectin-Sepharose and can be immunoprecipitated by an anti-phosphotyrosine antibody. This glycoprotein was shown to be distinct from the fibronectin receptor and a cellular protein phosphorylated in p60v-src immune complexes. The protein was a transmembrane protein localized in the plasma membrane and resistant to extraction with Triton X-100. The 130-kDa protein was also highly phosphorylated in cells transformed by Fujinami
sarcoma
virus or Y73 but not in cells infected with
Rous sarcoma
virus mutants that encode p60v-src lacking myristoylated N termini. Phosphorylation of this glycoprotein was temperature dependent in cells infected with temperature-sensitive mutants. The good correlation between its phosphorylation and morphological transformation, together with its relative abundance among phosphorylated proteins and its subcellular localization, suggests that phosphorylation of the 130-kDa glycoprotein is one of the primary events important for cell transformation by p60v-src and related oncogene products.
...
PMID:A glycoprotein in the plasma membrane matrix as a major potential substrate of p60v-src. 215 25
We have previously found that sarcomas localized to visceral organs frequently arise following wing web inoculation of
Rous sarcoma
virus. This observation prompted an investigation of whether visceral sarcomas are also inducible by wing web inoculation of a subgenomic viral DNA fragment (v-src DNA) that includes v-src but lacks genes encoding viral structural protein. For this analysis, line SC chickens were inoculated with v-src DNA at 1-2 days posthatch and monitored for 9 weeks. Ninety percent of the chickens developed wing web (primary) tumors at the site of inoculation and, of these, about 30% exhibited visceral tumors. All tumors were histologically identifiable as sarcomas, and both the primary and visceral
sarcoma
cells were specifically reactive with two monoclonal antibodies elicited to different peptide fragments of pp60v-src. In a separate set of experiments, visceral sarcomas were also observed in about half of the line SC chickens that had been inoculated intravenously with v-src DNA. These results indicate that exogenous progeny virus production is not required for v-src-induced, visceral
sarcoma
formation. In addition, they demonstrate that intravenous inoculation of v-src DNA is a means to achieve rapid and widespread, disseminated
sarcoma
growth.
...
PMID:Wing web or intravenous inoculation of chickens with v-src DNA induces visceral sarcomas. 215 15
The PC12 pheochromocytoma cell line has been a favorite model system for cell and neurobiologists, but has proven relatively refractory to standard DNA transfection methods. We have found that the cationic lipid "lipofectin" provides a simple, gentle, and nontoxic procedure that vastly improves transfection efficiencies in PC12 cells. Transient expression of chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) driven by a
Rous sarcoma
virus long terminal repeat (LTR) is much more efficient using lipofectin when compared with calcium phosphate as a transfection procedure. Additionally, transient transfection of nerve growth factor (NGF)-differentiated PC12 cells proceeds with equal efficiency relative to naive, uninduced cells. Using the lipofectin procedure, the frequency of stable transfection is 100-fold higher than that reported with standard calcium phosphate precipitation protocols. To examine the effectiveness of different promoters for efficient expression of heterologous DNA in PC12 cells, three different promoter-bearing constructs were utilized. Each construct contains a different promoter sequence upstream from a chicken calsequestrin cDNA. A human cytomegalovirus (CMV) immediate early promoter construct produced the highest level of expression, followed by a human beta-actin promoter construct. Expression from a mouse Moloney
sarcoma
virus LTR construct could not be detected. These results overcome the previous transfection problems of low efficiency and low viability that have plagued many PC12 cell investigations.
...
PMID:Efficient transfection and expression of heterologous genes in PC12 cells. 218 80
Rous sarcoma
virus-transformed BHK cells (RSV/B4-BHK) adhere to a fibronectin-coated substratum primarily at specific dot-shaped sites. Such sites contain actin and vinculin and represent close contacts with the substratum as revealed by interference reflection microscopy. Only a few adhesion plaques and actin filament bundles can be detected in these cells as compared to untransformed parental fibroblasts. In thin sections examined with transmission electron microscopy (TEM) these adhesion sites correspond to short protrusions of the ventral cell surface that contact the substratum at their apical portion. These structures, which may represent cellular feet, are therefore called podosomes. By screening a number of different transformed fibroblasts plated on a fibronectin-coated substratum we find that podosomes are common to mammalian and avian cell lines transformed either by
Rous sarcoma
virus (RSV) or by Fujinami avian sarcoma virus (FSV), whose oncogenes encode specific tyrosine kinases. Using antibodies reacting with phosphotyrosine in immunofluorescence experiments, we show that phosphotyrosine-containing molecules are concentrated in podosomes. Podosomes are not detected in fibroblasts transformed by other retroviruses (Snyder-Theilen
sarcoma
virus, Abelson leukemia virus and Kirsten
sarcoma
virus) or by DNA tumor viruses (polyoma, SV40), indicating that podosome-mediated adhesion in transformed fibroblasts is related to the peculiar properties of some oncoproteins and possibly to their tropism for adhesion systems. Podosomes and adhesion plaques, although similar in cytoskeletal protein composition, have different mechanisms and kinetics of formation. Assembly of podosomes, in fact (i) does not require fetal calf serum (FCS) in the adhesion medium, that is necessary for the organization of adhesion plaques; (ii) does not require protein synthesis; and (iii) is insensitive to the ionophore monensin, that prevents adhesion plaque formation. Moreover, during attachment to fibronectin-coated dishes, podosomes appear in the initial phase (60 min) of attachment, while adhesion plaques require a minimum of 180 min. In conclusion podosomes of RSV- and FSV-transformed fibroblasts represent a phenotypic variant of adhesion structures.
...
PMID:Rous sarcoma virus-transformed fibroblasts adhere primarily at discrete protrusions of the ventral membrane called podosomes. 241 76
For direct identification of phosphotyrosine-containing proteins in lysates of various cells, phosphotyrosine (P-Tyr) was coupled to carrier proteins and anti-P-Tyr antibodies were raised in rabbits and mice. The antibodies were highly specific for P-Tyr and did not cross-react with phosphoserine or phosphothreonine. The mean association constant of rabbit anti-P-Tyr antibody to N-acetyl-P-Tyr was about four times that of rabbit anti-azobenzene phosphonate antibody. In addition, anti-P-Tyr antibody scarcely cross-reacted with the 5'-monophosphate of ribosyladenine or the 5'-monophosphate of ribosylinosine, whereas anti-azobenzene phosphonate antibody cross-reacted appreciably with these compounds. Anti-P-Tyr antibody immunoprecipitated three oncogenic gene products from cells transformed with
Rous sarcoma
virus, Fujinami
sarcoma
virus, and Abelson murine leukemia virus, respectively. The immunoprecipitates with anti-P-Tyr antibody from cells transformed with these three retroviruses all manifested tyrosine kinase activity including activity for phosphorylations of oncogene products. In addition to the proteins reported previously, the following new phosphotyrosine-containing proteins were immunoprecipitated from the respective retrovirus-transformed cells by anti-P-Tyr antibody: Mr 230,000, 74,000, and 24,000 proteins (
Rous sarcoma
virus); Mr 230,000, 69,000, and 24,000 proteins (Fujinami
sarcoma
virus); and Mr 230,000, 62,000, and 54,000 proteins (Abelson murine leukemia virus).
...
PMID:Direct identification of phosphotyrosine-containing proteins in some retrovirus-transformed cells by use of anti-phosphotyrosine antibody. 241 36
The gag-onc fusion proteins of three isolates of feline sarcoma virus (ST-FeSV, GA-FeSV, TP1-FeSV) from a stable noncovalent complex with two cellular phosphoproteins, pp90 and pp50. These two phosphoproteins are the same phosphoproteins which have been shown to complex with the transforming proteins of
Rous sarcoma
virus, Fujinami
sarcoma
virus, Yamaguchi 73 virus (Lipsich et al., 1982), and PRCII avian sarcoma virus (Adkins et al., 1982). Both the monomeric and complex-associated gag-onc fusion proteins are phosphorylated on serine, threonine, and tyrosine; however, quantitative and/or qualitative differences in phosphorylation of the two species were apparent. Only the monomeric form of the gag-onc proteins was able to undergo tyrosine specific autophosphorylation in an in vitro kinase reaction. Both the monomeric and complex-associated forms of the proteins were acylated, the complex-associated molecules to a greater degree. Pulse-chase experiments indicated that newly synthesized gag-onc molecules become rapidly incorporated into the complex and that a significant amount of these molecules remained associated with the complex for more than 20 hr.
...
PMID:Characterization of the monomeric and complex-associated forms of the gag-onc fusion proteins of three isolates of feline sarcoma virus: phosphorylation, kinase activity, acylation, and kinetics of complex formation. 242 12
We assayed phosphatidylinositol (PI) kinase (EC 2.7.1.67) activity in detergent extracts of nontransformed or virus-transformed cells. Nontransformed chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEF) contain PI kinase activity with an apparent specific activity of 20 pmol/min per mg of protein. This activity sedimented as a single peak with a molecular weight of approximately 60,000 in a glycerol gradient, although immunoprecipitation with anti-p60src sera showed that the PI kinase activity is distinct from p60c-src. Extracts from CEF transformed by
Rous sarcoma
virus, Fujinami
sarcoma
virus, or avian sarcoma virus UR2 showed no elevation of PI kinase activity over nontransformed CEF. Removal of the oncogene products from extracts by immunoprecipitation did not change the level of PI kinase activity in extracts, suggesting that putative virus-coded PI kinases do not make a significant contribution to overall levels of PI kinase activity in transformed cells. Additionally, P140gag-fps was separated from cellular PI kinase by phosphocellulose chromatography. This partially purified fraction contained low PI kinase activity distinct from P140gag-fps, indicating that P140gag-fps has no detectable PI kinase activity.
...
PMID:Phosphatidylinositol kinase activity in virus-transformed and nontransformed cells. 242 80
The transmembrane potential of
Rous sarcoma
virus (RSV)-infected Rat-1 cells, expressing the pp60v-src protein kinase, is markedly less negative (by approximately 30 mV) than that of their normal counterparts. By contrast, the membrane potential of Rat-1 cells infected with Kirsten
sarcoma
virus is virtually unaltered. The RSV-induced membrane depolarization is shown to be due to a severalfold increase in the cation permeability ratio (PNa/PK) of the plasma membrane. When cells infected with a temperature-sensitive mutant of RSV (ts LA29), encoding a src protein with heat-labile kinase activity, are shifted from the nonpermissive to the permissive temperature, a rapid and sustained membrane depolarization is observed. Conversely, thermal inactivation of the ts LA29 pp60v-src kinase activity rapidly restores the membrane potential to near normal levels. Addition of epidermal growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor, or insulin to uninfected cells fails to cause a detectable change in membrane potential. We conclude that, unlike growth factor receptor tyrosine kinases, pp60v-src can induce, either directly or indirectly, a major change in the membrane permeability to monovalent cations.
...
PMID:Expression of pp60v-src alters the ionic permeability of the plasma membrane in rat cells. 243 84
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