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Query: UNIPROT:P04626 (
erbB-2
)
5,251
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The CD45 antigen cluster identifies a family of transmembrane glycoprotein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPases) present on nearly all hemopoietic cells. Recent studies suggest that CD45 may play a role in the control of receptor mediated blood cell responses, and that expression of the CD45 gene varies during bone marrow cell maturation. However, relatively little is known of the mechanisms controlling CD45 expression and function. Here we show that the induction of granulocyte or monocyte differentiation of HL60 leukemia cells is accompanied by a rapid increase in CD45 antigen expression and CD45 PTPase activity. In contrast, other leukemia cell lines induced for monocyte/macrophage differentiation did not show increased CD45. Immunoprecipitation of radiolabelled CD45 glycoprotein from dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO) treated HL60 cells indicated that the cells expressed 200 and 180 kD isoforms. Northern blots of steady-state RNA from HL60 cells showed a 4-11-fold increase in CD45 transcripts after DMSO treatment, but no alteration in the half-life of CD45 mRNA. Nuclear transcription assays showed that CD45 expression was controlled at the level of gene transcription. Namalwa Burkitt leukemia cells expressing the heterologous
epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor
protein tyrosine kinase were used to assess the specificity of CD45 PTPase activity. Co-clustering of CD45 and the EGF receptor with specific monoclonal antibodies failed to alter the EGF stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of the EGF receptor. These studies indicate that CD45 increases during myeloid maturation, and the expression of the CD45 gene is controlled at the level of gene transcription. Preliminary studies suggest that CD45 does not alter the protein tyrosine kinase activity of the EGF receptor in intact cells, suggesting substrate specificity in vivo.
Leukemia
1991 Apr
PMID:Regulation of CD45 expression in human leukemia cells. 185 Dec 41
HER2 (
erbB-2
) proto-oncogene amplification and/or overexpression correlate with poor prognosis in many malignancies. The precise biological role of this oncogenic signaling pathway (which also involves the HER4 gene) in breast cancer is unclear. One property conferred by this oncogene relates to response to drug therapy. Clinical studies support an association between HER2 overexpression and resistance to alkylating agents (cisplatinum and cyclophosphamide). Data from the Cancer and
Leukemia
Group B 8869/8541 study indicate enhanced dose responsiveness to doxorubicin (Adriamycin) in patients who overexpress the HER2 receptor. Heregulin beta-2, a naturally occurring ligand that activates the HER2 receptor by inducing its heterodimerization with the HER4 receptor, has recently been cloned. The ability of this ligand to phosphorylate the HER2 receptor exogenously allows us to study the effect of HER2 activation on cancer cell behavior. To study the relationship between chemotherapy response and activation of HER2, MCF-7 cells expressing biologically active heregulin were assessed for response to doxorubicin and etoposide, both of which are topoisomerase IIalpha (topo IIalpha) inhibitors. Several clones show markedly increased sensitivity to these drugs. In addition, the same wild-type MCF-7 cells transfected with heregulin beta-2 under the control of an inducible promoter also show this dose-response relationship to doxorubicin after the expression of heregulin beta-2 is activated by zinc. The modulation of topo IIalpha was studied in the cell lines transfected with heregulin. topo IIalpha mRNA and protein (total protein and enzymatic decatenating activity) were found to be up-regulated in heregulin beta-2-transfected cells. Moreover, topo IIalpha promoter activity was also modestly increased in heregulin beta-2-transfected cells. Because up-regulation of topo IIalpha in vitro and in clinical specimens is associated with increased response to doxorubicin (presumptively by an increase in drug substrate), this may be the mechanism of the increased sensitivity to doxorubicin seen in heregulin beta-2-transfected cells. This implies that activation of HER2 or one of the other members of the receptor family may increase sensitivity to doxorubicin by up-regulation of topo IIalpha. This finding suggests the use of receptor/ligand expression to direct patient-specific therapeutic choices (e.g., doxorubicin versus alkylator-based regimens) and the use of biological agents (such as heregulin) in combination with certain chemotherapeutic agents to enhance response to treatment in breast cancer patients.
...
PMID:Induction of sensitivity to doxorubicin and etoposide by transfection of MCF-7 breast cancer cells with heregulin beta-2. 956 96
Several studies have suggested that biochemical or molecular markers examined in non-small cell lung cancer carry prognostic or treatment response information. Non-small cell lung cancer patients whose tumors have neuroendocrine (NE) features may be more responsive to chemotherapy. In addition, increased expression of HER2 (c-
erbB-2
), a membrane-bound receptor with tyrosine kinase activity, has been associated with shortened survival. The Cancer and
Leukemia
Group B (CALGB) performed a study of patients with stage IIIA (N2 nodes positive) non-small cell lung cancer in which patients received initial chemotherapy followed by surgery, then post-operative therapy consisting of sequential chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Since all patients underwent mediastinoscopy, this provided an opportunity to compare pre- and post-chemotherapy tumor specimens to test the hypothesis that these proteins would predict treatment response. In particular, we hypothesized that the post-chemotherapy specimens would be enriched for NE marker negative cells because of the increased sensitivity of NE positive cells to chemotherapy. We performed immunohistochemical analysis for a panel of NE markers [neuron-specific enolase (NSE), Leu-7, chromogranin A (ChrA), synaptophysin (Syn)], HER2 and CEA to determine if there was an effect of therapy on the percentage of cells expressing these markers. Secondary endpoints were a correlation with chemotherapy response and survival. Slides were scored for intensity (0-4) and percentage of cells positive (0-4). Of 61 eligible patients, there were 38 with both pre- and post-chemotherapy specimens. When both intensity of staining and percentage of positive cells were considered, post-chemotherapy specimens had a higher percentage of positive NE markers compared with pre-chemotherapy. In addition, there was no correlation between NE marker, HER2 or CEA expression (prior to or post treatment) and response to chemotherapy or survival. These data do not support the hypothesis that NE positive tumor cells are preferentially killed by chemotherapy in patients with stage IIIA non-small cell lung cancer.
...
PMID:Analysis of neuroendocrine markers, HER2 and CEA before and after chemotherapy in patients with stage IIIA non-small cell lung cancer: a Cancer and Leukemia Group B study. 985 98
HER2 (neu,
erbB-2
), a receptor related to the human epidermal growth factor receptor, has now become more important as a predictive marker of treatment response. While the value and direction of the treatment/HER2 interaction may vary, depending on the agents, dose, or schedule of drug administration, there is little disagreement that HER2 testing is an important part of breast cancer evaluation. In 1998, trastuzumab (Herceptin) was approved for the treatment of HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer patients by the Food and Drug Administration of the USA. Patients with abnormal HER2 in their breast cancer cells (generally 2 or 3+ with the HercepTest, overexpression by other immunohistochemical assays or amplification by fluorescence in situ hybridization [FISH] assay) have demonstrated the greatest response to trastuzumab treatment. It is unclear which test (method, reagent, cut-off points, etc.) is best to use to evaluate HER2 for this purpose because parallel testing of the same cancers from patients who received trastuzumab has only recently been initiated and the data are limited. It is widely believed that breast cancers without HER2 alterations will not be responsive to trastuzumab, although a clinical trial to test this specific hypothesis has not been initiated. There are also concerns that clonal heterogeneity for HER2 within a tumor, or between primary and metastatic cancer foci, may affect treatment response; yet we do not currently evaluate these parameters. Consensus regarding the best methods, reagents, or cut-off points to define HER2 status for determining trastuzumab responsivity has not yet been reached. HER2 testing for other prognostic or predictive purposes, e.g. to determine whether patients are likely to respond to other agents, such as dose-intensive doxorubicin, may be less. Data from the Cancer and
Leukemia
Group B trial 8541 (companion 8869) suggest that, with proper controls in high-volume laboratories, many of the available methods produce comparable results.
...
PMID:HER2--a discussion of testing approaches in the USA. 1152 14
The search for a simple, sensitive test to reliably determine prognosis and predict response to therapy in patients with cancer is an important area of translational research. In this issue of Clinical Cancer Research, Hayes et al. (Clin. Cancer Res., 7: 601-604, 2001) report the results of an ancillary Cancer and
Leukemia
Group B protocol designed to determine whether the circulating extracellular domain of
HER-2/neu
(ECD-HER-2) was indicative of prognosis or predictive of response to therapy in women with metastatic breast cancer. Results were drawn from a sample of 242 patients of whom 89 had elevated values of the protein. These women had been enrolled in a variety of Cancer and
Leukemia
Group B protocols evaluating either the efficacy of dose in the use of megestrol acetate as second-line hormonal treatment or in patients enrolled into several chemotherapeutic protocols, many containing doxorubicin. They report that patients with pretreatment elevation of ECD-HER-2 had a worse prognosis than those who did not, but that there was no convincing correlation of elevated ECD-HER-2 with response to either endocrine or chemotherapy. Although the small number of patients and the retrospective study design allows one to draw only tentative conclusions, this report raises several important issues for the conduct of translational research and points to several new hypotheses for future testing.
...
PMID:The prognostic and predictive values of ECD-HER-2. 1155 82