Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04626 (erbB-2)
5,251 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Antisera were prepared against three synthetic peptides with amino acid sequences identical to those surrounding the three major autophosphorylation sites of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor. The affinity-purified antibodies reacted strongly in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay against the immunizing peptide but showed little cross-reaction with the other two phosphorylation site peptides. EGF receptors labelled by autophosphorylation could be specifically precipitated by each of the phosphorylation site antibodies. The antibodies recognised EGF receptors labelled at each of the autophosphorylation sites, indicating that they could bind to the immunizing sequences irrespective of their states of phosphorylation. The antibodies were able to inhibit EGF receptor autophosphorylation without affecting EGF-stimulated tyrosine kinase activity towards exogenous peptide substrates, suggesting that the kinase and autophosphorylation sites were in distinct domains. Immunofluorescent staining of A431 cells showed that the autophosphorylation site sequences resided inside the cell. The autophosphorylation sites were shown to be within a domain of 20 000 mol. wt. which could be cleaved from the receptor through limited proteolysis by the calcium-dependent protease, calpain. The position of cleavage of the EGF receptor by the protease was mapped to lie between residues 996 and 1059. These results are discussed in the context of a model for the structure and function of the human EGF receptor.
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PMID:Antibodies to the autophosphorylation sites of the epidermal growth factor receptor protein-tyrosine kinase as probes of structure and function. 241 53

A single point mutation, Glu627--> Val, equivalent to the activating mutation in the Neu oncogene, was inserted in the transmembrane domain of the human epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor. Unlike the wild type, Glu627-EGF receptor, transfected in NIH3T3 cells, gave rise to focal transformation and growth in agar even in the absence EGF. Constitutive activity of mutant EGF receptor amounted to 20% of that of wild type receptor stimulated by EGF. In addition, the mutant receptor was more sensitive to EGF, reaching maximum transforming activity at 5 ng/ml EGF. NIH3T3 cells expressing Glu627-EGF receptor showed a transformed phenotype and were not arrested in G0 upon serum deprivation. The mutant receptor was constitutively autophosphorylated, and several other cellular proteins were phosphorylated on tyrosine in absence of the ligand. Among these, the SHC adaptor protein was phosphorylated in absence of EGF, the other adaptor, GRB-2 was constitutively associated with the Glu627-EGF receptor in vivo and in vitro, and mitogen-activated protein kinase was constitutively phosphorylated. In contrast, other EGF receptor substrates, like phospholipase C gamma, were not phosphorylated in absence of EGF. The mutant receptor showed a higher sensitivity to cleavage by calpain both in absence and presence of EGF, appeared as a 170- and 150-kDa doublet in cell extracts, and a specific calpain inhibitor blocked the appearance of the 150-kDa form. Since the calpain cleavage site is located in the receptor cytoplasmic tail, this finding suggests that the Glu627 mutation induces a slightly different conformation in the EGF receptor intracellular domain. In conclusion, our data show that a point mutation in the EGF receptor transmembrane domain was able to constitutively activate the receptor and to induce transformation via constitutive activation of the Ras pathway.
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PMID:SHC and GRB-2 are constitutively by an epidermal growth factor receptor with a point mutation in the transmembrane domain. 764 41

To become migratory, cells must reorganize their connections to the substratum, and during locomotion they must break rear attachments. The molecular and biochemical mechanisms underlying these biophysical processes are unknown. Recent studies have implicated both extracellular signal-regulated kinase/mitogen-activated protein (ERK/MAP) kinase and calpain (EC 3.4.22.17) in these processes, but it is uncertain whether these are two distinct pathways acting on different modes of motility. We report that cell deadhesion involved in epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor-mediated fibroblast motility requires activation of M-calpain downstream of ERK/MAP kinase signaling. NR6 fibroblasts expressing full-length wild type epidermal growth factor receptor required both calpain and ERK activation, as demonstrated by pharmacological inhibitors (calpeptin and calpain inhibitor I and PD98059, respectively) for EGF-induced deadhesion and motility. EGF induced rapid activation of calpain that was preventable by molecular inhibition of the Ras-Raf-MEK but not phospholipase Cgamma signaling pathway, and calpain was stimulated by transfection of constitutively active MEK. Enhanced calpain activity was not mirrored by increased calpain protein levels or decreased levels of its endogenous inhibitor calpastatin. The link between ERK/MAP kinase signaling and cell motility required the M-isoform of calpain (calpain II), as determined by specific antisense-mediated down-regulation. These data promote a previously undescribed signaling pathway of ERK/MAP kinases activating calpain to destabilize cell-substratum adhesions in response to EGF stimulation.
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PMID:Epidermal growth factor receptor activation of calpain is required for fibroblast motility and occurs via an ERK/MAP kinase signaling pathway. 1064 90

The Her-2/neu oncogene, the second member of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor family, encodes a transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptor. Overexpression of Her-2/neu in approximately 30% of breast cancers is associated with poor overall survival. Recently, we have found that Her-2/neu activates nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB via a phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase (PI3-K)-Akt kinase signaling pathway in mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV)-Her-2/neu NF639 mouse breast cancer cells. Surprisingly, the IkappaB kinase (IKK) kinase complex, implicated in proteasome-mediated degradation of IkappaB-alpha and activation of NF-kappaB via the canonical pathway, was not activated in these cells. Degradation of IkappaB-alpha was mediated via calpain, which in B cells is facilitated by phosphorylation of IkappaB-alpha by the protein kinase CK2. Here, we report that the inhibition of CK2 blocks Her-2/neu-mediated activation of NF-kappaB. NF639 breast cancer cells, stably expressing CK2alpha or CK2alpha' kinase-inactive mutants, displayed decreased NF-kappaB binding and reduced ability to grow in soft agar, as well as increased sensitivity to tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha killing. Similarly, CK2 kinase-inactive subunits inhibited NF-kappaB activity in Hs578T human breast cancer cells, which also display elevated CK2 activity. In NIH 3T3 fibroblasts, which express low basal NF-kappaB and CK2 activities, overexpression of CK2 by retroviral gene delivery led to increased IkappaB-alpha turnover and the induction of classical NF-kappaB (p50/RelA). Thus, CK2 plays an important role in Her-2/neu signaling, promoting IkappaB-alpha degradation and, thereby, NF-kappaB activation. Furthermore, because ectopic CK2 activity appears sufficient to induce NF-kappaB, the elevated CK2 activity observed in many primary human breast cancers likely plays a role in aberrant activation of NF-kappaB and, therefore, represents a potential therapeutic target.
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PMID:Protein kinase CK2 promotes aberrant activation of nuclear factor-kappaB, transformed phenotype, and survival of breast cancer cells. 1243 79

Keratinocyte migration is critical to reepithelialization during wound repair. The motility response is promoted by growth factors, cytokines, and cytokines produced in the wound bed, including those that activate the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor. The Alu-Leu-Arg-negative CXC chemokine interferon-inducible protein 9 (IP-9; also known as CXCL11, I-TAC, beta-R1, and H-174) is produced by keratinocytes in response to injury. As keratinocytes also express the receptor, CXCR3, this prompted us to examine the role and molecular mechanism by which IP-9 regulates keratinocyte motility. Unexpectedly, as CXCR3 liganding blocks growth factor-induced motility in fibroblasts, IP-9 alone promoted motility in undifferentiated keratinocytes (37 +/- 6% of the level of the highly motogenic EGF) as determined in a two-dimensional in vitro wound healing assay. IP-9 even enhanced EGF-induced motility in undifferentiated keratinocytes (116 +/- 5%; P < 0.05 compared to EGF alone), suggesting two separate mechanisms of action. IP-9-increased motility and -decreased adhesiveness required the intracellular protease calpain. The increases in both motility and calpain activity by IP-9 were blocked by pharmacological and molecular inhibition of phospholipase C-beta3 and chelation of calcium, which prevented an intracellular calcium flux. Molecular downregulation or RNA interference-mediated depletion of mu-calpain (calpain 1) but not M-calpain (calpain 2) blocked IP-9-induced calpain activation and motility. In accord with elimination of IP-9-induced de-adhesion, RNA interference-mediated depletion of calpain 1 but not calpain 2 prevented cleavage of the focal adhesion component focal adhesion kinase and disassembly of vinculin aggregates. In comparison, EGF-induced motility of the same undifferentiated keratinocytes requires the previously described extracellular signal-regulated kinase to the M-calpain pathway. These data demonstrate that while both EGF- and IP-9-induced motility in keratinocytes requires calpain activity, the isoform of calpain triggered depends on the nature of the receptor for the particular ligand. Interestingly, physiological nonapoptotic calcium fluxes were capable of activating mu-calpain, implying that the calcium requirement of mu-calpain for activation is attained during cell signaling. This is also the first demonstration of differential activation of the two ubiquitous calpain isoforms in the same cell by different signals.
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PMID:Interferon-inducible protein 9 (CXCL11)-induced cell motility in keratinocytes requires calcium flux-dependent activation of mu-calpain. 1571 46