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Query: UNIPROT:P05412 (
c-Jun
)
11,453
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We applied Southwestern and Western blotting and gel retardation techniques to investigate the changes that occur in the cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP)-responsive element (CRE) binding (CREB) proteins in rapidly growing, chemically induced 5123tc and 5123D Morris hepatomas. Using the CRE sequences from the c-fos, E2A, and somatostatin gene promoters, we identified in the nuclear proteins from normal unstimulated or proliferating rat liver cells six different protein factors of Mr 34,000, 36,000, 40,000, 47,000, 56,000, and 72,000 capable of binding to the element. The Mr 47,000 protein had the highest specificity for the core CRE, suggesting its importance in cAMP-mediated gene expression. We could not find the Mr 47,000 CREB protein in the 5123tc and 5123D hepatomas. Our efforts to detect this protein in the tumors by (a) using the CRE sequence from different gene promoters, (b) altering the protocol for extracting nuclear proteins, or (c) attempting to restore its DNA-binding property by phosphorylation [with endogenous protein kinase(s), a catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and protein kinase C/dephosphorylation (with alkaline phosphatase)] were unsuccessful. The loss of tje Mr 47,000 CREB protein from solid tumors of the Morris
hepatoma
is likely to be related to the neoplastic properties of the tumor cell rather than to cell growth because the level of this protein remained unchanged during a 6-day period of liver regeneration. The nuclear extract from the Morris
hepatoma
that did not have the Mr 47,000 CRE-binding factor contained proteins immunologically related to the CREB,
c-Jun
, and c-Fos proteins. We conclude that the Mr 47,000 factor represents a distinct member of the CRE-binding protein family and that its absence from the hepatomas may lead to aberrant expression of cAMP-inducible genes.
...
PMID:Changes in cyclic adenosine monophosphate-responsive element binding proteins in rat hepatomas. 182 83
The P97 promoter upstream of the oncogenic early genes of human papillomavirus (HPV)-16 is active in keratinocytes and in cervical carcinoma cells due to a 5' keratinocyte-dependent cis enhancer. In this study, we have mapped the main enhancer activity to an 88-nucleotide (nt) fragment composed of multiple cis elements. A 63-nt promoter-proximal enhancer core was sufficient for P97 activation in a human keratinocytic cell line, HaCaT, and in cervical carcinoma cells. Although the enhancer functioned poorly in
hepatoma
cells or in fibroblasts, nuclear extracts from different cells protected similar cis elements from DNase I digestion. Two protected half-palindromic NF-I/CTF sites within the 63-nt core were necessary for its function; one represents a "cytokeratin element" (CK), a previously described 8-nt sequence shared with cytokeratin gene promoters. Both sites formed complexes of the same apparent size and relative binding affinity with NF-I/CTF-like factor(s) present in all cells tested. Although cell-dependent P97 activation could be determined by similar, yet distinct NF-I/CTF-like proteins, adjacent cis elements in the enhancer core were also required for function, and may thus interact with additional transcription factors. A 25-nt distal module with two AP-1 sites increased enhancer activity and cooperated with cis elements of the proximal core. Each AP-1 site as well as a third AP-1 site near the promoter bound
c-Jun
and Jun/Fos in vitro, and was activated by
c-Jun
and c-Fos in transfections. In addition to cell type-dependent activation, HPV-16 P97 transcription may therefore respond to growth factors and oncogene products via the AP-1 pathway.
...
PMID:Transcriptional activation of the human papillomavirus-16 P97 promoter by an 88-nucleotide enhancer containing distinct cell-dependent and AP-1-responsive modules. 196 84
The hepatic expression of the alpha-2u-globulin gene family is controlled by a variety of hormones including steroids, growth hormone and insulin. The mechanisms by which these hormones affect alpha 2u-globulin expression are only partially understood. Recently we isolated and characterized clone RAP 01, an alpha 2u-globulin gene expressed in the liver. In preliminary experiments we noted that partial hepatectomy, a procedure which results in a sharp rise in the level of the oncoproteins c-Fos and
c-Jun
, also causes a transient induction of the messenger RNA corresponding to clone RAP 01. Using the DNAseI footprinting technique we were able to show that this clone contains a TPA (phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate)-responsive element (TRE) in its first intron. This element (denoted as element X) is identical to the consensus AP-1 binding site (TGACTCAG) and is protected by rat liver nuclear extracts as well as by purified
c-Jun
. Gel retardation experiments show that an oligonucleotide containing the TRE consensus sequence competes for binding of liver nuclear proteins to element X and that antibodies directed against the M2 peptide of the mouse Fos protein or the PEP-2 peptide of Jun prevent the formation of specific complexes with the same element. Moreover, element X functions as a TRE in transfected BWTG3
hepatoma
cells treated with TPA. Co-transfection with fos and jun expression vectors mimics the effects of TPA suggesting that AP-1 is in fact the mediator of the observed response. It is concluded that the first intron of RAP 01 contains a functional Fos-Jun element.
...
PMID:A Fos-Jun element in the first intron of an alpha 2u-globulin gene. 750 7
In KB epidermoid cells, we previously showed that interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1) and various mitogens activate the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases ERK1 and ERK2, which phosphorylate both myelin basic protein (MBP) and a peptide containing Thr669 of the epidermal growth factor receptor. In cell-free extracts made from gingival fibroblasts treated with platelet-derived growth factor or HepG2
hepatoma
cells stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate, MBP and Thr669 kinase were both elevated 4-fold, and ERK1 and ERK2 were tyrosine-phosphorylated. In these cells IL-1 activated a kinase(s) that phosphorylated Thr669 peptide but not MBP and failed to cause tyrosine phosphorylation of ERK1/ERK2. Ceramide has been proposed as an intracellular mediator of IL-1 action, but C2-ceramide or sphingosine stimulated predominantly MBP-specific kinase activity in fibroblasts and had no effect in HepG2 cells. p54 MAP kinase (also called stress-activated protein kinase) is a
c-Jun
kinase first isolated from livers of cycloheximide-treated rats. After IL-1 stimulation, immunoprecipitates of lysates made from all three cell types with specific anti-p54 MAP kinase serum contained Thr669 and
c-Jun
phosphorylating activity, whereas precipitates from unstimulated cells contained no detectable p54 kinase activity. The major peak of IL-1-stimulated HepG2 Thr669 kinase activity co-chromatographed on Mono Q and phenyl-Superose with immunodetectable p54 MAP kinase. IL-1 did not cause p21ras activation in any cell type. Induction of Thr 669 kinase activity was not abrogated by elevation of cAMP levels, which has been shown to interfere with the activation of Raf-1. We could not detect MAP kinase kinase phosphorylating activity in unfractionated lysates made from IL-1-stimulated fibroblasts or HepG2 cells. KB cells contained a small amount of this activity, but it was not precipitated with an anti-Raf-1 antibody. We conclude that most of the IL-1-activated Thr669 kinase activity in fibroblasts and HepG2 cells, and a portion in KB cells, is due to p54 MAP kinase and that its activation is Ras-, Raf-, and MAP kinase kinase-independent.
...
PMID:Interleukin-1 activates p54 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase/stress-activated protein kinase by a pathway that is independent of p21ras, Raf-1, and MAP kinase kinase. 752 98
The effects of a phorbol ester (TPA) and of members of the Jun and Fos oncoprotein family on the activity of the rat alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) promoter were checked by using transient expression experiments in HepG2
hepatoma
cells. TPA blocked the activity of the rat AFP promoter in a dose-dependent manner. Overexpression of
c-Jun
specifically repressed the rat AFP promoter but not the albumin promoter. JunB and JunD were poorer inhibitors. c-Fos expression did not potentiate the negative effect of Jun. The Jun-induced repression does not require binding of
c-Jun
to the AFP promoter. DNase 1 footprinting experiments did not display any high affinity binding site for Jun on the AFP promoter. Integrity of the
c-Jun
DNA binding domain is not required for the
c-Jun
protein to block the AFP promoter. The N-terminal part of Jun, which contains the activating domain, is responsible for the repression as shown by using Jun-Gal4 chimera. Jun likely exerts its negative control on the AFP promoter via protein-protein interactions with a not yet identified trans-activating factor within the -134 to +6 region or with a component of the general machinery of transcription. Jun proteins can thus be key intermediates in regulatory cascades which result in the differential modulation of the AFP and albumin gene expression in the course of liver development and carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:The c-jun proto-oncogene down-regulates the rat alpha-fetoprotein promoter in HepG2 hepatoma cells without binding to DNA. 753 66
Hepatic metabolism and gene expression are among the factors controlled by the cellular hydration state, which changes within minutes in response to aniso-osmotic environments, cumulative substrate uptake, oxidative stress and under the influence of hormones such as insulin. The signalling events coupling cell-volume changes to altered cell function were studied in H4IIE rat
hepatoma
cells. Hypo-osmotic cell swelling resulted within 1 min in a tyrosine kinase-mediated activation of the extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases Erk-1 and Erk-2, which was independent of protein kinase C and cytosolic calcium. Activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases was followed by an increased phosphorylation of
c-Jun
, which may explain our recently reported finding of an about 5-fold increase in c-jun mRNA level in response to cell swelling. Pretreatment of cells with pertussis or cholera toxin abolished the swelling-induced activation of Erk-1 and Erk-2, suggesting the involvement of G-proteins. Thus, a signal-transduction pathway resembling growth factor signalling is activated already by osmotic water shifts across the plasma membrane, thereby providing a new perspective for adaption of cell function to alterations of the environment.
...
PMID:Activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases Erk-1 and Erk-2 by cell swelling in H4IIE hepatoma cells. 761 47
We have established and characterized a new glioblastoma cell line, termed GT9, from a biopsy sample of a female adult patient with glioblastoma multiforme. The line has now undergone over 60 passages and has been successfully cultured after cryopreservation. Immunofluorescence analyses with a panel of monoclonal antibodies were positive for glial fibrillary acidic protein and vimentin, and negative for neurofilament, galactocerebroside, and fibronectin, a pattern typical of glial cells. Based on a tetraploid, the composite karyotype of GT9 cells included the loss of chromosome 10, gain of chromosome 7, and the presence of double minute chromosomes, three of the most common karyotypic abnormalities in glioblastoma. Sequence analysis of p53 cDNA revealed a homozygous double mutation at codon 249 (commonly mutated in aflatoxin-associated
hepatocellular carcinoma
) and codon 250. Moreover, there was a complete absence of wild-type p53. However, unlike the majority of human glioblastomas previously described, the expression of platelet-derived growth factor-B (PDGF-B), a potent mitogenic autocrine factor, was low in GT9 cells. The expression and phosphorylation of
c-Jun
and Jun-B, downstream mediators of the PDGF pathway, were also low. Thus, deregulation of the PDGF pathway does not appear to be involved in the pathogenesis of the GT9 glioblastoma. Conversely, Jun-D, a negative regulator of cell growth, was also low. In addition, Phosphorylated Egr-1, a recently reported suppressor of PDGF-B/v-sis-transformed cells, was also low, suggesting that the lack of activation of the PDGF pathway was not due to these suppressive mechanisms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Characterization of a new human glioblastoma cell line that expresses mutant p53 and lacks activation of the PDGF pathway. 775 3
Chronic infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is accompanied by an increasing risk of developing
hepatocellular carcinoma
. There are indications that the HBx protein of HBV is involved in the process of tumour formation. HBx also transactivates several transcription factor binding sites. Recently, we reported that HBx can use a tumour promotor pathway for transactivation. In particular, we found that transactivation of the binding motif for
transcription factor AP-1
(JUN/FOS) by HBx is dependent on functional protein kinase C (PKC), as indicated by abolition of the transcriptional stimulation following downregulation or inhibition of the enzyme. Moreover, HBx activates PKC, probably via increasing the endogenous PKC activator sn-1,2-diacylglycerol (DAG). Here we extend these data and report on the time course of PKC activation. We found that activation of PKC by HBx is transient and differs from activation of PKC by the ras oncogene product or phorbol ester in that it does not lead to rapid downregulation of the enzyme subsequent to the activation. Moreover, we provide evidence that an increase in cellular DAG is observable not only as an early event in response to HBx but also in cell lines transformed after transfection with HBV DNA and stably expressing HBx. Besides its important role in the regulation of cellular genes, PKC is also the intracellular receptor for tumour-promoting agents and an activator of proto-oncogenes, suggesting that our observations might provide an explanation for the oncogenic properties of HBx.
...
PMID:The hepatitis B virus transactivator HBx causes elevation of diacylglycerol and activation of protein kinase C. 821 Jul 15
Integrated hepatitis B virus DNA cloned from hepatitis B virus-associated
hepatocellular carcinoma
frequently contains 3'-truncated middle surface genes (preS2/St), which were recently found to have a transcriptional transactivator function. Because preS2/St, among others, is able to transactivate the promoters of the cellular oncogenes c-myc and c-fos, it has been speculated that integrated preS2/St genes might contribute to hepatitis B virus-associated liver carcinogenesis. In this study, we investigated the mechanism of target gene stimulation by preS2/St. It was found that deletion of a fragment containing the binding site for
transcription factor AP-1
(Jun-Fos) substantially decreases inducibility of the human c-myc promoter by preS2/St. A subsequent investigation of AP-1 activation by preS2/St revealed the following: (a) insertion of multimeric AP-1 binding sites confers inducibility to an otherwise unstimulatable test promoter; (b) transactivation of AP-1 sites is dramatically increased when Jun and Fos are overexpressed by cotransfected expression plasmids; and (c) inhibitors of AP-1 activation also impair transactivation by preS2/St. Besides AP-1, preS2/St was also able to utilize the unrelated transcription factors NF-kappa B and AP-2 for transactivation, suggesting that the gene product of preS2/St acts indirectly through one or several general cellular pathways rather than as a bona fide transcription factor. Because AP-1 conveys induction of a large panel of tumor-relevant genes, its preS2/St-dependent activation implies a possible causative role in hepatitis B virus-associated hepatocarcinogenesis.
...
PMID:The hepatitis B virus preS2/St transactivator utilizes AP-1 and other transcription factors for transactivation. 827 60
We have identified in mammalian cells a novel cyclic AMP response element (CRE)-binding protein of molecular mass 47 kDa. This protein was not recognized by either the CREB-327/341 or
c-Jun
antisera, and its tissue distribution did not overlap with those of the CREB and Jun families. For example,
hepatoma
and placental tissue did not contain the 47-kDa DNA-binding protein, but did contain the CREB isoforms. On the other hand, S49 lymphoma cells contained a high level of the 47-kDa DNA-binding protein but did not contain a 47-kDa Jun-related protein which was found in normal liver and
hepatoma
. This new 47-kDa factor bound to the CRE in the dephosphorylated form, and phosphorylation of the protein by the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A completely abolished its DNA-binding activity. The isoforms of the CREB-327/341 family, on the other hand, bound to DNA in the phosphorylated form, and alkaline phosphatase treatment reduced significantly their interaction with CRE sequence. This reverse effect of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation on the DNA-binding property of this new 47-kDa protein in particular distinguishes it from other known CREB factors and suggests that the protein might play a unique role in the regulation of cAMP-mediated transcription.
...
PMID:Identification of a new cAMP response element-binding factor by southwestern blotting. 836 1
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