Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P05412 (c-Jun)
11,453 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Overexpression of the erbB-2 gene contributes to aggressive behavior of various human adenocarcinomas, including breast cancer, through an unknown molecular mechanism. The erbB-2-encoded protein is a member of the ErbB family of growth factor receptors, but no direct ligand of ErbB-2 has been reported. We show that in various cells ErbB-2 can form heterodimers with both EGF receptor (ErbB-1) and NDF receptors (ErbB-3 and ErbB-4), suggesting that it may affect the action of heterologous ligands without the involvement of a direct ErbB-2 ligand. This possibility was addressed in breast cancer cells through either overexpression of ErbB-2 or by blocking its delivery to the cell surface by means of an endoplasmic reticulum-trapped antibody. We report that ErbB-2 overexpression enhanced binding affinities to both EGF and NDF, through deceleration of ligand dissociation rates. Likewise, removal of ErbB-2 from the cell surface almost completely abolished ligand binding by accelerating dissociation of both growth factors. The kinetic effects resulted in enhancement and prolongation of the stimulation of two major cytoplasmic signaling pathways, namely: MAP kinase (ERK) and c-Jun kinase (SAPK), by either ligand. Our results imply that ErbB-2 is a pan-ErbB subunit of the high affinity heterodimeric receptors for NDF and EGF. Therefore, the oncogenic action of ErbB-2 in human cancers may be due to its ability to potentiate in trans growth factor signaling.
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PMID:ErbB-2 is a common auxiliary subunit of NDF and EGF receptors: implications for breast cancer. 861 1

The ErbB family includes two receptors, ErbB-1 and ErbB-3, that respectively bind to epidermal growth factor and Neu differentiation factor, and an orphan receptor, ErbB-2. Unlike ErbB-1 and ErbB-2, the intrinsic tyrosine kinase of ErbB-3 is catalytically impaired. By using interleukin-3-dependent cells that ectopically express the three ErbB proteins or their combinations, we found that ErbB-3 is devoid of any biological activity but both ErbB-1 and ErbB-2 can reconstitute its extremely potent mitogenic activity. Transactivation of ErbB-3 correlates with heterodimer formation and is reflected in receptor phosphorylation and the transregulation of ligand affinity. Inter-receptor interactions enable graded proliferative and survival signals: heterodimers are more potent than homodimers, and ErbB-3-containing complexes, especially the ErbB-2/ErbB-3 heterodimer, are more active than ErbB-1 complexes. Nevertheless, ErbB-1 signaling displays dominance over ErbB-3 when the two receptors are coexpressed. Although all receptor combinations activate the mitogen-activated protein kinases ERK and c-Jun kinase, they differ in their rate of endocytosis and in coupling to intervening signaling proteins. It is conceivable that combinatorial receptor interactions diversify signal transduction and confer double regulation, in cis and in trans, of the superior mitogenic activity of the kinase-defective ErbB-3.
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PMID:Diversification of Neu differentiation factor and epidermal growth factor signaling by combinatorial receptor interactions. 866 53

The HER2/neu oncogene is an important diagnostic and prognostic factor and therapeutic target in breast and other cancers. We developed and characterized a breast cancer cell line (Bam1a) that overexpresses the activated HER2/neu and ErbB-3 and has a gene expression profile consistent with the ErbB-2 genetic signature. We evaluated the effects of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)/HER2 inhibitor, gefitinib, on this breast tumor line in vitro and in vivo. We characterized the effects of gefitinib on EGFR, HER2, and ErbB-3 phosphorylation by Western blot and determined the effects on downstream signaling through growth, survival, and stress pathways and the effect on proliferation, cell cycle, and apoptosis. Gefitinib treatment diminished phosphorylation of the ErbB-3 > EGFR > HER2/neu and signal transducers and activators of transcriptions in a dose-dependent fashion. Downstream mitogenic signaling through mitogen-activated protein (MAP)/extracellular signal regulated kinase kinase, p44/42 MAP kinase (MAPK) and stress signaling through c-Jun-NH(2)-kinase (JNK) 1 and c-Jun was impaired (1 micromol/L, 4-24 h), leading to cytostasis and cell cycle arrest within 24 h by decreased cyclin D1, cyclin B1, and p(Ser795)Rb and increased p27. Proliferation and colony formation were inhibited at 0.5 and 1 micromol/L, respectively, and correlated with altered gene expression profiles. Diminished survival signaling through Akt, induction of bim, loss of connexin43, and decreased production of vascular endothelial growth factor-D preceded caspase-3 and poly(ADP)ribose polymerase (PARP) cleavage and apoptosis (>50% 2 micromol/L, 48 h). Oral administration of gefitinib was able to prevent the outgrowth of Bam1a tumor cells from palpable lesions, shrink established tumors, eliminate HER2 and HER3 phosphorylation, and decrease MAPK and Akt signaling in vivo. A variant of the Bam1a cell line, IR-5, with acquired ability to grow in 5 micromol/L gefitinib was developed and characterized. IR-5 bears a novel point mutation in the HER2/neu that corresponds to a L726I in the ATP-binding pocket and correlates with a log decrease in sensitivity to gefitinib, increased heterodimerization with EGFR and HER3, and impaired down-regulation. Gene expression profiling of IR-5 showed increased expression of EMP-1, NOTCH-1, FLT-1, PDGFB, and several other genes that may contribute to the resistant phenotype and sustain signaling through MAPK and Akt. This model will be useful in understanding the differences between intrinsic drug sensitivity and acquired resistance in the context of therapeutic strategies that target oncogene addicted diseases.
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PMID:Breast cancer expressing the activated HER2/neu is sensitive to gefitinib in vitro and in vivo and acquires resistance through a novel point mutation in the HER2/neu. 1763 94