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)

Bcl3, an IkappaB protein, was originally isolated as a putative proto-oncogene in a subset of B cell chronic lymphocytic leukemias. Bcl3 was subsequently shown to associate tightly with and transactivate the NFkappaB p50 or p52 homodimer. Herein, we show that Bcl3 stimulates the activating protein-1 (AP-1) transactivation, either alone or in conjunction with transcription integrators steroid receptor coactivator-1 and CREB-binding protein/p300. The C-terminal 158 residues of Bcl3 exhibited an autonomous transactivation function and interacted with specific subregions of the AP-1 components c-Jun and c-Fos, CREB-binding protein/p300, and steroid receptor coactivator-1, as demonstrated by the yeast and mammalian two-hybrid tests as well as glutathione S-transferase pull-down assays. In addition, anti-HA antibody co-precipitated c-Jun from HeLa cells co-expressing c-Jun and HA-tagged Bcl3, consistent with the idea that Bcl3 directly associates with AP-1 in vivo. Furthermore, microinjection of Bcl3 expression vector into Rat-1 fibroblast cells significantly enhanced DNA synthesis and expression of c-jun, one of the cellular target genes of AP-1. These results suggest that Bcl3 may directly participate in the tumorigenesis processes as a novel transcription coactivator of the mitogenic transcription factor AP-1 in vivo.
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PMID:Bcl3, an IkappaB protein, stimulates activating protein-1 transactivation and cellular proliferation. 1049 12

The proline-, glutamic acid-, serine- and threonine-enriched protein tyrosine phosphatase PEP, which is expressed primarily in hematopoietic cells, was recently discovered to be physically associated with the 50-kDa cytosolic protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) Csk, an important suppressor of Src family PTK, including Lck and Fyn in T cells. We report that this phosphatase has an inhibitory effect on TCR-induced transcriptional activation of the c-fos proto-oncogene and elements from the IL-2 gene promoter. Catalytically inactive mutants of PEP had no effects in these assays. Expression of PEP also reduced activation of the N-terminal c-Jun kinase Jnk2 in response to receptor ligation, but not in response to UV light. In agreement with a more receptor-proximal site of action, we found that PEP reduced the TCR-induced increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of an Lck mutant, Lck-Y505F, which is only phosphorylated on tyrosine 394, the positive regulatory site. Finally, we observed that PEP reduced c-fos activation in a synergistic manner with Csk, supporting the notion that these two enzymes form a functional team acting on Src family kinases involved in TCR signaling.
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PMID:Characterization of TCR-induced receptor-proximal signaling events negatively regulated by the protein tyrosine phosphatase PEP. 1060 92

The serine/threonine kinase Cot is a member of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) kinase kinase family implicated in cellular transformation. Enhanced expression of this protein has been shown to activate both the MAPK and the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) pathways and to stimulate the nuclear factor of activated T cells and NF-kappaB-dependent transcription. However, the nature of the normal functions of the Cot protein and the molecular mechanisms responsible for its oncogenic potential are still largely unknown. Here, we show that overexpression of the cot proto-oncogene is sufficient to stimulate the expression of c-jun and that, in turn, the activity of c-Jun is required for Cot-induced transformation. These observations prompted us to explore the molecular events by which Cot regulates c-jun expression. We found that Cot potently stimulates the activity of the c-jun promoter utilizing JNK-dependent and -independent pathways, the latter involving two novel members of the MAPK family, p38gamma (ERK6) and ERK5. Molecularly, this activity was found to be dependent on the ability of Cot to activate, in vivo, members of each class of the MAPK kinase superfamily, including MEK, SEK, MKK6, and MEK5. Furthermore, the use of dominant interfering molecules revealed that Cot requires JNK, p38s, and ERK5 to stimulate the c-jun promoter fully and to induce neoplastic transformation. These findings indicate that Cot represents the first example of a serine/threonine kinase acting simultaneously on all known MAPK cascades. Moreover, these observations strongly suggest that the transforming ability of Cot results from the coordinated activation of these pathways, which ultimately converge on the regulation of the expression and activity of the product of the c-jun proto-oncogene.
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PMID:Multiple mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling pathways connect the cot oncoprotein to the c-jun promoter and to cellular transformation. 1066 51

Vas deferens epithelial cell subcultures were used to study the sequential regulation of jun/fos proto-oncogene expression and AP1 activities during cell proliferation, polarization and androgen-induced expression of a terminal differentiation marker, i. e. the mvdp gene. Proliferation of epithelial cells is associated with a high expression in the nucleus of most Jun and Fos oncoproteins. After cell seeding on an extracellular matrix which allows polarization and expression of the mvdp gene in response to androgens, AP1 protein accumulation is greatly altered and consists in a loss of JunB, Fra1, FosB and a decrease in c-Fos, c-Jun and Fra2, while JunD remained at the same level. This was correlated with a drop in AP1 binding activity as evaluated by gel shift assay using either AP1 consensus sequence or AP1 binding sites of the mvdp gene promoter region, and in AP1 transactivating activity, as estimated by stable transfection experiments using an AP1 responsive promoter (TRE-TK-luc). Androgens did not significantly influence AP1 activities. On the contrary, stimulation of AP1 proteins by the tumor-promoting phorbol ester caused a decrease in androgen-induced mvdp mRNA accumulation, and this effect was reversed by staurosporine, a potent inhibitor of PKC. Our data suggest that a down-regulation of AP1 activities induced by epithelial cell differentiation is a prerequisite to androgen-induced mvdp gene expression. The high AP1 activities observed during proliferative state or induced in TPA-treated polarized cells, exert a repressive effect on androgen action.
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PMID:Down-regulation of AP1 activities after polarization of vas deferens epithelial cells correlates with androgen-induced gene expression. 1077 1

The tumor suppresser protein p53 is critical for guarding the genome from incorporation of damaged DNA (Lane, D. P. (1992) Nature 358, 15-16). A relevant stress that activates p53 function is UV light (Noda, A., Toma-Aiba, Y., and Fujiwara, Y. (2000) Oncogene 19, 21-31). Another well known component of the mammalian UV response is the transcription factor c-Jun (Angel, P., and Karin, M. (1991) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1072, 129-157). We show here that upon UV irradiation p53 activates transcription of the human mismatch repair gene MSH2. Interestingly, this up-regulation critically depends on functional interaction with c-Jun. Hence, the synergistic interaction of a proto-oncogene with a tumor suppresser gene is required for the regulation of the mammalian stress response through activation of expression of MSH2.
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PMID:p53 and c-Jun functionally synergize in the regulation of the DNA repair gene hMSH2 in response to UV. 1098 93

An immunohistochemical study on the temporal expression of c-Fos and c-Jun, both of which designate proto-oncogene products, was performed on 60 human skin wounds with different post-infliction intervals. In unwounded skin, c-Fos or c-Jun was immunolocalized at the nuclei of the epidermal cells in the basal layer, hair follicle cells and sweat gland cells. During the early inflammatory phase of wound healing, the nuclei of polymorphonuclear cells (probably neutrophils), mainly infiltrating at the wound site, were labeled with anti-c-Fos or -c-Jun antibody. As the wound age increased, the neutrophils had disappeared at the wound site, and both mononuclear cells (probably macrophages) and spindle-shaped fibroblastic cells, which expressed a c-Fos or c-Jun positive reaction in the nuclei, were mainly observed. Morphometrically, the distribution of the c-Fos-positive ratio was very similar to that of the c-Jun-positive ratio; the positive ratio was considerably increased in wound specimens with a post-infliction interval of > or = 1 day, thus indicating the late inflammatory or proliferative phase. This study showed that c-Fos and c-Jun were closely involved in the inflammatory phase as well as the proliferative phase of the wound healing process.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical study on the expression of c-Fos and c-Jun in human skin wounds. 1109 77

The position of the point mutation in the c-K-ras gene appears associated with different degrees of aggressiveness in human colorectal tumors. In addition, colon tumors carrying K-ras codon 12 mutations associate with lower levels of apoptosis than tumors lacking this mutation. To test the hypothesis of a distinct transforming capacity of different K-ras forms in an in vitro system, we generated stable transfectants of NIH3T3 cells expressing a plasmid containing K-ras mutated at codon 12 (K12) or at codon 13 (K13), or overexpressing the K-ras proto-oncogene (Kwt-oe). We evaluated changes in morphology, proliferative capacity, contact inhibition, and predisposition to apoptosis and anchorage-independent growth in K12, K13, and Kwt-oe transformants. In addition, we studied alterations in expression and/or activation of proteins that participate in signal transduction downstream of Ras or are involved in the regulation of apoptosis and cell-cell (E-cadherin and beta-catenin) and cell-substrate (focal adhesion kinase) interactions. We observed that K13 or Kwt-oe transformants died synchronically 24-48 h after reaching confluency. Their death was apoptotic. In contrast, K12 grew, forming bigger colonies with higher cell densities; and before reaching confluency, spontaneously formed spheroids and showed no sign of apoptosis. The enhanced resistance to apoptosis, loss of contact inhibition, and predisposition to anchorage-independent growth in the K12 transformants were associated with higher AKT/protein kinase B activation, bcl-2, E-cadherin, beta-catenin, and focal adhesion kinase overexpression, and RhoA underexpression, whereas the increased sensitivity of K13 or Kwt-oe transformants to apoptosis was associated with increased activation of the c-Jun-NH2-terminal kinase 1 pathway. All transformants showed a similar overactivation of mitogen-activated protein kinases and levels of bax expression similar to the endogenous level. Therefore, in our in vitro model, the localization of the mutation in the K-ras gene predisposes to a different level of aggressiveness in the transforming phenotype. K12 may increase aggressiveness not by altering proliferative pathways, but by the differential regulation of K-Ras downstream pathways that lead to inhibition of apoptosis, enhanced loss of contact inhibition, and increased predisposition to anchorage-independent growth. These results offer a molecular explanation for the increased aggressiveness of the tumors with K-ras codon 12 mutations observed in the clinical setting.
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PMID:K-ras codon 12 mutation induces higher level of resistance to apoptosis and predisposition to anchorage-independent growth than codon 13 mutation or proto-oncogene overexpression. 1111 62

Rb, c-Jun and dnmt1 play critical roles in the process of cellular differentiation. We demonstrate that a regulatory region of murine dnmt1 contains an element which is responsible for transactivation by Rb and c-Jun in P19 embryocarcinoma cells which is not observed in Y1 adrenocarcinoma cells. During differentiation of P19 cells, the induction of Rb and c-Jun coincides with an increase of dnmt1 mRNA. Using linker scanning mutagenesis we identify the element that is responsible for this activation to be a non-canonical AP-1 site. Our data is an example of how a proto-oncogene activates its downstream effectors by recruiting a tumor suppressor. This interaction of Rb and a proto-oncogene might play an important role in differentiation. The responsiveness of dnmt1 to this type of signal is consistent with an important role for regulated expression of dnmt1 during cellular differentiation.
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PMID:A novel regulatory element in the dnmt1 gene that responds to co-activation by Rb and c-Jun. 1136 4

Phosphorylation of c-Jun at Ser 63/73 by the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) potentiates the transactivation function of c-Jun. Protein kinase D (PKD), a downstream effector of protein kinase C (PKC), has been implicated in the attenuation of epidermal growth factor (EGF)-induced activation of JNK. In order to determine whether activated PKD is sufficient to modulate the EGF-JNK-c-Jun pathway, we have developed a cellular model system, utilizing human embryonic kidney cells (HEK 293), in which stably transfected, constitutively active or kinase dead mutants of PKD can be inducibly expressed by the insect hormone, ecdysone. Induced expression of constitutively active, but not kinase dead PKD, suppressed EGF stimulated c-Jun phosphorylation at Ser 63, demonstrating that activated PKD is sufficient to suppress c-Jun phosphorylation. This is the first demonstration that PKD modulates phosphorylation of the proto-oncogene c-Jun at a site critical for its ability to mediate cell proliferation and differentiation.
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PMID:Protein kinase D is sufficient to suppress EGF-induced c-Jun Ser 63 phosphorylation. 1140 72

The Drosophila melanogaster homolog of the human proto-oncogene fos is Dfos. It is the only fos homolog in the Drosophila genome. Fos functions as a subunit of the heterodimeric transcription factor AP-1. There are two models of the Dfos gene. The first comes from a cDNA sequence of Dfos (Perkins et al., Genes Dev. 4 (1990) 822). The second is from the gene sequence published by the Drosophila genome project (Adams et al., Science 287 (2000) 2185), and there are notable contradictions between the two models. The promoter and the 5' end of the transcript sequence were not identified in either model. In this paper, we present the gene structure of Dfos and identify the promoter. This promoter has an initiator and a downstream promoter element sequence, but lacks a TATA box. Through comparison of the mRNA and genomic DNA sequences, three introns varying in length from 66 bp to 17.57 kb were found and verified by RT-PCR. The Dfos gene is 21.2 kb in length, giving a transcript of 3438 bp, coding for a predicted protein of 595 amino acids. The 3' untranslated region is confirmed to be 1092 bp in length.
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PMID:The gene structure of the Drosophila melanogaster homolog of the human proto-oncogene fos. 1147 May 38


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