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Disease
Symptom
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Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
TSPY, the 'testis-specific protein, Y-encoded', is the product of a tandem gene cluster on human proximal Yp. In order to gain insight into the function of this locus, we have analysed (I) the diversity of RNAs transcribed from the cluster, (II) the sequence homology of the deduced TSPY to other proteins, and (iii) its protein properties both in tissue extracts and in tissue sections, using a TSPY-specific antiserum. We have identified a set of distinct TSPY transcripts with diverse exon compositions. We show that TSPY has homology with other human and non-human proteins, including SET and NAP, factors that are suggested to play a role in DNA replication. Protein analysis revealed TSPY to occur mainly in a modified, putatively phosphorylated form. By immunostaining it was detected in distinct subsets of spermatogonia. TSPY was also strongly immunostained in early testicular carcinoma in situ (
CIS
), while seminomatous tumour cells stained less intensely. The spermatogonial cells of two XY-TFM-females gave a strong immune response. The data presented here point to a phosphorylation-dependent TSPY-function in early spermatogenesis, immediately prior to the spermatogonia-to-spermatocyte transition, and in early testicular tumorigenesis.
Hum
Mol
Genet 1996 Nov
PMID:Testis-specific protein, Y-encoded (TSPY) expression in testicular tissues. 892 9
Subtractive hybridization was used to isolate genes expressed uniquely in the immortalized human breast epithelial cell (HBEC) line MCF-10F and not in the mortal HBEC line S-130, from which MCF-10F cells were derived. We identified a 233-bp cDNA that was expressed in MCF-10F cells and not in their mortal counterpart S-130 cells. Sequence comparison with the GenBank database revealed that the cDNA was identical to the gene encoding human ferritin heavy H chain. Northern blot analysis using the isolated cDNA as a probe showed a differentially expressed 1.1-kb transcript of ferritin H in total RNA from the immortal MCF-10F cells, MCF-10F cells treated with the chemical carcinogens 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene and benzo[a]pyrene, and the breast cancer cell lines MCF-7, HBL-100, T-47D, and BT-20. No ferritin H transcript was detected in the mortal line S-130 or in other primary HBEC cultures. Increased levels of mRNA transcript signals were also detected in total RNA from breast cancer tissue samples. Tissue with ductal hyperplasia had higher expression levels than normal adjacent mammary tissue. In situ hybridization showed high levels of ferritin H transcript in mammary tissue areas with ductal hyperplasia,
carcinoma in situ
, and infiltrating ductal carcinoma. This is the first report of the differential expression and upregulation of human ferritin H chain gene in immortal HBECs. It may be an important factor in the process of immortalization, possibly an early stage of malignant transformation of HBECs, providing cells with iron necessary for growth and clonal expansion. Also, ferritin iron, once released, may increase the level of reactive iron, leading to an increase in oxygen free-radical generation, oxidative DNA damage, and mutation.
Mol
Carcinog 1997 Dec
PMID:Differential expression of human ferritin H chain gene in immortal human breast epithelial MCF-10F cells. 943 77
Leptin affects food intake and body weight by actions on the hypothalamus. Although leptin resistance is common in obesity, mechanisms have not been identified. We examined the effect of leptin on expression of the suppressors-of-cytokine-signaling (SOCS) family of proteins. Peripheral leptin administration to ob/ob, but not db/db mice, rapidly induced SOCS-3 mRNA in hypothalamus, but had no effect on
CIS
, SOCS-1, or SOCS-2. A leptin-dependent increase of SOCS-3 mRNA was seen in areas of hypothalamus expressing high levels of the leptin receptor long form. In mammalian cell lines, SOCS-3, but not
CIS
or SOCS-2, blocked leptin-induced signal transduction. Expression of SOCS-3 mRNA in the arcuate and dorsomedial hypothalamic nuclei is increased in Ay/a mice, a model of leptin-resistant murine obesity. In conclusion, SOCS-3 is a leptin-inducible inhibitor of leptin signaling, and a potential mediator of leptin resistance in obesity.
Mol
Cell 1998 Mar
PMID:Identification of SOCS-3 as a potential mediator of central leptin resistance. 966 Sep 46
Two distinct genes encode the closely related signal transducer and activator of transcription proteins STAT5A and STAT5B. The molecular mechanisms of gene regulation by STAT5 and, particularly, the requirement for both STAT5 isoforms are still undetermined. Only a few STAT5 target genes, among them the
CIS
(cytokine-inducible SH2-containing protein) gene, have been identified. We cloned the human
CIS
gene and studied the human
CIS
gene promoter. This promoter contains four STAT binding elements organized in two pairs. By electrophoretic mobility shift assay studies using nuclear extracts of UT7 cells stimulated with erythropoietin, we showed that these four sequences bound to STAT5-containing complexes that exhibited different patterns and affinities: the three upstream STAT binding sequences bound to two distinct STAT5-containing complexes (C0 and C1) and the downstream STAT box bound only to the slower-migrating C1 band. Using nuclear extracts from COS-7 cells transfected with expression vectors for the prolactin receptor, STAT5A, and/or STAT5B, we showed that the C1 complex was composed of a STAT5 tetramer and was dependent on the presence of STAT5A. STAT5B lacked this property and bound with a stronger affinity than did STAT5A to the four STAT sequences as a homodimer (C0 complex). This distinct biochemical difference between STAT5A and STAT5B was confirmed with purified activated STAT5 recombinant proteins. Moreover, we showed that the presence on the same side of the DNA helix of a second STAT sequence increased STAT5 binding and that only half of the palindromic STAT binding sequence was sufficient for the formation of a STAT5 tetramer. Again, STAT5A was essential for this cooperative tetrameric association. This property distinguishes STAT5A from STAT5B and could be essential to explain the transcriptional regulation diversity of STAT5.
Mol
Cell Biol 1998 Oct
PMID:A sequence of the CIS gene promoter interacts preferentially with two associated STAT5A dimers: a distinct biochemical difference between STAT5A and STAT5B. 974 2
Janus kinase 2 (Jak2) protein tyrosine kinase plays an important role in interleukin-3- or granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor-mediated signal transduction pathways leading to cell proliferation, activation of early response genes, and inhibition of apoptosis. However, it is unclear whether Jak2 can activate these signaling pathways directly without the involvement of cytokine receptor phosphorylation. To investigate the specific role of Jak2 in the regulation of signal transduction pathways, we generated gyrase B (GyrB)-Jak2 fusion proteins, dimerized through the addition of coumermycin. Coumermycin induced autophosphorylation of GyrB-Jak2 fusion proteins, thus bypassing receptor activation. Using different types of chimeric Jak2 molecules, we observed that although the kinase domain of Jak2 is sufficient for autophosphorylation, the N-terminal regions are essential for the phosphorylation of Stat5 and for the induction of short-term cell proliferation. Moreover, coumermycin-induced activation of Jak2 can also lead to increased levels of c-myc and
CIS
mRNAs in BA/F3 cells stably expressing the Jak2 fusion protein with the intact N-terminal region. Conversely, activation of the chimeric Jak2 induced neither phosphorylation of Shc or SHP-2 nor activation of the c-fos promoter. Here, we showed that the GyrB-Jak2 system can serve as an excellent model to dissect signals of receptor-dependent and -independent events. We also obtained evidence indicating a role for the N-terminal region of Jak2 in downstream signaling events.
Mol
Biol Cell 1998 Dec
PMID:Activation and functional analysis of Janus kinase 2 in BA/F3 cells using the coumermycin/gyrase B system. 984 70
The aim of this study was to evaluate the DNA content in Bowen's disease in comparison to healthy epidermis applying image cytophotometry. The material investigated was derived from 50 patients with Bowen's disease and 10 patients with healthy skin. For comparison of both groups the Kruskal-Wallis test was applied. Slides were stained with Feulgen and were evaluated with CAS-200 image analyzer. Only 7/50 morbus Bowen cases represented euploid histogram. The others 43/50 were either conspicious to be aneuploid (29/50) or clearly aneuploid (14/50). In contrast, all normal epidermis (10/10) were clearly euploid. Morbus Bowen cases demonstrated significantly higher 5c exceeding rate (p=0.0012) and significantly more cells in the S-phase (p=0.017). High aneuploidy rate and increased proliferative activity in morbus Bowen cases support the classification of these lesion as
carcinoma in situ
.
Int J
Mol
Med 1998 Mar
PMID:Analysis of the DNA content in Bowen's disease. 985 74
Members of the recently discovered SOCS/
CIS
/SSI family have been proposed as regulators of cytokine signaling, and while targets and mechanisms have been suggested for some family members, the precise role of these proteins remains to be defined. To date no SOCS proteins have been specifically implicated in interleukin-2 (IL-2) signaling in T cells. Here we report SOCS-3 expression in response to IL-2 in both T-cell lines and human peripheral blood lymphocytes. SOCS-3 protein was detectable as early as 30 min following IL-2 stimulation, while
CIS
was seen only at low levels after 2 h. Unlike
CIS
, SOCS-3 was rapidly tyrosine phosphorylated in response to IL-2. Tyrosine phosphorylation of SOCS-3 was observed upon coexpression with Jak1 and Jak2 but only weakly with Jak3. In these experiments, SOCS-3 associated with Jak1 and inhibited Jak1 phosphorylation, and this inhibition was markedly enhanced by the presence of IL-2 receptor beta chain (IL-2Rbeta). Moreover, following IL-2 stimulation of T cells, SOCS-3 was able to interact with the IL-2 receptor complex, and in particular tyrosine phosphorylated Jak1 and IL-2Rbeta. Additionally, in lymphocytes expressing SOCS-3 but not
CIS
, IL-2-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT5b was markedly reduced, while there was only a weak effect on IL-3-mediated STAT5b tyrosine phosphorylation. Finally, proliferation induced by both IL-2- and IL-3 was significantly inhibited in the presence of SOCS-3. The findings suggest that when SOCS-3 is rapidly induced by IL-2 in T cells, it acts to inhibit IL-2 responses in a classical negative feedback loop.
Mol
Cell Biol 1999 Jul
PMID:SOCS-3 is tyrosine phosphorylated in response to interleukin-2 and suppresses STAT5 phosphorylation and lymphocyte proliferation. 1037 48
Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is common in cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN). This study investigates HPV detection and typing assay based on polymerase chain reaction amplification of L1 open reading frame with general primers GP5/GP6, followed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay detection with type-specific DNA probes. To determine the sensitivity of this assay, formalin-fixed CaSki cells were used as reference cell lines. Fifty copies of viral DNA diluted in DNA from 100,000 noninfected cells could be detected. This assay was also investigated for HPV detection and typing of 67 cervical specimens diagnosed with with CIN III or
carcinoma in situ
(
CIS
) and their adjacent squamous epithelium. The CIN III lesions were infected in approximately 80% of the samples, 81% in the neighboring CIN II, and 68% in CIN I. The HPV infection was even detectable in 54% of nondysplastic epithelium located near a CIN III lesion.
Diagn
Mol
Pathol 1999 Mar
PMID:Consensus polymerase chain reaction and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for human papillomavirus detection and typing in cervical specimens. 1040 91
Telomerase is a ribonucleoprotein complex intimately involved in cell immortalization and carcinogenesis. This enzyme is activated and stabilizes telomere length in almost all types of cancer. Telomerase may be necessary for continuous cell proliferation. In this study, we analyzed telomerase activity in hamster experimental oral lesions (starting from epithelial hyperplasia through dysplasia,
carcinoma in situ
, and invasive carcinoma) evoked by 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene, and in normal mucosa. We also analyzed proliferative activity in these lesions by using immunohistochemical analysis and flow cytometry. Histologically normal epithelium expressed weak telomerase activity. The telomerase activity count increased rapidly in the early stage of carcinogenesis and gradually in the late stage. Cell-proliferative activity closely correlated with progression of disease. These findings indicate that telomerase activation is an early event and that increases in telomerase activity upregulate cell proliferation in chemically induced hamster oral carcinogenesis.
Mol
Carcinog 1999 Jul
PMID:Telomerase activation and cell proliferation during 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene-induced hamster cheek pouch carcinogenesis. 1041 Nov 42
Suppressor of cytokine signalling (SOCS) proteins act as part of a classical negative feedback loop regulating cytokine signal transduction. Expression of SOCS proteins is induced in response to cytokines and down-regulates the cytokine signal by inhibiting the JAK/STAT pathway. Growth hormone (GH) was previously shown to induce strong transient expression of SOCS-3 and to a lesser extent
CIS
, SOCS-1 and SOCS-2 in mouse liver (Adams, T.E., Hansen, J.A., Starr, R., Nicola, N.A., Hilton, D.J., Billestrup, N., 1998. Growth hormone preferentially induces the rapid, transient expression of SOCS-3, a novel inhibitor of cytokine receptor signalling. J. Biol. Chem. 273, 1285-1287.). In this work we have compared GH-induced SOCS gene expression in wild-type and STAT5b-deficient mice, and show that STAT5b is required for the induction of SOCS-2 and SOCS-3 in liver. In contrast, the absence of STAT5b has no effect on the GH-induced expression of
CIS
and SOCS-2 mRNA in the mammary gland. Suprisingly, there is no activation of SOCS-3 expression in mammary glands of wild-type and STAT5b mutant mice following GH administration. These results highlight both tissue- and factor-specific differences in the regulation of SOCS gene expression by STAT5a/b.
Mol
Cell Endocrinol 1999 Dec 20
PMID:STAT5b mediates the GH-induced expression of SOCS-2 and SOCS-3 mRNA in the liver. 1063 Apr 11
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