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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
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630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We localized the 5' region of the human gene
HER2
in a cloned fragment of genomic DNA. This clone contained exons 1 to 4 of
HER2
, spanning the coding sequence for the first 191 amino acids. The promoter region of
HER2
was identified upstream to exon 1 by nuclease S1 mapping and by a functional assay in which the promoter region drives the expression of a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene. The
HER2
promoter is different from the promoter of the epidermal growth factor receptor gene (HER1), and the GC boxes which are typical of the promoter of the epidermal growth factor receptor gene are absent from the
HER2
promoter. One major and two minor RNA start sites located at nucleotides 178, 244, and 257 upstream to the initiator ATG were identified. The first one is 21 and 70 base pairs downstream from typical TATAA and CAAT boxes, respectively. This indicates that transcription of
HER2
/neu can be regulated by a mechanism involving a TATA box, as well as by other unidentified regulatory elements.
Mol
Cell Biol 1987 Jul
PMID:Human HER2 (neu) promoter: evidence for multiple mechanisms for transcriptional initiation. 303 51
Antagonists of steroid hormones are clinically important in the management of breast cancer. However, the duration of response is limited due to the development of hormone-independent tumors in virtually all cases. In an attempt to obtain insight into the mechanisms underlying antiestrogen resistance, the consequences of epigenetic changes in gene expression were studied in vitro. Estrogen-dependent ZR-75-1 human breast cancer cells were treated with 5-azacytidine, an inhibitor of DNA methylation, and cultured in the absence of estradiol or in the presence of antiestrogens. Estrogen-independent cell colonies developed within 3 weeks at high frequency in 5-azacytidine-treated cultures (0.7 x 10(-3), in contrast to control cultures (< or = 10(-8). The derived cells (ZR/AZA) were resistant to 4-hydroxytamoxifen and ICI 164,384, independent of the selection protocol, but had lost the ability to grow anchorage-independent. Whereas expression of estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and pS2 were down-regulated, expression of epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor and
HER2
/neu were increased in ZR/AZA cells. In contrast to the stable altered expression patterns of estrogen receptor and EGF receptor, transient keratin 7 expression was observed. Transforming growth factor-alpha mRNA was identified in ZR-75-1 cells and ZR/AZA cells and EGF-like peptides were secreted in the culture medium. Proliferation of ZR/AZA cells could be partially inhibited with an EGF receptor-blocking antibody. Presence of both growth factor receptors and possible ligands suggests the development of an autocrine growth mechanism. Our data show that epigenetic alterations of gene expression result in rapid progression of breast cancer cells to hormone independence.
Mol
Endocrinol 1994 Nov
PMID:Induction of estrogen independence of ZR-75-1 human breast cancer cells by epigenetic alterations. 753 60
Amplification of genomic DNA encoding oncogenes such as
HER-2
(syn.c-erbB2/c-neu) may be substantially involved in the initiation and progression of breast cancer. In order to refine and facilitate the quantitative analysis of
HER-2
amplification in breast cancer, differential polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed on DNA derived from single cryosections of tumor tissue. This technique is based on the simultaneous amplification of a potentially amplified oncogene (
HER-2
) and a reference gene (IFN-gamma). Differential PCR yielded reproducible results that were in agreement with gene copy quantification using the dot blot technique. Thus we suggest differential PCR to be a reliable and rapid method for determining relative gene dosage in a minute amount of tumour tissue.
Virchows Arch B Cell Pathol Incl
Mol
Pathol 1993
PMID:Detection of HER-2 oncogene amplification in breast cancer by differential polymerase chain reaction from single cryosections. 790 15
One hundred and five breast cancer patients with stage T3/4, N+/-, Mo were treated at random either with a pre- and postoperative chemotherapy (A) (5-drug-combination + tamoxifen) or with a pre- and postoperative radiotherapy (B). Paraffin embedded tissue samples were prepared from tumor material taken by biopsy prior to therapy as well as at surgery from patients of both groups to estimate the
HER-2
oncogene copy numbers before and after treatment. In 53 and 50% of the pretherapeutic samples the
HER-2
gene was amplified in groups A and B, respectively. In the post-therapeutic group 60% of the chemotherapy and 48% of the radiotherapy patients, respectively, had low or high
HER-2
oncogene copy numbers. In addition,
HER-2
amplification before and after therapy was estimated in 28 patients. An increase of oncogene copy numbers could be detected in 21% of the chemotherapy patients, and a decrease was noted in 11%. No radiotherapy patient showed a rise, but 11% a loss of copy numbers. Although amplification of
HER-2
oncogene was not found to be associated with overall survival as it was in many studies before, it could still be a predictor of clinical outcome and the cause of mammary carcinomas developing into stage T3/4.
J Steroid Biochem
Mol
Biol 1994 May
PMID:Clinical therapy and HER-2 oncogene amplification in breast cancer: chemo- vs radiotherapy. 791 77
Cloned sequences encoding a truncated form of the
HER2
receptor were obtained from cDNA libraries derived from two
HER2
-overexpressing human breast cancer cell lines, BT-474 and SK-BR-3. The 5' 2.1 kb of the encoded transcript is identical to that of full-length 4.6-kb
HER2
transcript and would be expected to produce a secreted form of
HER2
receptor containing only the extracellular ligand binding domain (ECD). The 3' end of the truncated transcript diverges 61 nucleotides before the receptor's transmembrane region, reads through a consensus splice donor site containing an in-frame stop codon, and contains a poly(A) addition site, suggesting that the truncated transcript arises by alternative RNA processing. S1 nuclease protection assays show a 40-fold variation in the abundance of the truncated 2.3-kb transcript relative to full-length 4.6-kb transcript in a panel of eight
HER2
-expressing tumor cell lines of gastric, ovarian, and breast cancer origin. Expression of this truncated transcript in COS-1 cells produces both secreted and intracellular forms of
HER2
ECD; however, immunofluorescent labeling of
HER2
ECD protein in MKN7 tumor cells that natively overexpress the 2.3-kb transcript suggests that transcriptionally generated
HER2
ECD is concentrated within the perinuclear cytoplasm. Metabolic labeling and endoglycosidase studies suggest that this
HER2
ECD (100 kDa) undergoes differential trafficking between the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi compartments compared with full-length (185-kDa)
HER2
receptor. Transfection studies indicate that excess production of
HER2
ECD in human tumor cells overexpressing full-length
HER2
receptor can result in resistance to the growth-inhibiting effects of anti-
HER2
monoclonal antibodies such as muMAb4D5. These findings demonstrate alternative processing of the
HER2
transcript and implicate a potentially important growth regulatory role for intracellularly sequestered
HER2
ECD in
HER2
-amplified human tumors.
Mol
Cell Biol 1993 Apr
PMID:A truncated intracellular HER2/neu receptor produced by alternative RNA processing affects growth of human carcinoma cells. 809 58
p185HER2, the product of the c-erbB-2 or
HER2
gene, is a membrane-bound tyrosine kinase that has structural similarity to the epidermal growth factor receptor. Functionally, interaction of
HER2
with its ligand or p185HER2 antibodies affects the growth and differentiation of
HER2
-expressing breast cancer cell lines. As p185HER2 is also expressed in human lung cancers and human lung cancer cell lines, we hypothesized that these cell lines would also respond to p185HER2 antibodies. To test this hypothesis, we cultured human non-small cell lung cancer cell lines in the presence of a p185HER2 monoclonal antibody called 4D5. 4D5 inhibited the growth of p185HER2-expressing cell lines in a dose-dependent fashion. In addition, BEAS.2B, a p185HER2-nonexpressing bronchial epithelial cell line, was transfected with the
HER2
cDNA, resulting in high-level p185HER2 expression, and growth of BEAS.
HER2
was now inhibited by 4D5 exposure. Mechanistically, 4D5 appeared to have a weak agonist effect on the tyrosine kinase function of p185HER2, as exposure of p185HER2-expressing cell lines to 4D5 resulted in increased p185HER2 phosphorylation. Furthermore, inhibition of tyrosine kinase function with Genistein reversed the 4D5-induced growth inhibition. Therefore, 4D5 can regulate the growth of p185HER2-expressing lung cancer cell lines through agonist effects on p185HER2.
Am J Respir Cell
Mol
Biol 1993 Oct
PMID:Inhibition of human lung cancer cell line growth by an anti-p185HER2 antibody. 810 37
Receptor dimerization is a crucial intermediate step in activation of signaling by receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs). However, dimerization of the RTK Neu (also designated ErbB-2,
HER-2
, and p185(neu)), while necessary, is not sufficient for signaling. Earlier work in our laboratory had shown that introduction of an ectopic cysteine into the Neu juxtamembrane domain induces Neu dimerization but not signaling. Since Neu signaling does require dimerization, we hypothesized that there are additional constraints that govern signaling ability. With the importance of the interreceptor cross-phosphorylation reaction, a likely constraint was the relative geometry of receptors within the dimer. We have tested this possibility by constructing a consecutive series of cysteine substitutions in the Neu juxtamembrane domain in order to force dimerization along a series of interreceptor faces. Within the group that dimerized constitutively, a subset had transforming activity. The substitutions in this subset all mapped to the same face of a predicted alpha helix, the most likely conformation for the intramembrane domain. Furthermore, this face of interaction aligns with the projected Neu* V664E substitution and with a predicted amphipathic interface in the Neu juxtamembrane domain. We propose that these results identify an RTK dimer interface and that dimerization of this RTK induces an extended contact between juxtamembrane and intramembrane alpha helices.
Mol
Cell Biol 1998 Sep
PMID:Activation of Neu (ErbB-2) mediated by disulfide bond-induced dimerization reveals a receptor tyrosine kinase dimer interface. 971 Jun 21
The
HER2
proto-oncogene (also known as neu or c-erbB-2) belongs to the epidermal growth factor receptor family.
HER2
is frequently amplified in human carcinomas. Gene amplification or overexpression of
HER2
has been correlated with poor prognosis in several human cancers. Point mutation in the rat
HER2
homolog, neu, is involved in the formation of rat neuroblastomas. However, no similar mutation in
HER2
has been found in human cancers. Here we report the identification of a novel alternative splicing form of
HER2
(deltaHER2) in human cell lines. An exon 16 amino acids long in the extracellular domain was deleted in deltaHER2. Deletion mutations in the corresponding region were shown previously to be involved in the formation of mammary carcinomas in transgenic mice. In the focus-formation assay, deltaHER2 showed much stronger transformation activity than did wild-type
HER2
. This result suggests that the deleted 16-amino acid exon may play a regulatory role in
HER2
transformation activity.
Mol
Carcinog 1998 Oct
PMID:A novel splice variant of HER2 with increased transformation activity. 980 59
The adenovirus E1A gene can act as an oncogene or a tumor suppressor, with the latter effect generally arising from the induction of apoptosis or the repression of genes that provide oncogenic growth stimuli (e.g.,
HER-2
/c-erbB2/neu) or increased metastatic invasiveness (e.g., metalloproteases). In this study, coexpression of E1A and p50E4F, a cellular transcription factor whose DNA binding activity is stimulated by E1A, suppressed colony formation by NIH 3T3 cells and transformation of primary rat embryo fibroblasts but had no observed effect in the absence of E1A. Domains in p50E4F required for stimulation of the adenovirus E4 promoter were required for the suppressive effect, indicating a transcriptional mechanism. In serum-containing media, retroviral expression of p50E4F in E1A13S/ras-transformed NIH 3T3 fibroblasts had little effect on subconfluent cultures but accelerated a decline in viability after the cultures reached confluence. Cell death occurred by both apoptosis and necrosis, with the predominance of each process determined by culture conditions. In serum-free media, p50E4F accelerated E1A-induced apoptosis. The results suggest that p50E4F sensitizes cells to signals or conditions that cause cell death.
Mol
Cell Biol 1999 Jul
PMID:Suppression of E1A-mediated transformation by the p50E4F transcription factor. 1037 23
Bispecific antibody (bsAb)-based clinical trials of cancer have been conducted primarily using intact murine monoclonal antibody (mAb)-derived molecules. In some of these trials, toxicity resulting from the interactions of antibody Fc domains with cellular Fc receptors has limited the doses of antibody (Ab) that can be employed. Furthermore, human anti-mouse Ab responses prohibit multiple therapy courses. These factors have decreased the efficacy of the bsAb 2B1, which targets the extracellular domains (ECD) of the
HER2
/neu protooncogene product and the human FcgammaRIII (CD16). To address these obstacles, we have constructed and characterized a fully human gene-fused bsAb from single-chain Fv (scFv) molecules specific for
HER2
/neu and CD16. The human anti-CD16 scFv component, NM3E2, was isolated from a human scFv phage display library. As binding of NM3E2 to human neutrophil-associated CD16 decreased in the presence of plasma IgG, we have concluded that NM3E2 recognizes an epitope in the vicinity of the Fc binding pocket. Furthermore, the NM3E2 scFv was found by surface plasmon resonance-based epitope mapping to share an overlapping epitope with the Leu-11c mAb. The human anti-
HER2
/neu scFv component, C6.5, which was previously isolated from a human scFv phage display library, was employed as fusion partner for the creation of a bispecific scFv (bs-scFv). In the presence of the C6.5 x NM3E2 bs-scFv, peripheral blood lymphocytes promoted significant lysis of human SK-OV-3 ovarian cancer cells overexpressing
HER2
/neu. Biodistribution studies performed in SK-OV-3 tumor-bearing scid mice revealed that 1% ID/g of 125I-labeled C6.5 x NM3E2 bs-scFv was specifically retained in tumor at 23 h following injection. These results indicated that both scFv components of the bs-scFv retained their function in the fusion protein. This bsAb should overcome some of the problems associated with the 2B1 bsAb. C6.5 x NM3E2 bs-scFv offers promise as a platform for multifunctional binding proteins with potential clinical applications as a result of its human origin, lack of an Fc domain, ease of production, high level of in vitro tumor cell cytotoxicity and highly selective tumor targeting.
Mol
Immunol 1999 May
PMID:Isolation and characterization of an anti-CD16 single-chain Fv fragment and construction of an anti-HER2/neu/anti-CD16 bispecific scFv that triggers CD16-dependent tumor cytolysis. 1044 96
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