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Query: UNIPROT:P10721 (c-kit)
6,575 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The proto-oncogene c-kit encodes a tyrosine kinase receptor related to the PDGF/CSF-1 receptors. Mutations of this gene result in impairment of hematopoiesis, melanogenesis and gametogenesis. Using monoclonal antibodies to the c-kit gene product, we have analyzed its expression in normal and transformed human tissues. Unexpectedly, the receptor was found to be expressed in normal mammary epithelium. While in benign breast lesions, the c-kit gene product was detected at variable levels in 82% of the instances, in primary tumors, no product could be identified in 87% of the cases. This phenotype is maintained in metastatic foci. These findings were confirmed by paired Northern blot analysis of RNA preparations from normal and tumor tissues. These results demonstrate that the c-kit receptor may also be involved in the growth control of mammary epithelium and that this function may be impaired following malignant transformation and de-differentiation.
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PMID:Breast cancer is associated with loss of the c-kit oncogene product. 138 36

We have cloned and characterized a new member of the receptor tyrosine kinase family. The cDNA clone, isolated from a rat olfactory cDNA library, has considerable homology to the family of receptors that includes the colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor, the c-kit proto-oncogene, and the platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptors. Analysis of DNA sequence homology, ligand-binding, and ligand-stimulated phosphorylation data suggests that this clone encodes the rat PDGF-A/B or alpha-receptor. Comparison of its sequence to those of other receptors allows us to postulate a mechanism for receptor dimerization and activation. The expression of the rat alpha-PDGF receptor in nonneuronal cells of the olfactory epithelium and in the olfactory bulb is consistent with a role for PDGF in glial cell generation.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of the alpha platelet-derived growth factor receptor from rat olfactory epithelium. 215 69

A purified opioid-binding protein has been characterized by cDNA cloning. The cDNA sequence predicts an extracellularly located glycoprotein of 345 amino acids. This protein does not possess a membrane-spanning domain but contains a C-terminal hydrophobic sequence characteristic of membrane attachment by a phosphatidylinositol linkage. It displays homology to the immunoglobulin protein superfamily, featuring three domains that resemble disulfide-bonded constant regions. More specifically, the protein is most homologous to a subfamily of proteins which includes the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) and myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG) and one subgroup of the tyrosine kinase growth factor receptors comprising the platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGF R), the colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF-1 R) and the c-kit protooncogene. These sequence homologies suggest that the protein could be involved in either cell recognition and adhesion, peptidergic ligand binding or both.
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PMID:Molecular characterization of a new immunoglobulin superfamily protein with potential roles in opioid binding and cell contact. 272 89

Autocrine and paracrine growth factors are important mediators in malignant transformation. Interferons (IFN) and retinoids (RX) are well-known differentiative and immunomodulating agents with effects on subsets of different human tumors including malignant melanoma. In this study, we examined the modulating effects of three IFN and seven different RX on human melanoma cell lines regarding growth factor receptor expression. Growth factor receptor expression, including PDGF-R, NGF-R, EGF-R, IR, IGF-I-R, TFR and c-kit, was studied by immunohistochemistry and FACSscan analysis. Both groups of substances modulated the expression of some growth factor receptors. Upregulation of PDGF-R was seen after treatment with IFN as well as with RX. In contrast, EGF-R was found to be downregulated in two EGF-R-positive cell lines by IFN and, on the other hand, induced by RX in two EGF-R-negative cell lines. The expression of NGF-R was modulated ambiguously by these substances but demonstrated a cell line specificity in the different melanoma cell lines tested. Additionally, some of the tested growth factor receptors were not markedly changed regarding their expression by treatment with IFN and RX (IR, IGF-I-R, c-kit, TFR).
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PMID:Expression of growth factor receptors on human melanoma cells: comparison of modulating effects of interferons and retinoids. 751 81

The c-kit receptor tyrosine kinase belongs to the PDGF/CSF-1/c-kit receptor subfamily. The kit-ligand, KL, also called steel factor, is synthesized from two alternatively spliced mRNAs as transmembrane proteins that can either be proteolytically cleaved to produce soluble forms of KL or can function as cell-associated molecules. The c-kit receptor kinase and KL are encoded at the white spotting (W) and steel (Sl) loci of the mouse, respectively. Mutations at both the W and the Sl locus cause deficiencies in gametogenesis, melanogenesis and hematopoiesis. The c-kit receptor is expressed in the cellular targets of W and Sl mutations, while KL is expressed in their microenvironment. In melanogenesis, c-kit is expressed in melanoblasts from the time they leave the neural crest and expression continues during embryonic development and in the melanocytes of postnatal animals. In gametogenesis c-kit is expressed in primordial germ cells, in spermatogonia, and in primordial and growing oocytes, implying a role at three distinct stages of gametogenesis. Many mutant alleles are known at W and Sl loci and their phenotypes vary in the degree of severity in the different cellular targets of the mutations. While many W and Sl alleles severely affect primordial germ cells (PGC), several mild Sl alleles have weak effects on PGCs and exhibit differential male or female sterility. Steel Panda (Sl(pan)) is a KL expression mutation in which KL RNA transcript levels are reduced in most tissues analyzed. In female Sl(pan)/Sl(pan) mice, ovarian follicle development is arrested at the one layered cuboidal stage as a result of reduced KL expression in follicle cells, indicating a role for c-kit in oocyte growth. Wsh is a c-kit expression mutation, which affects mast cells and melanogenesis. While the mast cell defect results from lack of c-kit expression, the pigmentation deficiency appears to stem from ectopic c-kit receptor expression in the somitic dermatome at the time of migration of melanoblasts from the neural crest to the periphery. It is proposed that the ectopic c-kit expression in Wsh mice affects early melanogenesis in a dominant fashion. The "sash" or white belt of Wsh/+ animals and some other mutant mice is explained by the varying density of melanoblasts along the body axis of wild-type embryos.
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PMID:The kit-ligand (steel factor) and its receptor c-kit/W: pleiotropic roles in gametogenesis and melanogenesis. 751 81

The transforming gene of the Hardy-Zuckerman-4 strain of feline sarcoma virus, v-kit, arose by transduction of the cellular c-kit gene, which encodes the receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) p145c-kit. To gain insight into the molecular basis of the v-kit transforming potential, we characterized the feline c-kit by cDNA cloning. Comparison of the feline v-kit and c-kit sequences revealed, in addition to deletions of the extracellular and transmembrane domains, three additional mutations in the v-kit oncogene product: deletion of tyrosine-569 and valine-570, the exchange of aspartate at position 761 to glycine, and replacement of the C-terminal 50 amino acids by five unrelated residues. Examinations of individual v-kit mutations in the context of chimeric receptors yielded inhibitory effects for some mutants on both autophosphorylation and substrate phosphorylation functions. In contrast, deletion of tyrosine-569 and valine-570 significantly enhanced transforming and mitogenic activities of p145c-kit, while the other mutations had no significant effects. Conservation in subclass III RTKs and the identification of the corresponding residue in beta PDGF-R, Y579, as a binding site for src family tyrosine kinases suggests an important role for Y568 in kit signal regulation and the definition of its oncogenic potential. Repositioning of Y571 by an inframe two codon deletion may be the crucial alteration resulting in enhancement of v-kit oncogenic activity.
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PMID:Oncogenic activation of v-kit involves deletion of a putative tyrosine-substrate interaction site. 753 Aug 27

During Xenopus gastrulation, platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptor-alpha is expressed in involuting marginal zone cells which migrate over ectodermal cells expressing PDGF-A. To investigate the role of PDGF signalling during this process, we have generated a novel point mutant of PDGF receptor-alpha analogous to the W37 mutation of c-kit. This molecule is a specific, potent, dominant inhibitor of PDGF signalling in vivo. Injection of RNA encoding this protein into Xenopus embryos prevents closure of the blastopore, leads to abnormal gastrulation and a loss of anterior structures. Convergent extension is not inhibited in these embryos, but rather, involuting mesodermal cells fail to adhere to the overlying ectoderm. PDGF may therefore be required for mesodermal cell-substratum interaction.
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PMID:PDGF signalling is required for gastrulation of Xenopus laevis. 755 34

In this article we describe the rapid advances made in the molecular genetics of three inherited pigmentation disorders: albinism, piebaldism, and vitiligo, all of which throw light on normal pigment cell function. The focus is on studies in mice, with comparison of data in humans. The critical role of tyrosinase (c-locus or human tyrosinase protein) in normal pigmentation and albinism has been reinforced by the cloning and identification of mutations in tyrosinase and two other melanocyte-specific oxidoreductases structurally related to but functionally different from tyrosinase: the (b) brown-locus protein/gp75/catalase B and dopachrome tautomerase. Each possesses a distinct enzyme activity and yet the three share homology in strategic regions. Most of the point mutations that reduce or abrogate the respective enzyme activities are located in those regions. Tyrosinase-negative albinism is caused only by defects in tyrosinase. A locus for human tyrosinase-positive albinism has been recently mapped to chromosome 15q11.2-->q12, at a gene identified in mice as pink-eyed dilution. On the other hand, several genes encoding proteins critical for the proliferation of melanocytes are known to control the piebald phenotype. So far identified are two membrane-receptor tyrosine kinases, c-Kit and PDGF-R/alpha, and the ligand for c-kit, MGF (mast-cell growth factor, also known as stem-cell factor, c-Kit-ligand, or steel factor). Mutations in W/c-kit (white spotting), Ph/Pdgfr/a (patch), and Sl/MGF (steel), lead to a reduction in receptor kinase activity and failure of melanocytes to thrive and reach the skin during embryogenesis. Finally, mouse mutant models suggest at least two possible causes for vitiligo, a progressive loss of pigmentation that occurs after birth. In one mutant, the Blt (light) mouse, the cyclic death of hair melanocytes may be due to the toxicity of intermediates and byproducts of melanogenesis in the presence of a dysfunctional b-locus protein. In the other model, the "vitiligo mouse," in which the allele vit has been assigned to the microphthalmia (mi) locus, the loss of melanocytes may be caused by defective signal transduction, because in addition to vitiligo mivit/mivit mice have extensive piebaldism.
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PMID:White mutants in mice shedding light on humans. 843 6

Cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesive interactions mediated by integrins play crucial roles in leukocyte migration to inflamed tissues, and also in cell migration during embryogenesis. Much remains to be learned about the molecular mechanisms of regulation of adhesion mediated by integrins. Recently we found that steel factor and c-kit induce adhesion to fibronectin by VLA-5 in mast cells. Activation of adhesiveness is transient, and occurs at concentrations of steel factor 100-fold lower than required for growth stimulation. This suggests that regulation of adhesion is an important biological function of steel factor and c-kit. Other receptor tyrosine kinases such as the PDGF receptor can substitute for c-kit. Signaling through receptor tyrosine kinases may offer a general mechanism for the regulation of integrin avidity.
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PMID:Regulation of cell-matrix adhesion by receptor tyrosine kinases. 853 83

Hematopoietic tyrosine kinase receptors (HGF-TKRs or class III TKRs) are essential for the growth and differentiation of hematopoietic cells. In this report we present a novel method that generates expression profiles of these receptors. The method was tested and optimized using the myeloblastic/ promyelocytic cell line KG1. The method involves PCR of cDNA using class III-specific degenerate primers and subsequent restriction enzyme digests of the 147 bp amplicons followed by fractionation on denaturing poly-acrylamide gels. This primary fingerprint of KG1 revealed equal expression of c-kit and flt3 and to a lesser extent PDGF-R alpha and c-fms. One residual band of unknown origin was seen and appeared to be the proto-oncogene RET following cloning and sequence analysis. This tyrosine kinase receptor is known to play an important role in neural development. In order to detect less abundantly expressed sequences, a secondary fingerprint was generated by pre-digestion of the receptors present in the primary expression profile and subsequent amplification of the residual band. No other tyrosine kinase receptors were observed in KG1. In conclusion, this method allows direct visualization of expression of the HGF-TKRs and has the potential to detect novel homologous receptors.
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PMID:Direct display of hematopoietic tyrosine kinase receptor expression profiles in KG1 cells by PCR using degenerate primers. 870 51


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