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Query: UNIPROT:P10721 (
c-kit
)
6,575
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There is considerable evidence to suggest that polypeptide growth factors from either the oviduct or the endometrium can control preimplantation development of the mammalian embryo. These act directly through receptors expressed on the embryo. In addition, embryos also produce growth factors. The reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was used to determine the pattern of expression of mRNAs encoding several growth factor ligand and receptor genes throughout preimplantation development of cryopreserved human embryos. Transcripts encoding the receptor for
c-fms
, the receptor for colony-stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1), and
c-kit
(the receptor for stem cell factor [SCF]) were expressed throughout preimplantation development. Other growth factor ligand and receptor transcripts were expressed in a stage-specific manner: these included receptors for interleukin (IL)-6 (IL-6R), leukemia inhibitory factor (LIFR), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha) (TNFRp80 and TNFRp60), and gp130. The transcripts for gp130 and the ligand SCF showed stage-specific splice variants. Blastocysts expressed a novel cDNA encoding gp130, which predicts a truncated form lacking the intracellular signaling domain. No expression of mRNAs encoding LIF, CSF-1, or the cloned receptor for platelet-activating factor was seen in any embryonic stage studied. We have shown that RT-PCR provides a sensitive and powerful method for identifying transcripts encoding growth factors and their receptors in single human embryos. The method is economical, allowing the expression pattern of many genes to be determined from a single embryo. These data are important in defining which cytokines may be involved in regulating human preimplantation development and when they may act.
...
PMID:Stage-specific expression of cytokine and receptor messenger ribonucleic acids in human preimplantation embryos. 854 94
CD34+ precursors in normal human bone marrow (BM) generate large numbers of dendritic cells alongside macrophages and granulocytic precursors when cultured for 12 to 14 days in
c-kit
ligand, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha). This study reports an intermediate cell type that develops by day 6, and has the potential to differentiate into either macrophages or dendritic cells. When the d6 progeny are depleted of mature macrophages and residual CD34+ precursors, a discrete CD14+ HLA-DR+ population persists in addition to immunostimulatory CD14- HLA-DR() dendritic cells. Half of the CD14+ HLA-DR+ population is in cell cycle (Ki-67+), but colony-forming units (CFUs) are no longer detectable. The calls are c-fms+, but lack myeloperoxidase and nonspecific esterase. They also possess substantial phagocytic and allostimulatory activity. These post-CFU, CD14+ HLA-DR+ intermediates develop into typical macrophages when recultured in the absence of exogenous cytokines. M-CSF supports up to approximately 2.5-fold expansion of macrophage progeny. In contrast, the combination of GM-CSF and TNF-alpha supports quantitative differentiation into dendritic cells, lacking
c-fms
, CD14, and other macrophage properties, and expressing HLA-DR, CD1a, CD83, CD80, CD86, and potent allostimulatory activity. Therefore, normal CD34+ BM precursors can generate a post-CFU bipotential intermediate in the presence of
c-kit
ligand, GM-CSF, and TNF-alpha. This intermediate cell type will develop along the dendritic cell pathway when macrophages are removed and GM-CSF and TNF-alpha are provided. Alternatively, it can differentiate along a macrophage pathway when recultured with or without M-CSF.
...
PMID:Dendritic cells and macrophages can mature independently from a human bone marrow-derived, post-colony-forming unit intermediate. 863 19
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.
...
PMID:Direct display of hematopoietic tyrosine kinase receptor expression profiles in KG1 cells by PCR using degenerate primers. 870 51
Expression profiles were generated for the haemopoietic tyrosine kinase receptors (HGF-TKRs or class III TKRs) by PCR on cDNA samples (RT-PCR) using a degenerate primer set. Each profile consisted of primary and secondary, i.e. enriched for less-expressed sequences, fingerprints. This method was applied on FACS-purified haemopoietic CD34+ cells, both from bone marrow (BM) and umbilical cord blood (UCB), and on mature cells from peripheral blood. CD34+ BM cells showed expression of
c-fms
. flt3, whereas CD34+ UCB cells expressed
c-fms
and, to a lesser extent,
c-kit
and flt3. In mature blood cells, only
c-fms
was observed in monocytes and a weaker flt3 expression in monocytes and T lymphocytes, whereas no known class III TKRs were detected in B lymphocytes and polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs). In all fractions a novel band could be observed, which appeared to be RET. Expression of RET was confirmed by RT-PCR and showed the highest levels in monocytes, followed by PMNs and CD34+ cells. B lymphocytes revealed low levels of expression. RET is known to be essential in neural development. Our results suggest a possible role for this receptor in haemopoiesis.
...
PMID:Haemopoietic growth factor tyrosine kinase receptor expression profiles in normal haemopoiesis. 875 81
The lymphohematopoietic progenitors represent < 0.01% of nucleated marrow cells. We have shown that murine lymphohematopoietic progenitors can be immortalized by a recombinant retroviral vector harboring a dominant-negative retinoic acid (RA) receptor. The immortalized progenitors proliferate as a stem-cell factor-dependent clonal line designated EML C1. The EML C1 cell line spontaneously generates prepro-B-lymphocytes and erythroid and myeloid progenitors. Upon stimulation with interleukin 7 and marrow stromal cells, the prepro-B-lymphocytes express recombination-activating gene 1 (RAG-1) and undergo D-J rearrangements of the immunoglobulin heavy-chain genes. With erythropoietin, the erythroid progenitors proliferate and differentiate into red cells. Generation of the common progenitors for neutrophils and macrophages [colony-forming units-granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM)] is suppressed in EML C1 cells but is inducible by high concentrations of RA. An additional block in neutrophil differentiation occurs at the promyelocyte stage, but this can also be overcome by high concentrations of RA. Although
c-fms
is homologous to
c-kit
, which encodes the receptor for stem-cell factor (SCF), EML C1 cells neither express
c-fms
nor respond to macrophage colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF), the ligand for
c-fms
. Transduction and expression of
c-fms
cDNA in EML C1 cells confers responsiveness to M-CSF. This finding indicates that
c-kit
and
c-fms
share substantially overlapping signal-transduction pathways. However,
c-fms
-transduced EML C1 cells (EML C1/
c-fms
cells) exhibit different development patterns when stimulated by SCF alone or by M-CSF alone. When stimulated by SCF alone, EML C1/
c-fms
cells show mostly erythroid and B-lymphoid development. When stimulated by M-CSF alone, development switches to mostly myeloid (neutrophil and macrophage) development. This observation suggests that
c-kit
and
c-fms
must have unique signal-transduction pathways in addition to the common ones.
...
PMID:Differential effects of c-fms and c-kit ligands on the lineage development of the lymphohematopoietic cell line EML C1. 876 19
The cbl oncogene was first identified as part of a transforming retrovirus which arose in a mouse pre-B cell lymphoma. Its protein product, p120cbl, is cytoplasmic and has several distinctive domains including a highly basic region, a RING finger motif and a large proline-rich domain. A mutation to cbl in the 70Z/3 pre-B cell lymphoma produces an oncogenic protein which exhibits a marked enhancement of tyrosine phosphorylation. Parallel studies have demonstrated that p120cbl is a substrate of protein Tyrosine kinases activated by engagement of the T cell antigen receptor and that cbl is phosphorylated by oncogenic forms of the Abl tyrosine kinase. These studies also demonstrated a constitutive association between cbl and the SHS domains of the Grb2 and Nck adaptor proteins in a range of haemopoietic cell lines. More recently it has been found that cbl is rapidly phosphorylated following stimulation of the EGF receptor, Fcy receptor,
c-Kit
receptor and
CSF-1 receptor
. A genetic analysis in Caenorhabditis elegans has identified a cbl homologue, called sli-1, that negatively regulates the LET-23 tyrosine kinase receptor. These characteristics indicate a central role for cbl in the regulation of intracellular signals that are mediated by growth factors and antigenic stimuli which activate protein tyrosine kinases.
...
PMID:The cbl oncogene: a novel substrate of protein tyrosine kinases. 877 Mar 64
We have evaluated the expression of growth factor receptors (GFRs) on early hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) purified from human adult peripheral blood and induced in liquid suspension culture to unilineage differentiation/maturation through the erythroid (E), granulocytic (G), megakaryocytic (Mk), or monocytic (Mo) lineage. The receptors for basic fibroblast GF (bFGF), erythropoietin (Epo), thrombopoietin (Tpo), and macrophage colony-stimulating factor (MCSF) have been only assayed at mRNA level; the majority of GFRs have been evaluated by both mRNA and protein analyses: the expression patterns were consistent at both levels. In quiescent HPCs the receptors for early-acting [flt3 ligand (FL),
c-kit
ligand (KL), bFGF, interleukin-6 (IL-6)] and multilineage [IL-3, granulocyte-macrophage CSF (GM-CSF)] HGFs are expressed at significant levels but with different patterns, eg, kit and flt3 are detected on a majority and minority of HPCs, respectively, whereas IL-3Rs and GM-CSFRs are present on almost all HPCs. In the four differentiation pathways, expression of early-acting receptors shows a progressive decrease, more rapidly for bFGFR-1 and flt3 than for
c-kit
; furthermore,
c-kit
is more slowly downmodulated in the E and Mk than the G and Mo lineages. As a partial exception, IL-6Rs are still detected through the early or late stages of maturation in the Mk and Mo lineages, respectively. IL-3R expression is progressively and rapidly downmodulated in both E and Mk pathways, whereas it moderately decreases in the Mo lineage and is sustained in the G series. The expression of GM-
CSFR
is gradually downmodulated in all differentiation pathways, ie, the receptor density markedly decreases but late erythroblasts are still partially GM-CSFR+ and terminal G, Mk and Mo cells are essentially GM-CSFR+. Expression of receptors for late-acting cytokines is lineage-specific. Thus, EpoR, G-
CSFR
, TpoR, and
M-CSFR
exhibit a gradual induction followed by a sustained expression in the E, G, MK, and Mo lineages, respectively. In the other differentiation pathways the expression of these receptors is either absent or initially low and there-after suppressed. These observations are compatible with the following multi-step model. (1) The early-acting GFRs are expressed on quiescent HPCs with different patterns, whereas the multilineage GFRs are present on > or = 90% to 95% HPCs. (2) Multilineage GFs, potentiated by early-acting HGFs, trigger HPCs into cycling. HPC proliferation/differentiation is followed by declining expression of the early-acting GFRs and in part of multilineage GFRs (see above). (3) Multilineage GFs trigger the expression of the unilineage GFRs (see Testa U, et al: Blood 81:1442, 1993). Interaction of each unilineage GF with its receptor leads to sustained expression of the receptor (possibly via transcription factors activating the receptor promoter) and thus mediates differentiation/maturation through the pertinent lineage.
...
PMID:Expression of growth factor receptors in unilineage differentiation culture of purified hematopoietic progenitors. 889 4
The kinetics of colony formation by granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)-mobilized peripheral blood progenitor cells (PBPCs) were monitored using clone-mapping experiments. Compared with normal resting bone marrow (BM), where the ratio of Day 7:Day 14 granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming cells (GM-CFCs) was 1:0.76-1.9, PB was found to be relatively deficient in progenitor cells with the capacity to form colonies by Day 7 (median ratio Day 7:Day 14 1:21). The most mature Day 7 GM-CFCs, those dispersing or extinguishing before Day 14, were almost absent in PB (< 1% of all GM-CFCs) but comprised 77% of Day 7 GM-CFCs and 32% of all GM-CFCs in BM. The expression patterns of high affinity receptors for G-CSF, GM-CSF, stem cell factor (SCF), and the ligand for flk-2 on CD38hi and CD38-/dim PB CD34+ cells were determined by binding of 125I-labeled ligand and autoradiography. G-CSF receptor (G-CSFR) expression was detected on approximately 25% of CD38-/dim cells (estimated mean 105 receptors per positive cell) and was higher in CD38hi cells (approximately 50% positive, with a mean of 227 receptors per cell). GM-
CSFR
expression was low (approximately 25% of cells positive, mean of 120 receptor per cell) and did not vary with CD38 expression.
c-kit
(SCFR) and flk-2 were expressed by > or = 90% and > or = 80% of CD34+ cells, respectively. SCF binding per cell was greater in the CD38hi population, while flk-2 expression did not vary with CD38 expression. These results confirm the heterogeneity of receptor expression by progenitor cells and imply differential regulation of receptor expression during maturation.
...
PMID:G-CSF-mobilized peripheral blood progenitor cells: in vitro growth pattern and hematopoietic growth factor receptor profile. 913 Oct 4
The murine cell line SR-4987 was originated in our laboratory from adherent cells of a long term bone marrow culture. SR-4987 cells do not express p21-ras and
c-fms
products on membrane whereas secrete M-CSF, evidence a fibroblast-like morphology and are vimentine positive. This line shows a very poor "in vitro" agar clonogenicity which is not modulated by the addition of different cytokines and growth factors (M-CSF, GM-CSF, G-CSF, IL-3, IL-7, alpha-TNF, PDGF, and EGF). On the contrary, a dramatic increase in clonogenicity is observed in the presence of bFGF. The RT-PCR investigation evidences the mRNA encoding for bFGF, IL-7, GM-CSF, and SCF (
c-kit
ligand). The analysis of CD antigen expression on SR-4987 cell membrane indicates a phenotype (CD5+, CD44+, 45R(B220)+, sIg+, 5'-nucleotidase+) that is consistent with a B cell feature. Our observations suggest that exogenous bFGF might represent an appropriate stimulus for inducing the SR-4987 cells proliferation also in the absence of cell-substrate anchorage. Further, they indicate that SR-4987 cells could represent a particular differentiation stage in which characters of "stromal cell" and "B cell" are coexpressed in agreement with the hypothesis of a common stromal-hematopoietic differentiation.
...
PMID:Expression of B cell markers on SR-4987 cells derived from murine bone marrow stroma. 919 33
Osteoclasts are hematopoietic cells essential for bone resorption. To study the derivation of these interesting cells, we developed a stepwise culture system where stromal cells promote embryonic stem (ES) cells to differentiate into mature osteoclasts. Three phases to this differentiation process include (1) induction of hematopoiesis, along with the generation of osteoclast precursors, (2) expansion of these precursors, and (3) terminal differentiation into mature osteoclasts in the presence of 1alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamine D3 . Although the transition of ES cells to the hematopoietic lineage was not blocked by an antibody to
c-fms
, later phases were dependent on a signaling through this transmembrane receptor as indicated by the finding that anti-
c-fms
treatment of cells in the second and third phases reduced the number of osteoclasts produced by 75% and more than 99%, respectively. Blockade of signaling through another tyrosine kinase-type receptor,
c-kit
, did not affect any stages of osteoclastogenesis, although generation of other hemopoietic lineages was reduced to less than 10% of untreated. When small numbers of ES cells were directly cultured under conditions that promote osteoclast differentiation, tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase-positive multinucleated cells were observed at the edge but not inside of colonies. This suggests that some types of cell-cell interactions may inhibit development of mature osteoclasts. The culture system developed here provides an important tool for osteoclast biology.
...
PMID:Development of osteoclasts from embryonic stem cells through a pathway that is c-fms but not c-kit dependent. 934 35
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