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Query: UNIPROT:P51812 (
mitogen-activated protein
)
10,636
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Several non-small cell lung carcinomas (squamous cell carcinomas and adenocarcinomas) were analyzed for protein kinase activity. Soluble protein extracts derived from these tumors and from the lung parenchyma adjacent to the tumors were resolved by Mono Q anion exchange chromatography, and the fractions were assayed for phosphotransferase activity towards in vitro substrates. Myelin basic protein, casein, and a ribosomal S6-1 COOH-terminus peptide were efficient substrates for protein kinases that exhibited elevated phosphotransferase activity in the tumor extracts when compared to extracts derived from the adjacent nonneoplastic lung or from the lung parenchyma from patients with nonneoplastic lung disorders. Casein phosphotransferase activity was resolved into two peaks that eluted at 0.44 M NaCl and 0.56 M NaCl. The second peak was identified as casein kinase 2, based upon immunoreactivity to casein kinase 2-specific antipeptide antibodies and its sensitivity to inhibition by heparin sulfate. Myelin basic protein phosphotransferase activity eluted at 0.44 M NaCl, but Western blot analysis revealed that this could not be ascribed to
mitogen-activated protein
(
MAP
) kinases. This tumor associated protein kinase, designated p40TAK, exhibited a molecular mass of approximately 40 kDa upon gel filtration. In addition to myelin basic protein, it phosphorylated S6 peptide analogues and histone H1 on seryl residues. Like casein kinase 2, p40TAK exhibited elevated basal phosphotransferase activity in squamous cell carcinomas and adenocarcinomas of the lung when compared to the nonneoplastic lung parenchyma adjacent to the tumor.
Cancer
Res 1994 Apr 15
PMID:Activation of a tumor-associated protein kinase (p40TAK) and casein kinase 2 in human squamous cell carcinomas and adenocarcinomas of the lung. 751 12
A pyrazolo-quinoline compound, 6-methoxy-4-[2-[(2-hydroxyethoxyl)-ethyl]amino]-3-methyl-1M-pyrazo lo [3,4-b]quinoline (SCH 51344), was identified based on its ability to derepress human smooth muscle alpha-actin promoter activity in ras-transformed cells. In this study, we show that SCH 51344 reverts several key aspects of ras transformation, such as morphological changes, actin filament organization, and anchorage-independent growth, and also inhibits Val-12 Ras-induced maturation of Xenopus oocytes. SCH 51344 is also a potent inhibitor of the anchorage-independent growth of human tumor lines known to contain multiple genetic alterations in addition to activated ras genes. We have sought to determine whether SCH 51344 disrupts the signaling pathway that activates
mitogen-activated protein
(
MAP
) kinase or extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) in normal and ras-transformed fibroblast cells. NIH 3T3 cells transformed by different oncogenes, which have products that participate at different steps of the Ras signaling pathway, were tested in a soft-agar colony formation assay to determine which step of the pathway is inhibited by SCH 51344. Our results indicate that SCH 51344 inhibits the ability of v-abl, v-mos, H-ras, v-raf, and mutant active MAP kinase kinase-transformed NIH 3T3 cells to grow in soft agar. Only v-fos-transformed cells were found to be resistant to the treatment of SCH 51344. SCH 51344 treatment had very little effect, if any, on the activation of MAP kinase kinase, MAP kinase, and p90RSK activity in response to growth factor stimulation. Treatment of ras-transformed cells with SCH 51344 led to stimulation of serum response factor DNA binding activity and activation of serum response element-dependent gene transcription, accounting for its ability to activate alpha-actin promoter activity in ras-transformed cells. Our results indicate that SCH 51344 inhibits ras transformation by a novel mechanism and acts at a point either downstream or parallel to extracellular signal-regulated kinase-dependent Ras signaling pathway.
Cancer
Res 1995 Nov 01
PMID:SCH 51344 inhibits ras transformation by a novel mechanism. 758 59
Farnesyl protein transferase (FPTase) catalyzes the first of a series of posttranslational modifications of Ras required for full biological activity. Peptidomimetic inhibitors of FPTase have been designed that selectively block farnesylation in vivo and in vitro. These inhibitors prevent Ras processing and membrane localization and are effective in reversing the transformed phenotype of Rat1-v-ras cells but not that of cells transformed by v-raf or v-mos. We have tested the effect of the FPTase inhibitor L-744,832 (FTI) on the anchorage-dependent and -independent growth of human tumor cell lines. The growth of over 70% of all tumor cell lines tested was inhibited by 2-20 microM of the FTI, whereas the anchorage-dependent growth of nontransformed epithelial cells was less sensitive to the effects of the compound. No correlation was observed between response to drug and the origin of the tumor cell or whether it contained mutationally activated ras. In fact, cell lines with wild-type ras and active protein tyrosine kinases in which the transformed phenotype may depend on upstream activation of the ras pathway were especially sensitive to the drug. To define the important targets of FTI action, the mechanism of cellular drug resistance was examined. It was not a function of altered drug accumulation or of FPTase insensitivity since, in all cell lines tested, FPTase activity was readily inhibited within 1 h of treatment with the inhibitor. Furthermore, the general pattern of inhibition of cellular protein farnesylation and the specific inhibition of lamin B processing were the same in sensitive and resistant cells. In addition, functional activation of Ras was inhibited to the same degree in sensitive and resistant cell lines. However, the FTI inhibited the epidermal growth factor-induced activation of
mitogen-activated protein
kinases in sensitive cells but not in two resistant cell lines. These data suggest that the drug does inhibit ras function and that resistance in some cells is associated with the presence of Ras-independent pathways for mitogen-activated protein kinase activation by tyrosine kinases. We conclude that FPTase inhibitors are potent antitumor agents with activity against many types of human
cancer
cell lines, including those with wild-type ras.
Cancer
Res 1995 Nov 15
PMID:A peptidomimetic inhibitor of farnesyl:protein transferase blocks the anchorage-dependent and -independent growth of human tumor cell lines. 758 92
Exposure of NIH3T3 cells to elevated temperatures induces the phosphorylation and activation of
mitogen-activated protein
(
MAP
) kinases [or extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs)]. To investigate the significance of MAP kinase activation by heat shock, we examined the effect of inhibiting the activity of MAP kinase on heat shock protein 70 (hsp 70) expression. Overexpression of a dominant inhibitory mutant of ERK1, but not ERK2, in heat-shocked cells increased hsp70 reporter gene activity, suggesting that ERK1 acts as a repressor of hsp70 gene expression. Increases in ERK1 activity through treatment of cells with sodium vanadate (SV), an inhibitor of the dual-specificity MAP kinase phosphatase 1 (PAC1), resulted in increased phosphorylation of the heat shock transcription factor-1 (HSF-1) in unheated cells, delayed the activation of HSF-1 by heat shock, and inhibited the induction of hsp 70 by heat shock. Furthermore, the induction of thermotolerance was reduced significantly in cells that increased ERK1 activity by SV pretreatment. Immune complex kinase assays of heat shocked or SV-pretreated cells indicated that HSF-1 is a potential in vivo substrate for ERK1 phosphorylation. Taken together, these results suggest that agents that modulate MAP kinase act as negative regulators of the heat shock response in mammalian cells by modulating HSF-1 activity and hsp 70 expression.
Cancer
Res 1995 Dec 01
PMID:Mitogen-activated protein kinase acts as a negative regulator of the heat shock response in NIH3T3 cells. 758 24
Paclitaxel, an anti-mitotic anti-
cancer
agent, is active against solid tumors. The inhibition of depolymerization and promotion of microtubular assembly are essential for the anti-tumor activity of paclitaxel. Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) co-polymerize with tubulin and play some roles in microtubular dynamics. We examined the effect of paclitaxel on the interaction between tubulin and MAPs. Human lung-
cancer
cells, PC-14, were synchronized to G1/S border by the thymidine-double-block technique. After release from exposure to thymidine, the cells were treated briefly with 2 nM paclitaxel and the levels of alpha and beta tubulins and MAPs were examined after various times. Immunoblot analysis of paclitaxel-treated cells showed no changes in the overall expression of alpha and beta tubulins, microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) or MAPs in comparison with controls. The samples were immunoprecipitated with anti-alpha- and anti-beta-tubulin antibodies and reblotted with an anti-MAP2 antibody, which showed that the amount of co-immuno-precipitated MAP2 in the synchronized cells, were increased by the brief paclitaxel treatment. These results suggest that paclitaxel treatment enhances the interaction between alpha and beta tubulins and MAP2. Since the phosphorylation state of MAP2 regulates the affinity of MAP2 for tubulins, and
mitogen-activated protein
(
MAP
) kinase is considered to be one of the kinases responsible for MAP2 phosphorylation, the effect of paclitaxel treatment on the
MAP
-kinase activity of synchronized PC-14 cells was examined. Two bands with molecular masses of 42 and 44 kDa were detected by an "intra-gel"
MAP
-kinase assay using myelin basic protein as the substrate. Paclitaxel treatment inhibited the
MAP
-kinase activity of PC-14 cells and inhibition was maximal at the G2/M phase of the cell cycle. Similar, concentration-dependent inhibition by paclitaxel of cellular MAP kinase of human synchronized small-cell lung carcinoma, H69, was observed. No inhibition of the MAP kinase of the paclitaxel-resistant sub-line H69/Txl by paclitaxel was observed, suggesting that some change of the
MAP
-kinase cascade had occurred in these cells. No direct inhibition of
MAP
-kinase activity by paclitaxel was observed in the cell-free assay (in vitro), suggesting that paclitaxel did not inhibit MAP kinase directly. Since it has been speculated that p34cdc2 kinase is also a kinase that phosphorylates MAP2, the effect of paclitaxel treatment on the p34cdc2-kinase activity of synchronized PC-14 and PC-9 cells was examined. Paclitaxel inhibited p34cdc2-kinase activation at the G2/M phase. These results suggest that paclitaxel inhibited MAP kinase and p34cdc2 kinase in vivo indirectly. These actions of paclitaxel may be responsible for the increased affinity between MAP2 and tubulins that it induces.
Int J
Cancer
1995 Nov 27
PMID:Enhanced interaction between tubulin and microtubule-associated protein 2 via inhibition of MAP kinase and CDC2 kinase by paclitaxel. 759 Dec 86
We have investigated the effects of phospholipids on activation and proliferation of ovarian and breast cancer cells. Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), lysophosphatidylserine (LPS) and sphingosylphosphorylcholine (SPC) all induce transient increases in cytosolic free Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) in both ovarian and breast cancer cell lines. The ability of LPA, LPS and SPC to induce increases in [Ca2+]i in ovarian and breast cancer cells is likely to be due to an interaction with cell-surface receptors as the increases in [Ca2+]i were: (1) due to release of calcium from intracellular stores and not from transmembrane uptake due to changes in permeability; (2) blocked by lanthanum and suramin which do not enter cells; (3) blocked by phorbol esters which interrupt increases in [Ca2+]i induced through a number of different receptors; and (4) not detected in freshly isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells, indicating cell type specificity. In addition, increases in [Ca2+]i induced by LPA, LPS and SPC in ovarian and breast cancer cells completely self-desensitized and cross-desensitized each other, but did not block increases in [Ca2+]i induced by thrombin. Lysophosphatidylglycerol (LPG), but not other lysophospholipids, inhibited LPA- but not LPS- or SPC-induced increases in [Ca2+]i, suggesting that LPA may interact with a different receptor(s) to LPS or SPC and that their downstream signalling pathways converge or interact. LPA, SPC and LPS also induced rapid increases in tyrosine phosphorylation of specific cellular proteins, including p125FAK. Strikingly, LPA, but not LPS or SPC, induced activation of
mitogen-activated protein
(
MAP
) kinases. Despite an ability to activate similar intracellular signaling events, LPA, LPS and SPC exhibited markedly different effects on cell proliferation. Whereas LPA induced a significant increase in cell proliferation, LPS did not substantially alter cell proliferation and SPC inhibited cell proliferation. Surprisingly, phosphatidic acid (PA), which did not induce increases in [Ca2+]i, p125FAK activation or activation of
MAP
kinases, did induce proliferation of ovarian cancer cells, albeit at higher concentrations that LPA. The discordance between sensitivity to LPG, early biochemical events stimulated, and the eventual proliferation response combine to suggest that LPA probably utilizes a different receptor from LPS, SPC and PA. Therefore ovarian and breast cancer cells are sensitive to the effects of a number of different phospholipids which may play a role in the growth of these tumour cells in the
cancer
patient and are thus potential targets for therapy.
...
PMID:Lysophospholipids activate ovarian and breast cancer cells. 763 13
Suramin, a non-specific growth factor antagonist, has been reported to have pleiotrophic action on the proliferation of some kinds of tumours and has therefore attracted attention as an agent in the treatment of
cancer
. We studied its action on human glioma cell lines in vitro by examining the effect of suramin on the proliferation and the cell cycle and
mitogen-activated protein
(
MAP
)-kinase activity of glioma cells. We found that at low concentration (50, 100 micrograms/ml) suramin had a stimulatory effect while at higher concentrations (200, 500 micrograms/ml) it had an inhibitory effect on the proliferation of 4 human glioma cell lines. At low concentrations, suramin stimulated the transition of glioma cells from a quiescent state (G0) to the proliferative phase (S phase); MAP kinase activity was also increased. The stimulatory effect of low concentrations of suramin on the proliferation of glioma cells may have important consequences for glioma patients treated with suramin.
...
PMID:Stimulatory effect of suramin on the proliferation of human glioma cells. 765 6
In view of the potent mitogenic effect exerted by insulin in human colonic cells, we used Caco-2 cells transfected with an activated (Val12) human Ha-ras gene or the polyoma middle T (PyMT) oncogene, a constitutive activator of pp60c-src tyrosine kinase activity, to investigate the effect of oncogenic p21ras and PyMT/pp60c-src on insulin mitogenic signaling. As compared to vector control Caco-2 cells, both oncogene-transfected cells exhibited: 1) a lost of response to insulin's stimulatory effect on
mitogen-activated protein
(
MAP
) kinase activity and cell proliferation, both of which were constitutively increased; 2) a decrease in insulin receptor (IR) affinity and insulin-stimulated exogenous tyrosine kinase activity, which resulted, at least in part, from increased protein kinase C (PKC) activity (4), since both IR alterations were partially corrected by PKC down-regulation; and 3) a decrease in both insulin receptor mRNA level and insulin receptor number, which was independent of PKC since it persisted after PKC down-regulation. In conclusion, oncogenic p21ras and PyMT/pp60c-src abolished insulin mitogenic signaling in Caco-2 cells through mechanisms involving (i) constitutive activation of MAP kinase, and (ii) marked decreases in both insulin receptor function and expression which were mediated by PKC-dependent and PKC-independent pathways respectively. This is the first evidence that, when oncogenically activated, p21ras and pp60c-src not only exert a negative control on insulin receptor function but also repress insulin receptor gene expression in human colonic cells.
Bull
Cancer
1994 Oct
PMID:[Oncogenic activation of p21(ras) and pp60(c-src) in human colonic Caco-2 cells decreases insulin receptor function and expression through protein kinase C-dependent and independent pathways]. 773 71
We have previously shown that hypoxia causes the activation of nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappa B), and the phosphorylation of its inhibitory subunit, I kappa B alpha, on tyrosine residues. With the use of dominant negative mutants of Ha-Ras and Raf-1, we investigated some of the early signaling events leading to the activation of NF-kappa B by hypoxia. Both dominant negative alleles of Ha-Ras and Raf-1 inhibited NF-kappa B induction by hypoxia, suggesting that the hypoxia-induced pathway of NF-kappa B induction is dependent on Ras and Raf-1 kinase activity. Furthermore, although conditions of low oxygen can also activate
mitogen-activated protein
kinases (ERK1 and ERK2), these kinases do not appear to be involved in regulating NF-kappa B by low oxygen conditions, as dominant negative mutants of mitogen-activated protein kinase do not inhibit NF-kappa B activation by hypoxia. Since Ras and Raf-1 have been previously shown to work downstream from membrane-associated tyrosine kinases such as Src, we determined if the Src membrane-associated kinase was also activated by low oxygen conditions. We detected an increase in Src proto-oncogene activity within 15-30 min of cellular exposure to hypoxia. We postulate that Src activation by hypoxia may be one of the earliest events that precedes Ras activation in the signaling cascade which ultimately leads to the phosphorylation and dissociation of the inhibitory subunit of NF-kappa B, I kappa B alpha.
Cancer
Res 1994 Oct 15
PMID:Hypoxic activation of nuclear factor-kappa B is mediated by a Ras and Raf signaling pathway and does not involve MAP kinase (ERK1 or ERK2). 792 53
v-Ha-Ras, an oncogenic Ras mutant, causes malignant transformation of mammalian cells by recruiting c-Raf-1, a cytosolic Ser/Thr kinase, to the plasma membranes/cytoskeleton. The kinase activity of c-Raf-1 resides in the C-terminal half, which activates
mitogen-activated protein
(
MAP
) kinase kinase, while it is the N-terminal half of c-Raf-1 (Raf257, residues 1-257) that binds the Ras-GTP complex and can compete Ras GTPase-activating proteins such as NF1 for binding to Ras. However, it still remains to be clarified whether overexpression of Raf257 or its minimal Ras-binding fragment alone is sufficient to suppress Ras-induced
malignancy
. In this paper we demonstrate for the first time that the 81-amino acid fragment (Raf81, residues 51-131), the minimal Ras-binding fragment of Raf, indeed can suppress v-Ha-Ras-induced malignant phenotype. A further deletion of the first 6 amino acids causes 65% reduction in the Ras binding of Raf81. The resultant 75 amino acid fragment (Raf75, residues 57-131) consists of a single alpha-helix, five anti-paralleled beta-sheets and five loops. We have found that a further deletion of either the first beta-sheet/loop or the last two beta-sheets/loops completely abolishes Ras binding. In addition we have found that the removal of the C-terminal 35 amino acids from a Ras-binding 91-amino acid fragment of NF1 (NF91, residues 1441-1531) does not abolish its ability to suppress the Ras-induced
malignancy
.
...
PMID:The minimal fragments of c-Raf-1 and NF1 that can suppress v-Ha-Ras-induced malignant phenotype. 798 12
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