Inhibition by two lavendustins of the tyrosine kinase activity of pp60F527 in vitro and in intact cells

1994 ◽  
Vol 269 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenceslas K. Agbotounou ◽  
Kazuo Umezawa ◽  
Alain Jacquemin-Sablon ◽  
Josiane Pierre
1993 ◽  
Vol 105 (3) ◽  
pp. 629-636 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Rebut-Bonneton ◽  
S. Boutemy-Roulier ◽  
D. Evain-Brion

The morphological and functional differentiation of human trophoblast cells ends with the formation of terminally differentiated multinucleated syncytial trophoblasts. This in vivo differentiation is mimicked in vitro during the primary culture of extravillous cytotrophoblasts: isolated mononuclear cytotrophoblasts aggregate and fuse to form syncytia. This in vitro differentiation is associated with an increase in epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R) expression and a transitory increase in E-cadherin expression during cell aggregation. In the present study, we investigated the expression of pp60c-src during morphological differentiation of trophoblast cells. Cultures were terminated at various time intervals and pp60c-src was analysed by immunocytochemistry using a specific antibody. In addition, pp60c-src was investigated by western blot analysis and its tyrosine kinase activity was measured concomitantly. In mononuclear cytotrophoblasts, pp60c-src was localized at cell-matrix contacts and during the aggregation of cytotrophoblasts, pp60c-src was distributed on the cell surface at points of cell-cell contact being colocalized with EGF-R and E-cadherin. The kinase activity of the pp60c-src protein increased significantly at day 2 when cells were completely aggregated and started to fuse, and remained elevated while cells underwent further differentiation. Inhibition of pp60c-src by herbimycin A at 0.25 to 1 microgram/ml during the first day of culture was associated with a decreased expression of tyrosine kinase activity of EGF-R and an increase in E-cadherin expression. These data suggest that pp60c-src is involved in the modulation of trophoblast cell aggregation and fusion leading to syncytial formation.


Neuroscience ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 161-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.L Braunton ◽  
V Wong ◽  
W Wang ◽  
M.W Salter ◽  
J Roder ◽  
...  

1985 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 204-213 ◽  
Author(s):  
R L Davis ◽  
J B Konopka ◽  
O N Witte

The v-abl protein of Abelson murine leukemia virus is a tyrosine-specific kinase. Its normal cellular homolog, murine c-abl, does not possess detectable tyrosine kinase activity in vitro. Previously, we have detected tyrosine kinase activity in vitro for an altered c-abl gene product (c-abl P210) in the K562 human chronic myelogenous leukemia cell line. The expression of this variant c-abl gene product correlates with chromosomal translocation and amplification of the c-abl gene in K562 cells. Like v-abl, c-abl P210 is a fusion protein containing non-abl sequences near the amino terminus of c-abl. We compared the in vitro tyrosine kinase activity of c-abl P210 with that of wild-type murine v-abl. The remarkable similarities of these two proteins with respect to cis-acting autophosphorylation, trans-acting phosphorylation of exogenous substrates, and kinase inhibition, using site-directed abl-specific antisera, suggested that c-abl P210 could function similarly to v-abl in vivo. In addition, c-abl P210 possessed an associated serine kinase activity in immunoprecipitates. The serine kinase activity was not inhibited by site-directed, abl-specific antisera that inhibit the tyrosine kinase activity, suggesting that the serine kinase activity is not an intrinsic property of c-abl P210. Thus, the activation of the c-abl gene in a human leukemia cell line may have functional consequences analogous to activation of the c-abl gene in Abelson murine leukemia virus.


1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 735-743 ◽  
Author(s):  
S K Muthuswamy ◽  
P M Siegel ◽  
D L Dankort ◽  
M A Webster ◽  
W J Muller

Amplification and overexpression of the neu (c-erbB2) proto-oncogene has been implicated in the pathogenesis of 20 to 30% of human breast cancers. Although the activation of Neu receptor tyrosine kinase appears to be a pivotal step during mammary tumorigenesis, the mechanism by which Neu signals cell proliferation is unclear. Molecules bearing a domain shared by the c-Src proto-oncogene (Src homology 2) are thought to be involved in signal transduction from activated receptor tyrosine kinases such as Neu. To test whether c-Src was implicated in Neu-mediated signal transduction, we measured the activity of the c-Src tyrosine kinase in tissue extracts from either mammary tumors or adjacent mammary epithelium derived from transgenic mice expressing a mouse mammary tumor virus promoter/enhancer/unactivated neu fusion gene. The Neu-induced mammary tumors possessed six- to eightfold-higher c-Src kinase activity than the adjacent epithelium. The increase in c-Src tyrosine kinase activity was not due to an increase in the levels of c-Src but rather was a result of the elevation of its specific activity. Moreover, activation of c-Src was correlated with its ability to complex tyrosine-phosphorylated Neu both in vitro and in vivo. Together, these observations suggest that activation of the c-Src tyrosine kinase during mammary tumorigenesis may occur through a direct interaction with activated Neu.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 438-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoyan Jiang ◽  
Kyi Min Saw ◽  
Allen Eaves ◽  
Connie Eaves

Abstract Growing evidence indicates that the therapeutic potential of imatinib mesylate (IM) for the treatment of CML may be limited initially by a relative innate resistance of the leukemic stem cells and eventually by an accumulation of cells with BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase domain mutations. We now show that the amount and tyrosine kinase activity of p210-BCR-ABL in the most primitive and relatively IM-unresponsive lin−CD34+CD38− CML cells is 3 to 10-fold higher than in the majority of the lin−CD34+CD38+ CML progenitors (n=3). These results confirm previous BCR-ABL transcript data and identify elevated p210-BCR-ABL expression to be a likely important factor in the characteristic IM-insensitivity of very primitive CML cells. To determine whether in vivo, CML stem cells also accumulate gene mutations affecting the BCR-ABL kinase domain, cDNAs were prepared from RNA extracts of purified lin−CD34+CD38− cells isolated from 3 chronic phase patients that had not received IM therapy. Bidirectional sequencing of individually cloned cDNAs from these samples revealed BCR-ABL kinase domain mutations in 2 of the 3 patients at frequencies of 10% (1/10), 20% (2*/10,*identical mutations). Incubation of these lin−CD34+CD38− cells in vitro for 2–3 wk ± a high concentration of IM (up to 10 μM, which was sufficient to reduce the tyrosine kinase activity in the input cells by 70±12% and in their 2 wk progeny by 10±5%) selected a subpopulation of more differentiated and completely IM-resistant cells. This was shown in Western blots by the inability of 10 μM IM to reduce either their p210-BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase activity or CrkL phosphorylation and in methylcellulose assays ±5 μM IM. As predicted, IM-selected cells showed a higher frequency of kinase domain mutations (13–20% vs 0–20% of cDNA clones analyzed from 3 wk cells cultured ±IM). Analysis of individual colonies produced from CFCs in the cultured cells showed all (21/21) colonies from IM-selected cells had mutations vs 50% (5/10) in those cultured without IM. The total frequency of mutant cDNAs detected was also increased in the IM-resistant cells (35–55% vs 10–25% mutant cDNAs in selected vs control cells). Interestingly, in most cases, both wild-type and mutant cDNAs were identified in the same colony, indicating de novo generation of mutations in vitro. Overall, >50 different mutations were identified. These included 10 point mutations previously associated with clinical IM resistance (including G250 and T315), another 13 point mutations previously identified in a comprehensive mutational screen, and >20 previously undescribed mutations. Several of the latter affect the critical region of the P loop, the c-helix and the activation loop and would be predicted to confer significant IM resistance. To investigate the possibility that the observed genomic instability of very primitive CML cells might be related to their elevated innate p210-BCR-ABL activity, BCR-ABL transcript levels in individual IM-selected, fully resistant and control (similarly treated but no IM exposure) colonies were compared. This showed that BCR-ABL transcripts were ~20-fold higher (P<0.05) in the resistant colonies (30 assessed from 3 patients). These findings suggest that the increased BCR-ABL expression and activity that uniquely characterizes the most primitive CML cells may contribute not only to their innate insensitivity to IM but also to a deregulation of genomic stability leading to the emergence of IM-resistant mutants and other subclones associated with disease progression.


1989 ◽  
Vol 109 (5) ◽  
pp. 2139-2144 ◽  
Author(s):  
D R Burgess ◽  
W P Jiang ◽  
S Mamajiwalla ◽  
W Kinsey

Growth and differentiation of stem cells is thought to be regulated by growth factors and responding protein tyrosine kinase activities. Comparing mitotic stem cells from the adult intestinal epithelium, isolated from the crypts of Lieberkuhn, with isolated differentiated absorbtive cells we find major differences in the levels of phosphotyrosine-containing proteins. Crypt stem cells possess two major phosphotyrosine-containing polypeptides of 36 and 17 kD which have greater than 15 times more phosphotyrosine than that present in the polypeptides of differentiated enterocytes. Tyrosine kinase activity and similar phosphotyrosine-containing proteins are associated with the Triton cytoskeleton. Moreover, crypt tyrosine kinase(s) is active in vitro in phosphorylating similar cytoskeleton-associated substrates. These results suggest that cytoskeleton-associated phosphotyrosine kinase(s) and their substrates may play a role in growth and differentiation of adult intestinal epithelial cells.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Naoki Yamamoto ◽  
Jiro Kikuchi ◽  
Yusuke Furukawa ◽  
Naoya Shibayama

We report expression and purification of a FLT3 protein with ITD mutation (FLT3-ITD) with a steady tyrosine kinase activity using a silkworm-baculovirus system, and its application as a fast screening system of tyrosine kinase inhibitors. The FLT3-ITD protein was expressed in Bombyx mori L. pupae infected by gene-modified nucleopolyhedrovirus, and was purified as an active state. We performed an inhibition assay using 17 potential kinase inhibitors, and succeeded in identifying two potent inhibitors for FLT3-ITD. The result has paved the way for screening FLT3-ITD inhibitors in a fast and easy manner, and also for structural studies.


1985 ◽  
Vol 5 (11) ◽  
pp. 3116-3123
Author(s):  
J B Konopka ◽  
O N Witte

The v-abl transforming protein P160v-abl and the P210c-abl gene product of the translocated c-abl gene in Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myelogenous leukemia cells have tyrosine-specific protein kinase activity. Under similar assay conditions the normal c-abl gene products, murine P150c-abl and human P145c-abl, lacked detectable kinase activity. Reaction conditions were modified to identify conditions which would permit the detection of c-abl tyrosine kinase activity. It was found that the Formalin-fixed Staphylococcus aureus formerly used for immunoprecipitation inhibits in vitro abl kinase activity. In addition, the sodium dodecyl sulfate and deoxycholate detergents formerly used in the cell lysis buffer were found to decrease recovered abl kinase activity. The discovery of assay conditions for c-abl kinase activity now makes it possible to compare P150c-abl and P145c-abl kinase activity with the altered abl proteins P160v-abl and P210c-abl. Although all of the abl proteins have in vitro tyrosine kinase activity, they differ in the way they utilize themselves as substrates in vitro. Comparison of in vitro and in vivo tyrosine phosphorylation sites of the abl proteins suggests that they function differently in vivo. The development of c-abl kinase assay conditions should be useful in elucidating c-abl function.


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