223 results on '"B. BOLEN"'
Search Results
2. Data from Characterization of Alisertib (MLN8237), an Investigational Small-Molecule Inhibitor of Aurora A Kinase Using Novel In Vivo Pharmacodynamic Assays
- Author
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Todd B. Sells, Christopher F. Claiborne, Joseph B. Bolen, Melissa S. Germanos, Matthew D. Silva, Rachel E. Gershman, Patrick J. LeRoy, Marc L. Hyer, David A. Janowick, Deborah R. Wysong, Jessica J. Huck, Vaishali Shinde, Wei Chen, Stephen G. Stroud, Kara M. Hoar, Mengkun Zhang, Lee Silverman, Arijit Chakravarty, Jeffrey A. Ecsedy, and Mark G. Manfredi
- Abstract
Purpose: Small-molecule inhibitors of Aurora A (AAK) and B (ABK) kinases, which play important roles in mitosis, are currently being pursued in oncology clinical trials. We developed three novel assays to quantitatively measure biomarkers of AAK inhibition in vivo. Here, we describe preclinical characterization of alisertib (MLN8237), a selective AAK inhibitor, incorporating these novel pharmacodynamic assays.Experimental Design: We investigated the selectivity of alisertib for AAK and ABK and studied the antitumor and antiproliferative activity of alisertib in vitro and in vivo. Novel assays were used to assess chromosome alignment and mitotic spindle bipolarity in human tumor xenografts using immunofluorescent detection of DNA and alpha-tubulin, respectively. In addition, 18F-3′-fluoro-3′-deoxy-l-thymidine positron emission tomography (FLT-PET) was used to noninvasively measure effects of alisertib on in vivo tumor cell proliferation.Results: Alisertib inhibited AAK over ABK with a selectivity of more than 200-fold in cells and produced a dose-dependent decrease in bipolar and aligned chromosomes in the HCT-116 xenograft model, a phenotype consistent with AAK inhibition. Alisertib inhibited proliferation of human tumor cell lines in vitro and produced tumor growth inhibition in solid tumor xenograft models and regressions in in vivo lymphoma models. In addition, a dose of alisertib that caused tumor stasis, as measured by volume, resulted in a decrease in FLT uptake, suggesting that noninvasive imaging could provide value over traditional measurements of response.Conclusions: Alisertib is a selective and potent inhibitor of AAK. The novel methods of measuring Aurora A pathway inhibition and application of tumor imaging described here may be valuable for clinical evaluation of small-molecule inhibitors. Clin Cancer Res; 17(24); 7614–24. ©2011 AACR.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Data from Antitumor Activity of the Investigational Proteasome Inhibitor MLN9708 in Mouse Models of B-cell and Plasma Cell Malignancies
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Siegfried Janz, Brian Van Ness, Joseph B. Bolen, Mark Manfredi, Erik Kupperman, Allison J. Berger, Vishala T. Neppalli, Mary Carsillo, Paul Hales, Ping Li, Olga Tayber, Zhi Li, Michael Pickard, Ray Liu, Matthew D. Silva, Ozlem Subakan, Daniel P. Bradley, Jennifer Terkelsen, Kristen Bano, Jill Donelan, Bret Bannerman, Michael Fitzgerald, and Edmund C. Lee
- Abstract
Purpose: The clinical success of the first-in-class proteasome inhibitor bortezomib (VELCADE) has validated the proteasome as a therapeutic target for treating human cancers. MLN9708 is an investigational proteasome inhibitor that, compared with bortezomib, has improved pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and antitumor activity in preclinical studies. Here, we focused on evaluating the in vivo activity of MLN2238 (the biologically active form of MLN9708) in a variety of mouse models of hematologic malignancies, including tumor xenograft models derived from a human lymphoma cell line and primary human lymphoma tissue, and genetically engineered mouse (GEM) models of plasma cell malignancies (PCM).Experimental Design: Both cell line–derived OCI-Ly10 and primary human lymphoma–derived PHTX22L xenograft models of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma were used to evaluate the pharmacodynamics and antitumor effects of MLN2238 and bortezomib. The iMycCα/Bcl-XL GEM model was used to assess their effects on de novo PCM and overall survival. The newly developed DP54-Luc–disseminated model of iMycCα/Bcl-XL was used to determine antitumor activity and effects on osteolytic bone disease.Results: MLN2238 has an improved pharmacodynamic profile and antitumor activity compared with bortezomib in both OCI-Ly10 and PHTX22L models. Although both MLN2238 and bortezomib prolonged overall survival, reduced splenomegaly, and attenuated IgG2a levels in the iMycCα/Bcl-XL GEM model, only MLN2238 alleviated osteolytic bone disease in the DP54-Luc model.Conclusions: Our results clearly showed the antitumor activity of MLN2238 in a variety of mouse models of B-cell lymphoma and PCM, supporting its clinical development. MLN9708 is being evaluated in multiple phase I and I/II trials. Clin Cancer Res; 17(23); 7313–23. ©2011 AACR.
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- 2023
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4. Supplementary Table 1-2 from Antitumor Activity of the Investigational Proteasome Inhibitor MLN9708 in Mouse Models of B-cell and Plasma Cell Malignancies
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Siegfried Janz, Brian Van Ness, Joseph B. Bolen, Mark Manfredi, Erik Kupperman, Allison J. Berger, Vishala T. Neppalli, Mary Carsillo, Paul Hales, Ping Li, Olga Tayber, Zhi Li, Michael Pickard, Ray Liu, Matthew D. Silva, Ozlem Subakan, Daniel P. Bradley, Jennifer Terkelsen, Kristen Bano, Jill Donelan, Bret Bannerman, Michael Fitzgerald, and Edmund C. Lee
- Abstract
PDF file - 108K
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- 2023
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5. Supplementary Figure Legends 1-4 from Characterization of Alisertib (MLN8237), an Investigational Small-Molecule Inhibitor of Aurora A Kinase Using Novel In Vivo Pharmacodynamic Assays
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Todd B. Sells, Christopher F. Claiborne, Joseph B. Bolen, Melissa S. Germanos, Matthew D. Silva, Rachel E. Gershman, Patrick J. LeRoy, Marc L. Hyer, David A. Janowick, Deborah R. Wysong, Jessica J. Huck, Vaishali Shinde, Wei Chen, Stephen G. Stroud, Kara M. Hoar, Mengkun Zhang, Lee Silverman, Arijit Chakravarty, Jeffrey A. Ecsedy, and Mark G. Manfredi
- Abstract
PDF file - 27K
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- 2023
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6. Supplementary Figure 3 from Characterization of Alisertib (MLN8237), an Investigational Small-Molecule Inhibitor of Aurora A Kinase Using Novel In Vivo Pharmacodynamic Assays
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Todd B. Sells, Christopher F. Claiborne, Joseph B. Bolen, Melissa S. Germanos, Matthew D. Silva, Rachel E. Gershman, Patrick J. LeRoy, Marc L. Hyer, David A. Janowick, Deborah R. Wysong, Jessica J. Huck, Vaishali Shinde, Wei Chen, Stephen G. Stroud, Kara M. Hoar, Mengkun Zhang, Lee Silverman, Arijit Chakravarty, Jeffrey A. Ecsedy, and Mark G. Manfredi
- Abstract
PDF file - 65K
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- 2023
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7. Supplementary Figure 2 from Characterization of Alisertib (MLN8237), an Investigational Small-Molecule Inhibitor of Aurora A Kinase Using Novel In Vivo Pharmacodynamic Assays
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Todd B. Sells, Christopher F. Claiborne, Joseph B. Bolen, Melissa S. Germanos, Matthew D. Silva, Rachel E. Gershman, Patrick J. LeRoy, Marc L. Hyer, David A. Janowick, Deborah R. Wysong, Jessica J. Huck, Vaishali Shinde, Wei Chen, Stephen G. Stroud, Kara M. Hoar, Mengkun Zhang, Lee Silverman, Arijit Chakravarty, Jeffrey A. Ecsedy, and Mark G. Manfredi
- Abstract
PDF file - 36K
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- 2023
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8. Scale-free structure of cancer networks and their vulnerability to hub-directed combination therapy
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Andrew X. Chen, Arijit Chakravarty, Christopher J. Zopf, Wen Chyi Shyu, Joseph B. Bolen, Jerome T. Mettetal, and Santhosh Palani
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Structure (mathematical logic) ,Combination therapy ,Computer science ,Scale (social sciences) ,medicine ,Cancer ,Computational biology ,Degree distribution ,medicine.disease ,Network topology ,Vulnerability (computing) - Abstract
BackgroundThe effectiveness of many targeted therapies is limited by toxicity and the rise of drug resistance. A growing appreciation of the inherent redundancies of cancer signaling has led to a rise in the number of combination therapies under development, but a better understanding of the overall cancer network topology would provide a conceptual framework for choosing effective combination partners. In this work, we explore the scale-free nature of cancer protein-protein interaction networks in 14 indications. Scale-free networks, characterized by a power-law degree distribution, are known to be resilient to random attack on their nodes, yet vulnerable to directed attacks on their hubs (their most highly connected nodes).ResultsConsistent with the properties of scale-free networks, we find that lethal genes are associated with ∼5-fold higher protein connectivity partners than non-lethal genes. This provides a biological rationale for a hub-centered combination attack. Our simulations show that combinations targeting hubs can efficiently disrupt 50% of network integrity by inhibiting less than 1% of the connected proteins, whereas a random attack can require inhibition of more than 30% of the connected proteins.ConclusionsWe find that the scale-free nature of cancer networks makes them vulnerable to focused attack on their highly connected protein hubs. Thus, we propose a new strategy for designing combination therapies by targeting hubs in cancer networks that are not associated with relevant toxicity networks.
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- 2020
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9. MLN8054 and Alisertib (MLN8237): Discovery of Selective Oral Aurora A Inhibitors
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Todd B. Sells, Ryan Chau, Jeffrey A. Ecsedy, Rachel E. Gershman, Kara Hoar, Jessica Huck, David A. Janowick, Vivek J. Kadambi, Patrick J. LeRoy, Matthew Stirling, Stephen G. Stroud, Tricia J. Vos, Gabriel S. Weatherhead, Deborah R. Wysong, Mengkun Zhang, Suresh K. Balani, Joseph B. Bolen, Mark G. Manfredi, and Christopher F. Claiborne
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Kinase ,business.industry ,INVESTIGATIONAL AGENTS ,Organic Chemistry ,Cell ,Aurora A kinase ,Pharmacology ,Biochemistry ,Clinical trial ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,embryonic structures ,Drug Discovery ,Alisertib ,Medicine ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,business ,Mitosis - Abstract
The Aurora kinases are essential for cell mitosis, and the dysregulation of Aurora A and B have been linked to the etiology of human cancers. Investigational agents MLN8054 (8) and alisertib (MLN8237, 10) have been identified as high affinity, selective, orally bioavailable inhibitors of Aurora A that have advanced into human clinical trials. Alisertib (10) is currently being evaluated in multiple Phase II and III clinical trials in hematological malignancies and solid tumors.
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- 2015
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10. Characterization of Alisertib (MLN8237), an Investigational Small-Molecule Inhibitor of Aurora A Kinase Using Novel In Vivo Pharmacodynamic Assays
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Vaishali Shinde, Stephen G. Stroud, Melissa S. Germanos, Mengkun Zhang, Wei Chen, Sells Todd B, Deborah R. Wysong, Arijit Chakravarty, Matthew D. Silva, Marc L. Hyer, Mark Manfredi, Christopher F. Claiborne, Jeffrey Ecsedy, Patrick J. LeRoy, Jessica Huck, Lee Silverman, David A. Janowick, Kara Hoar, Joseph B. Bolen, and Rachel E. Gershman
- Subjects
Fluorine Radioisotopes ,Cancer Research ,Lymphoma ,Aurora A kinase ,Mice, Nude ,Mice, SCID ,Spindle Apparatus ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Biology ,Pharmacology ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Aurora Kinases ,In vivo ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Neoplasms ,Mitotic Index ,Animals ,Humans ,Phosphorylation ,Mitosis ,Aurora Kinase A ,Cell Proliferation ,Molecular Structure ,Kinase ,Azepines ,HCT116 Cells ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Dideoxynucleosides ,In vitro ,Tumor Burden ,Pyrimidines ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Alisertib ,Female ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
Purpose: Small-molecule inhibitors of Aurora A (AAK) and B (ABK) kinases, which play important roles in mitosis, are currently being pursued in oncology clinical trials. We developed three novel assays to quantitatively measure biomarkers of AAK inhibition in vivo. Here, we describe preclinical characterization of alisertib (MLN8237), a selective AAK inhibitor, incorporating these novel pharmacodynamic assays. Experimental Design: We investigated the selectivity of alisertib for AAK and ABK and studied the antitumor and antiproliferative activity of alisertib in vitro and in vivo. Novel assays were used to assess chromosome alignment and mitotic spindle bipolarity in human tumor xenografts using immunofluorescent detection of DNA and alpha-tubulin, respectively. In addition, 18F-3′-fluoro-3′-deoxy-l-thymidine positron emission tomography (FLT-PET) was used to noninvasively measure effects of alisertib on in vivo tumor cell proliferation. Results: Alisertib inhibited AAK over ABK with a selectivity of more than 200-fold in cells and produced a dose-dependent decrease in bipolar and aligned chromosomes in the HCT-116 xenograft model, a phenotype consistent with AAK inhibition. Alisertib inhibited proliferation of human tumor cell lines in vitro and produced tumor growth inhibition in solid tumor xenograft models and regressions in in vivo lymphoma models. In addition, a dose of alisertib that caused tumor stasis, as measured by volume, resulted in a decrease in FLT uptake, suggesting that noninvasive imaging could provide value over traditional measurements of response. Conclusions: Alisertib is a selective and potent inhibitor of AAK. The novel methods of measuring Aurora A pathway inhibition and application of tumor imaging described here may be valuable for clinical evaluation of small-molecule inhibitors. Clin Cancer Res; 17(24); 7614–24. ©2011 AACR.
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- 2011
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11. MLN4924, a NEDD8-activating enzyme inhibitor, is active in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma models: rationale for treatment of NF-κB–dependent lymphoma
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Joseph B. Bolen, Erik Koenig, Michael Milhollen, Teresa A. Soucy, Usha Narayanan, Michael P. Thomas, James J. Garnsey, Louis M. Staudt, Mark Rolfe, Lawrence R. Dick, Tary Traore, Steven P. Langston, Julie Zhang, Jie Yu, Lenny Dang, Peter G. Smith, Allison Berger, Jennifer Adams-Duffy, and Mark Manfredi
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DNA Replication ,Programmed cell death ,NEDD8 Protein ,DNA damage ,Blotting, Western ,Immunology ,Apoptosis ,Cyclopentanes ,Mice, SCID ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Mice ,Mice, Inbred NOD ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Ubiquitins ,Cell Proliferation ,B-Lymphocytes ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Cell Cycle ,NF-kappa B ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Flow Cytometry ,Germinal Center ,medicine.disease ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Lymphoma ,Pyrimidines ,Pevonedistat ,Mechanism of action ,Enzyme inhibitor ,Cancer cell ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Female ,Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse ,medicine.symptom ,Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma - Abstract
MLN4924 is a potent and selective small molecule NEDD8-activating enzyme (NAE) inhibitor. In most cancer cells tested, inhibition of NAE leads to induction of DNA rereplication, resulting in DNA damage and cell death. However, in preclinical models of activated B cell–like (ABC) diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), we show that MLN4924 induces an alternative mechanism of action. Treatment of ABC DLBCL cells with MLN4924 resulted in rapid accumulation of pIκBα, decrease in nuclear p65 content, reduction of nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) transcriptional activity, and G1 arrest, ultimately resulting in apoptosis induction, events consistent with potent NF-κB pathway inhibition. Treatment of germinal-center B cell–like (GCB) DLBCL cells resulted in an increase in cellular Cdt-1 and accumulation of cells in S-phase, consistent with cells undergoing DNA rereplication. In vivo administration of MLN4924 to mice bearing human xenograft tumors of ABC- and GCB-DLBCL blocked NAE pathway biomarkers and resulted in complete tumor growth inhibition. In primary human tumor models of ABC-DLBCL, MLN4924 treatment resulted in NF-κB pathway inhibition accompanied by tumor regressions. This work describes a novel mechanism of targeted NF-κB pathway modulation in DLBCL and provides strong rationale for clinical development of MLN4924 against NF-κB–dependent lymphomas.
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- 2010
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12. An inhibitor of NEDD8-activating enzyme as a new approach to treat cancer
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Teresa A. Soucy, Peter G. Smith, Michael A. Milhollen, Allison J. Berger, James M. Gavin, Sharmila Adhikari, James E. Brownell, Kristine E. Burke, David P. Cardin, Stephen Critchley, Courtney A. Cullis, Amanda Doucette, James J. Garnsey, Jeffrey L. Gaulin, Rachel E. Gershman, Anna R. Lublinsky, Alice McDonald, Hirotake Mizutani, Usha Narayanan, Edward J. Olhava, Stephane Peluso, Mansoureh Rezaei, Michael D. Sintchak, Tina Talreja, Michael P. Thomas, Tary Traore, Stepan Vyskocil, Gabriel S. Weatherhead, Jie Yu, Julie Zhang, Lawrence R. Dick, Christopher F. Claiborne, Mark Rolfe, Joseph B. Bolen, and Steven P. Langston
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NEDD8 Protein ,Ubiquitin-activating enzyme ,Transplantation, Heterologous ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Cyclopentanes ,Ubiquitin-Activating Enzymes ,NEDD8 ,Mice ,Ubiquitin ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Neoplasms ,Animals ,Humans ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Ubiquitins ,Cells, Cultured ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Cullin Proteins ,Cell biology ,Pyrimidines ,Pevonedistat ,Proteasome ,Cancer cell ,biology.protein ,Female ,Neddylation ,Proteasome Inhibitors ,Cullin - Abstract
The clinical development of an inhibitor of cellular proteasome function suggests that compounds targeting other components of the ubiquitin-proteasome system might prove useful for the treatment of human malignancies. NEDD8-activating enzyme (NAE) is an essential component of the NEDD8 conjugation pathway that controls the activity of the cullin-RING subtype of ubiquitin ligases, thereby regulating the turnover of a subset of proteins upstream of the proteasome. Substrates of cullin-RING ligases have important roles in cellular processes associated with cancer cell growth and survival pathways. Here we describe MLN4924, a potent and selective inhibitor of NAE. MLN4924 disrupts cullin-RING ligase-mediated protein turnover leading to apoptotic death in human tumour cells by a new mechanism of action, the deregulation of S-phase DNA synthesis. MLN4924 suppressed the growth of human tumour xenografts in mice at compound exposures that were well tolerated. Our data suggest that NAE inhibitors may hold promise for the treatment of cancer.
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- 2009
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13. Mutation of NRAS but not KRAS significantly reduces myeloma sensitivity to single-agent bortezomib therapy
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Paul G. Richardson, Alessandra Di Bacco, Andrew Dorner, Allison Berger, Deborah Ricci, Pieter Sonneveld, Erik Koenig, Robert Z. Orlowski, Jeśus F.San Miguel, Hugues Bernard, Edward A. Stadtmauer, William L. Trepicchio, David I. Lichter, Helgi van de Velde, Sundar Jagannath, Matthew Schu, Kenneth C. Anderson, Stephen J. Blakemore, Nibedita Chattopadhyay, Dixie Lee Esseltine, George Mulligan, Joseph B. Bolen, Rachel Neuwirth, Bin Li, Sagar Lonial, James R. Berenson, Radiology & Nuclear Medicine, Epidemiology, and Hematology
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Neuroblastoma RAS viral oncogene homolog ,Clinical Trials and Observations ,Immunology ,Antineoplastic Agents ,PDGFRA ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,medicine.disease_cause ,Biochemistry ,GTP Phosphohydrolases ,Bortezomib ,Cohort Studies ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras) ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,medicine ,Humans ,neoplasms ,Survival analysis ,Multiple myeloma ,Dexamethasone ,Mutation ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Membrane Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Boronic Acids ,Survival Analysis ,digestive system diseases ,Pyrazines ,Cancer research ,ras Proteins ,KRAS ,Multiple Myeloma ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Various translocations and mutations have been identified in myeloma, and certain aberrations, such as t(4;14) and del17, are linked with disease prognosis. To investigate mutational prevalence in myeloma and associations between mutations and patient outcomes, we tested a panel of 41 known oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes in tumor samples from 133 relapsed myeloma patients participating in phase 2 or 3 clinical trials of bortezomib. DNA mutations were identified in 14 genes. BRAF as well as RAS genes were mutated in a large proportion of cases (45.9%) and these mutations were mutually exclusive. New recurrent mutations were also identified, including in the PDGFRA and JAK3 genes. NRAS mutations were associated with a significantly lower response rate to single-agent bortezomib (7% vs 53% in patients with mutant vs wild-type NRAS, P = .00116, Bonferroni-corrected P = .016), as well as shorter time to progression in bortezomib-treated patients (P = .0058, Bonferroni-corrected P = .012). However, NRAS mutation did not impact outcome in patients treated with high-dose dexamethasone. KRAS mutation did not reduce sensitivity to bortezomib or dexamethasone. These findings identify a significant clinical impact of NRAS mutation in myeloma and demonstrate a clear example of functional differences between the KRAS and NRAS oncogenes.
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- 2014
14. The MMAC1 tumor suppressor phosphatase inhibits phospholipase C and integrin-linked kinase activity
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Ronald Herbst, Alyssa M. Morimoto, Kaname Nakatani, Joseph B. Bolen, Michael G. Tomlinson, and Richard A. Roth
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Cancer Research ,Tumor suppressor gene ,Phosphatase ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Biology ,Mice ,Cell–cell interaction ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Genes, Tumor Suppressor ,Integrin-linked kinase ,Calcium Signaling ,Kinase activity ,Molecular Biology ,Protein kinase B ,Brain ,Glioma ,Protein phosphatase 2 ,Enzyme Activation ,Isoenzymes ,Type C Phospholipases ,Lipid phosphatase activity ,biology.protein ,Cancer research ,Glioblastoma ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt - Abstract
Loss of the tumor suppressor MMAC1 has been shown to be involved in breast, prostate and brain cancer. Consistent with its identification as a tumor suppressor, expression of MMAC1 has been demonstrated to reduce cell proliferation, tumorigenicity, and motility as well as affect cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions of malignant human glioma cells. Subsequently, MMAC1 was shown to have lipid phosphatase activity towards PIP3 and protein phosphatase activity against focal adhesion kinase (FAK). The lipid phosphatase activity of MMAC1 results in decreased activation of the PIP3-dependent, anti-apoptotic kinase, AKT. It is thought that this inhibition of AKT culminates with reduced glioma cell proliferation. In contrast, MMAC1's effects on cell motility, cell - cell and cell - matrix interactions are thought to be due to its protein phosphatase activity towards FAK. However, recent studies suggest that the lipid phosphatase activity of MMAC1 correlates with its ability to be a tumor suppressor. The high rate of mutation of MMAC1 in late stage metastatic tumors suggests that effects of MMAC1 on motility, cell - cell and cell - matrix interactions are due to its tumor suppressor activity. Therefore the lipid phosphatase activity of MMAC1 may affect PIP3 dependent signaling pathways and result in reduced motility and altered cell - cell and cell - matrix interactions. We demonstrate here that expression of MMAC1 in human glioma cells reduced intracellular levels of inositol trisphosphate and inhibited extracellular Ca2+ influx, suggesting that MMAC1 affects the phospholipase C signaling pathway. In addition, we show that MMAC1 expression inhibits integrin-linked kinase activity. Furthermore, we show that these effects require the catalytic activity of MMAC1. Our data thus provide a link of MMAC1 to PIP3 dependent signaling pathways that regulate cell - matrix and cell - cell interactions as well as motility. Lastly, we demonstrate that AKT3, an isoform of AKT highly expressed in the brain, is also a target for MMAC1 repression. These data suggest an important role for AKT3 in glioblastoma multiforme. We therefore propose that repression of multiple PIP3 dependent signaling pathways may be required for MMAC1 to act as a tumor suppressor.
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- 2000
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15. Direct Measurement ofAbandAcat theZ0Pole Using a Lepton Tag
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Kenji Abe, Koya Abe, T. Abe, I. Adam, T. Akagi, N. J. Allen, A. Arodzero, W. W. Ash, D. Aston, K. G. Baird, C. Baltay, H. R. Band, M. B. Barakat, O. Bardon, T. L. Barklow, G. L. Bashindzhagyan, J. M. Bauer, G. Bellodi, R. Ben-David, A. C. Benvenuti, G. M. Bilei, D. Bisello, G. Blaylock, J. R. Bogart, B. Bolen, G. R. Bower, J. E. Brau, M. Breidenbach, W. M. Bugg, D. Burke, T. H. Burnett, P. N. Burrows, R. M. Byrne, A. Calcaterra, D. Calloway, B. Camanzi, M. Carpinelli, R. Cassell, R. Castaldi, A. Castro, M. Cavalli-Sforza, A. Chou, E. Church, H. O. Cohn, J. A. Coller, M. R. Convery, V. Cook, R. Cotton, R. F. Cowan, D. G. Coyne, G. Crawford, C. J. S. Damerell, M. N. Danielson, M. Daoudi, N. de Groot, R. Dell'Orso, P. J. Dervan, R. de Sangro, M. Dima, A. D'Oliveira, D. N. Dong, M. Doser, R. Dubois, B. I. Eisenstein, V. Eschenburg, E. Etzion, S. Fahey, D. Falciai, C. Fan, J. P. Fernandez, M. J. Fero, K. Flood, R. Frey, T. Gillman, G. Gladding, S. Gonzalez, E. R. Goodman, E. L. Hart, J. L. Harton, A. Hasan, K. Hasuko, S. J. Hedges, S. S. Hertzbach, M. D. Hildreth, J. Huber, M. E. Huffer, E. W. Hughes, X. Huynh, H. Hwang, M. Iwasaki, D. J. Jackson, P. Jacques, J. A. Jaros, Z. Y. Jiang, A. S. Johnson, J. R. Johnson, R. A. Johnson, T. Junk, R. Kajikawa, M. Kalelkar, Y. Kamyshkov, H. J. Kang, I. Karliner, H. Kawahara, Y. D. Kim, R. King, M. E. King, R. R. Kofler, N. M. Krishna, R. S. Kroeger, M. Langston, A. Lath, D. W. G. Leith, V. Lia, C.-J. S. Lin, X. Liu, M. X. Liu, M. Loreti, A. Lu, H. L. Lynch, J. Ma, M. Mahjouri, G. Mancinelli, S. Manly, G. Mantovani, T. W. Markiewicz, T. Maruyama, H. Masuda, E. Mazzucato, A. K. McKemey, B. T. Meadows, G. Menegatti, R. Messner, P. M. Mockett, K. C. Moffeit, T. B. Moore, M. Morii, D. Muller, V. Murzin, T. Nagamine, S. Narita, U. Nauenberg, H. Neal, M. Nussbaum, N. Oishi, D. Onoprienko, L. S. Osborne, R. S. Panvini, H. Park, C. H. Park, T. J. Pavel, I. Peruzzi, M. Piccolo, L. Piemontese, E. Pieroni, K. T. Pitts, R. J. Plano, R. Prepost, C. Y. Prescott, G. D. Punkar, J. Quigley, B. N. Ratcliff, T. W. Reeves, J. Reidy, P. L. Reinertsen, P. E. Rensing, L. S. Rochester, P. C. Rowson, J. J. Russell, O. H. Saxton, T. Schalk, R. H. Schindler, B. A. Schumm, J. Schwiening, S. Sen, V. V. Serbo, M. H. Shaevitz, J. T. Shank, G. Shapiro, D. J. Sherden, K. D. Shmakov, C. Simopoulos, N. B. Sinev, S. R. Smith, M. B. Smy, J. A. Snyder, H. Staengle, A. Stahl, P. Stamer, R. Steiner, H. Steiner, M. G. Strauss, D. Su, F. Suekane, A. Sugiyama, S. Suzuki, M. Swartz, A. Szumilo, T. Takahashi, F. E. Taylor, J. Thom, E. Torrence, N. K. Toumbas, T. Usher, C. Vannini, J. Va'vra, E. Vella, J. P. Venuti, R. Verdier, P. G. Verdini, S. R. Wagner, D. L. Wagner, A. P. Waite, S. Walston, J. Wang, C. Ward, S. J. Watts, A. W. Weidemann, E. R. Weiss, J. S. Whitaker, S. L. White, F. J. Wickens, B. Williams, D. C. Williams, S. H. Williams, S. Willocq, R. J. Wilson, W. J. Wisniewski, J. L. Wittlin, M. Woods, G. B. Word, T. R. Wright, J. Wyss, R. K. Yamamoto, J. M. Yamartino, X. Yang, J. Yashima, S. J. Yellin, C. C. Young, H. Yuta, G. Zapalac, R. W. Zdarko, and J. Zhou
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Coupling ,Physics ,Semileptonic decay ,Particle physics ,Muon ,Hadron ,Detector ,General Physics and Astronomy ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Parity (physics) ,Electron ,Nuclear Experiment ,Lepton - Abstract
The parity violation parameters Ab and Ac of the Zb anti-b and Zc anti-c couplings have been measured directly, using the polar angle dependence of the Z0-pole polarized cross sections. Bottom and charmed hadrons were tagged via semileptonic decays. Both the muon and electron identification algorithms take advantage of new multivariate techniques, incorporating for the first time information from the SLD Cerenkov Ring Imaging Detector. Based on the 1993-95 SLD sample of 150,000 Z0 decays produced with highly polarized electron beams, we measure: Ab = 0.910 ± 0.068(stat) ± 0.037(syst) Ac = 0.642 ± 0.110(stat) ± 0.063(syst).
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- 1999
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16. Direct Measurement ofAbinZ0Decays Using Charged Kaon Tagging
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Kenji Abe, Koya Abe, T. Abe, I. Adam, T. Akagi, N. J. Allen, A. Arodzero, W. W. Ash, D. Aston, K. G. Baird, C. Baltay, H. R. Band, M. B. Barakat, O. Bardon, T. L. Barklow, G. L. Bashindzhagyan, J. M. Bauer, G. Bellodi, R. Ben-David, A. C. Benvenuti, G. M. Bilei, D. Bisello, G. Blaylock, J. R. Bogart, B. Bolen, G. R. Bower, J. E. Brau, M. Breidenbach, W. M. Bugg, D. Burke, T. H. Burnett, P. N. Burrows, R. M. Byrne, A. Calcaterra, D. Calloway, B. Camanzi, M. Carpinelli, R. Cassell, R. Castaldi, A. Castro, M. Cavalli-Sforza, A. Chou, E. Church, H. O. Cohn, J. A. Coller, M. R. Convery, V. Cook, R. Cotton, R. F. Cowan, D. G. Coyne, G. Crawford, C. J. S. Damerell, M. N. Danielson, M. Daoudi, N. de Groot, R. Dell'Orso, P. J. Dervan, R. de Sangro, M. Dima, A. D'Oliveira, D. N. Dong, M. Doser, R. Dubois, B. I. Eisenstein, V. Eschenburg, E. Etzion, S. Fahey, D. Falciai, C. Fan, J. P. Fernandez, M. J. Fero, K. Flood, R. Frey, T. Gillman, G. Gladding, S. Gonzalez, E. R. Goodman, E. L. Hart, J. L. Harton, A. Hasan, K. Hasuko, S. J. Hedges, S. S. Hertzbach, M. D. Hildreth, J. Huber, M. E. Huffer, E. W. Hughes, X. Huynh, H. Hwang, M. Iwasaki, D. J. Jackson, P. Jacques, J. A. Jaros, Z. Y. Jiang, A. S. Johnson, J. R. Johnson, R. A. Johnson, T. Junk, R. Kajikawa, M. Kalelkar, Y. Kamyshkov, H. J. Kang, I. Karliner, H. Kawahara, Y. D. Kim, R. King, M. E. King, R. R. Kofler, N. M. Krishna, R. S. Kroeger, M. Langston, A. Lath, D. W. G. Leith, V. Lia, C.-J. S. Lin, X. Liu, M. X. Liu, M. Loreti, A. Lu, H. L. Lynch, J. Ma, M. Mahjouri, G. Mancinelli, S. Manley, G. Mantovani, T. W. Markiewicz, T. Maruyama, H. Masuda, E. Mazzucato, A. K. McKemey, B. T. Meadows, G. Menegatti, R. Messner, P. M. Mockett, K. C. Moffeit, T. B. Moore, M. Morii, D. Muller, V. Murzin, T. Nagamine, S. Narita, U. Nauenberg, H. Neal, M. Nussbaum, N. Oishi, D. Onoprienko, L. S. Osborne, R. S. Panvini, H. Park, C. H. Park, T. J. Pavel, I. Peruzzi, M. Piccolo, L. Piemontese, E. Pieroni, K. T. Pitts, R. J. Plano, R. Prepost, C. Y. Prescott, G. D. Punkar, J. Quigley, B. N. Ratcliff, T. W. Reeves, J. Reidy, P. L. Reinertsen, P. E. Rensing, L. S. Rochester, P. C. Rowson, J. J. Russell, O. H. Saxton, T. Schalk, R. H. Schindler, B. A. Schumm, J. Schwiening, S. Sen, V. V. Serbo, M. H. Shaevitz, J. T. Shank, G. Shapiro, D. J. Sherden, K. D. Shmakov, C. Simopoulos, N. B. Sinev, S. R. Smith, M. B. Smy, J. A. Snyder, H. Staengle, A. Stahl, P. Stamer, R. Steiner, H. Steiner, M. G. Strauss, D. Su, F. Suekane, A. Sugiyama, S. Suzuki, M. Swartz, A. Szumilo, T. Takahashi, F. E. Taylor, J. Thom, E. Torrence, N. K. Toumbas, T. Usher, C. Vannini, J. Va'vra, E. Vella, J. P. Venuti, R. Verdier, P. G. Verdini, S. R. Wagner, D. L. Wagner, A. P. Waite, S. Walston, J. Wang, C. Ward, S. J. Watts, A. W. Weidemann, E. R. Weiss, J. S. Whitaker, S. L. White, F. J. Wickens, B. Williams, D. C. Williams, S. H. Williams, S. Willocq, R. J. Wilson, W. J. Wisniewski, J. L. Wittlin, M. Woods, G. B. Word, T. R. Wright, J. Wyss, R. K. Yamamoto, J. M. Yamartino, X. Yang, J. Yashima, S. J. Yellin, C. C. Young, H. Yuta, G. Zapalac, R. W. Zdarko, and J. Zhou
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Nuclear physics ,Quark ,Physics ,Particle physics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Hadron ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Electron ,Asymmetry ,Vertex (geometry) ,media_common ,Boson - Abstract
We present a direct measurement of the parity-violating asymmetry A{sub b} in the Z{sup 0} to b anti-b coupling using a new technique to distinguish the b and anti-b quarks using charged kaons from B decays. The Z{sup 0} bosons are produced in e{sup +}e{sup -} collisions at the SLC with longitudinally polarized electrons. b anti-b events are selected using a secondary vertex mass tag and A{sub b} is determined from the left-right forward-backward asymmetry. From the 1994-1995 data sample, selected from 100,000 hadronic Z{sup 0} decays, we obtain A{sub b} = 0.855 {+-} 0. 088{sub stat} {+-} 0.102{sub sys}.
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- 1999
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17. Identification and Characterization of a Myristylated and Palmitylated Serine/Threonine Protein Kinase
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Gregory H. Fujii, Amy E. Berson, Anne L. Burkhardt, Sherie L. Morrison, Bonnie Wu, Chi Young, Joseph B. Bolen, and Julie Sheung
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Immunoblotting ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Palmitates ,Biophysics ,Serine threonine protein kinase ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Biology ,Myristic Acid ,Biochemistry ,MAP2K7 ,Mice ,Animals ,Humans ,Tissue Distribution ,Amino Acid Sequence ,c-Raf ,Threonine ,Protein kinase A ,Molecular Biology ,Cells, Cultured ,Protein kinase C ,Serine/threonine-specific protein kinase ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,Chromosome Mapping ,Cell Biology ,Physical Chromosome Mapping ,Receptor protein serine/threonine kinase ,Molecular biology ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2 ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
We report the molecular cloning and initial characterization of a novel fatty acid acylated serine/threonine protein kinase. The putative open reading frame is predicted to encode a 305 amino acid protein possessing a carboxy-terminal protein kinase domain and amino-terminal myristylation and palmitylation sites. The protein kinase has been accordingly denoted as the myristylated and palmitylated serine/threonine protein kinase (MPSK). Human and mouse MPSKs share approximately 93% identity at the amino acid level with complete retention of acylation sites. Radiation hybridization localized the human MPSK gene to chromosome 2q34-37. Northern analysis demonstrated that the human MPSK 1.7 kilobase mRNA is widely distributed. Epitope tagged human MPSK was found to be acylated by myristic acid at glycine residue 2 and by palmitic acid at cysteines 6 and/or 8. Palmitylation of MPSK in these experiments was found to require an intact myristylation site. While epitope tagged MPSK in immune complexes or purified human glutathione S transferase-MPSK was found to autophosphorylate at one or more threonine residues, the enzyme was not found to phosphorylate several other common exogenous substrates. Indeed, only PHAS-I was identified as an exogenous substrate which was found to be phosphorylated on threonine and serine residues.
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- 1999
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18. Reconstitution of Btk Signaling by the Atypical Tec Family Tyrosine Kinases Bmx and Txk
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James A. Johnston, Joseph B. Bolen, Gregory H. Fujii, Tomohiro Kurosaki, Amy E. Berson, and Michael G. Tomlinson
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MAPK/ERK pathway ,TEC ,education ,Receptors, Antigen, B-Cell ,Apoptosis ,Biochemistry ,Cell Line ,Mice ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Agammaglobulinaemia Tyrosine Kinase ,Animals ,Humans ,Bruton's tyrosine kinase ,Protein kinase A ,Molecular Biology ,biology ,Kinase ,hemic and immune systems ,Cell Biology ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Enzyme Activation ,Pleckstrin homology domain ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Signal transduction ,tissues ,Tyrosine kinase ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Bruton's tyrosine kinase (Btk) is mutated in X-linked agammaglobulinemia patients and plays an essential role in B cell receptor signal transduction. Btk is a member of the Tec family of nonreceptor protein-tyrosine kinases that includes Bmx, Itk, Tec, and Txk. Cell lines deficient for Btk are impaired in phospholipase C-gamma2 (PLCgamma2)-dependent signaling. Itk and Tec have recently been shown to reconstitute PLCgamma2-dependent signaling in Btk-deficient human cells, but it is not known whether the atypical Tec family members, Bmx and Txk, can reconstitute function. Here we reconstitute Btk-deficient DT40 B cells with Bmx and Txk to compare their function with other Tec kinases. We show that in common with Itk and Tec, Bmx reconstituted PLCgamma2-dependent responses including calcium mobilization, extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activation, and apoptosis. Txk also restored PLCgamma2/calcium signaling but, unlike other Tec kinases, functioned in a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-independent manner and failed to reconstitute apoptosis. These results are consistent with a common role for Tec kinases as amplifiers of PLCgamma2-dependent signal transduction, but suggest that the pleckstrin homology domain of Tec kinases, absent in Txk, is essential for apoptosis.
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- 1999
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19. Transcriptional analysis of the PTEN/MMAC1 pseudogene, ΨPTEN
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Joseph B. Bolen, Alyssa Morimoto, Amy E. Berson, and Gregory H. Fujii
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Cancer Research ,DNA, Complementary ,Transcription, Genetic ,Tumor suppressor gene ,Pseudogene ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Gene Expression ,medicine.disease_cause ,Gene product ,Gene expression ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,PTEN ,Genes, Tumor Suppressor ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Molecular Biology ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Tumor Suppressor Proteins ,PTEN Phosphohydrolase ,Wild type ,Molecular biology ,Fusion protein ,Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases ,biology.protein ,Carcinogenesis ,Pseudogenes - Abstract
PTEN/MMAC1 is a recently characterized tumor suppressor. A pseudogene derived from the human PTEN/MMAC1 phosphatase, psiPTEN, has been reported. Recent analysis of the pseudogene revealed conflicting results about the expression of psiPTEN. In this study, we show that the PTEN/MMAC1 pseudogene is actively transcribed in all cells and tissues examined. In some cases, pseudogene transcripts were found to represent as much as 70% of the total PTEN/MMAC1 RNA. As psiPTEN is transcribed, there is a potential for misinterpretation of PTEN/MMAC1 mutations when RT-PCR techniques are used, as well as potential for a psiPTEN-encoded translation product. Although we were unable to detect a pseudogene protein product in the cell lines examined, a baculovirus produced GST pseudogene fusion protein exhibited phosphatase activity comparable to wild type. The results of this study, taken together, indicate the potential complication of PTEN/MMAC1 molecular analysis caused by the expression of psiPTEN.
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- 1999
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20. Direct Measurement of Parity Violation in the Coupling ofZ0Bosons tobQuarks Using a Mass Tag and Momentum-Weighted Track Charge
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K. Abe, T. Abe, I. Adam, T. Akagi, N. J. Allen, A. Arodzero, W. W. Ash, D. Aston, K. G. Baird, C. Baltay, H. R. Band, M. B. Barakat, O. Bardon, T. L. Barklow, J. M. Bauer, G. Bellodi, R. Ben-David, A. C. Benvenuti, G. M. Bilei, D. Bisello, G. Blaylock, J. R. Bogart, B. Bolen, G. R. Bower, J. E. Brau, M. Breidenbach, W. M. Bugg, D. Burke, T. H. Burnett, P. N. Burrows, A. Calcaterra, D. O. Caldwell, D. Calloway, B. Camanzi, M. Carpinelli, R. Cassell, R. Castaldi, A. Castro, M. Cavalli-Sforza, A. Chou, E. Church, H. O. Cohn, J. A. Coller, M. R. Convery, V. Cook, R. Cotton, R. F. Cowan, D. G. Coyne, G. Crawford, C. J. S. Damerell, M. N. Danielson, M. Daoudi, N. de Groot, R. Dell'Orso, P. J. Dervan, R. de Sangro, M. Dima, A. D'Oliveira, D. N. Dong, P. Y. C. Du, R. Dubois, B. I. Eisenstein, V. Eschenburg, E. Etzion, S. Fahey, D. Falciai, C. Fan, J. P. Fernandez, M. J. Fero, K. Flood, R. Frey, T. Gillman, G. Gladding, S. Gonzalez, E. L. Hart, J. L. Harton, A. Hasan, K. Hasuko, S. J. Hedges, S. S. Hertzbach, M. D. Hildreth, J. Huber, M. E. Huffer, E. W. Hughes, X. Huynh, H. Hwang, M. Iwasaki, D. J. Jackson, P. Jacques, J. A. Jaros, Z. Y. Jiang, A. S. Johnson, J. R. Johnson, R. A. Johnson, T. Junk, R. Kajikawa, M. Kalelkar, Y. Kamyshkov, H. J. Kang, I. Karliner, H. Kawahara, Y. D. Kim, R. King, M. E. King, R. R. Kofler, N. M. Krishna, R. S. Kroeger, M. Langston, A. Lath, D. W. G. Leith, V. Lia, C.-J. S. Lin, X. Liu, M. X. Liu, M. Loreti, A. Lu, H. L. Lynch, J. Ma, G. Mancinelli, S. Manly, G. Mantovani, T. W. Markiewicz, T. Maruyama, H. Masuda, E. Mazzucato, A. K. McKemey, B. T. Meadows, G. Menegatti, R. Messner, P. M. Mockett, K. C. Moffeit, T. B. Moore, M. Morii, D. Muller, V. Murzin, T. Nagamine, S. Narita, U. Nauenberg, H. Neal, M. Nussbaum, N. Oishi, D. Onoprienko, L. S. Osborne, R. S. Panvini, H. Park, C. H. Park, T. J. Pavel, I. Peruzzi, M. Piccolo, L. Piemontese, E. Pieroni, K. T. Pitts, R. J. Plano, R. Prepost, C. Y. Prescott, G. D. Punkar, J. Quigley, B. N. Ratcliff, T. W. Reeves, J. Reidy, P. L. Reinertsen, P. E. Rensing, L. S. Rochester, P. C. Rowson, J. J. Russell, O. H. Saxton, T. Schalk, R. H. Schindler, B. A. Schumm, J. Schwiening, S. Sen, V. V. Serbo, M. H. Shaevitz, J. T. Shank, G. Shapiro, D. J. Sherden, K. D. Shmakov, C. Simopoulos, N. B. Sinev, S. R. Smith, M. B. Smy, J. A. Snyder, H. Staengle, A. Stahl, P. Stamer, H. Steiner, R. Steiner, M. G. Strauss, D. Su, F. Suekane, A. Sugiyama, S. Suzuki, M. Swartz, A. Szumilo, T. Takahashi, F. E. Taylor, J. Thom, E. Torrence, N. K. Toumbas, A. I. Trandafir, J. D. Turk, T. Usher, C. Vannini, J. Va'vra, E. Vella, J. P. Venuti, R. Verdier, P. G. Verdini, S. R. Wagner, D. L. Wagner, A. P. Waite, S. Walston, J. Wang, C. Ward, S. J. Watts, A. W. Weidemann, E. R. Weiss, J. S. Whitaker, S. L. White, F. J. Wickens, B. Williams, D. C. Williams, S. H. Williams, S. Willocq, R. J. Wilson, W. J. Wisniewski, J. L. Wittlin, M. Woods, G. B. Word, T. R. Wright, J. Wyss, R. K. Yamamoto, J. M. Yamartino, X. Yang, J. Yashima, S. J. Yellin, C. C. Young, H. Yuta, G. Zapalac, R. W. Zdarko, and J. Zhou
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Physics ,Quark ,Meson ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Hadron ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Elementary particle ,Parity (physics) ,Nuclear physics ,Particle decay ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,B meson ,Boson - Abstract
We present a direct measurement of the parity-violation parameter ${A}_{b}$ using a self-calibrating track-charge technique. In the SLAC Linear Collider Large Detector (SLD) experiment we observe hadronic decays of ${Z}^{0}$ bosons produced in collisions between longitudinally polarized electrons and unpolarized positrons at the SLAC Linear Collider. A sample of $b\overline{b}$ events is selected using the topologically reconstructed mass of $B$ hadrons. From our 1993--1995 sample of approximately 150 000 hadronic ${Z}^{0}$ decays, we obtain ${A}_{b}\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}=\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}0.911\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.045(\mathrm{stat})\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.045(\mathrm{syst})$.
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- 1998
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21. Measurement of Rb Using a Vertex Mass Tag
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K. Abe, T. Akagi, N. J. Allen, W. W. Ash, D. Aston, K. G. Baird, C. Baltay, H. R. Band, M. B. Barakat, G. Baranko, O. Bardon, T. L. Barklow, G. L. Bashindzhagyan, A. O. Bazarko, R. Ben-David, A. C. Benvenuti, G. M. Bilei, D. Bisello, G. Blaylock, J. R. Bogart, B. Bolen, T. Bolton, G. R. Bower, J. E. Brau, M. Breidenbach, W. M. Bugg, D. Burke, T. H. Burnett, P. N. Burrows, W. Busza, A. Calcaterra, D. O. Caldwell, D. Calloway, B. Camanzi, M. Carpinelli, R. Cassell, R. Castaldi, A. Castro, M. Cavalli-Sforza, A. Chou, E. Church, H. O. Cohn, J. A. Coller, V. Cook, R. Cotton, R. F. Cowan, D. G. Coyne, G. Crawford, A. D'Oliveira, C. J. S. Damerell, M. Daoudi, N. de Groot, R. De Sangro, R. Dell'Orso, P. J. Dervan, M. Dima, D. N. Dong, P. Y. C. Du, R. Dubois, B. I. Eisenstein, R. Elia, E. Etzion, S. Fahey, D. Falciai, C. Fan, J. P. Fernandez, M. J. Fero, R. Frey, T. Gillman, G. Gladding, S. Gonzalez, E. L. Hart, J. L. Harton, A. Hasan, Y. Hasegawa, K. Hasuko, S. J. Hedges, S. S. Hertzbach, M. D. Hildreth, J. Huber, M. E. Huffer, E. W. Hughes, H. Hwang, Y. Iwasaki, D. J. Jackson, P. Jacques, J. A. Jaros, Z. Y. Jiang, A. S. Johnson, J. R. Johnson, R. A. Johnson, T. Junk, R. Kajikawa, M. Kalelkar, H. J. Kang, I. Karliner, H. Kawahara, H. W. Kendall, Y. D. Kim, M. E. King, R. King, R. R. Kofler, N. M. Krishna, R. S. Kroeger, J. F. Labs, M. Langston, A. Lath, J. A. Lauber, D. W. G. S. Leith, V. Lia, M. X. Liu, X. Liu, M. Loreti, A. Lu, H. L. Lynch, J. Ma, G. Mancinelli, S. Manly, G. Mantovani, T. W. Markiewicz, T. Maruyama, H. Masuda, E. Mazzucato, A. K. McKemey, B. T. Meadows, R. Messner, P. M. Mockett, K. C. Moffeit, T. B. Moore, D. Muller, T. Nagamine, S. Narita, U. Nauenberg, H. Neal, M. Nussbaum, Y. Ohnishi, N. Oishi, D. Onoprienko, L. S. Osborne, R. S. Panvini, C. H. Park, H. Park, T. J. Pavel, I. Peruzzi, M. Piccolo, L. Piemontese, E. Pieroni, K. T. Pitts, R. J. Plano, R. Prepost, C. Y. Prescott, G. D. Punkar, J. Quigley, B. N. Ratcliff, T. W. Reeves, J. Reidy, P. L. Reinertsen, P. E. Rensing, L. S. Rochester, P. C. Rowson, J. J. Russell, O. H. Saxton, T. Schalk, R. H. Schindler, B. A. Schumm, J. Schwiening, S. Sen, V. V. Serbo, M. H. Shaevitz, J. T. Shank, G. Shapiro, D. J. Sherden, K. D. Shmakov, C. Simopoulos, N. B. Sinev, S. R. Smith, M. B. Smy, J. A. Snyder, H. Staengle, P. Stamer, H. Steiner, R. Steiner, M. G. Strauss, D. Su, F. Suekane, A. Sugiyama, S. Suzuki, M. Swartz, A. Szumilo, T. Takahashi, F. E. Taylor, E. Torrence, A. I. Trandafir, J. D. Turk, T. Usher, J. Va'vra, C. Vannini, E. Vella, J. P. Venuti, R. Verdier, P. G. Verdini, D. L. Wagner, S. R. Wagner, A. P. Waite, S. J. Watts, A. W. Weidemann, E. R. Weiss, J. S. Whitaker, S. L. White, F. J. Wickens, D. C. Williams, S. H. Williams, S. Willocq, R. J. Wilson, W. J. Wisniewski, M. Woods, G. B. Word, J. Wyss, R. K. Yamamoto, J. M. Yamartino, X. Yang, J. Yashima, S. J. Yellin, C. C. Young, H. Yuta, G. Zapalac, R. W. Zdarko, J. Zhou, Abe, K, Akagi, T, Allen, N, Ash, W, Aston, D, Baird, K, Baltay, C, Band, H, Barakat, M, Baranko, G, Bardon, O, Barklow, T, Bashindzhagyan, G, Bazarko, A, Ben David, R, Benvenuti, A, Bilei, G, Bisello, D, Blaylock, G, Bogart, J, Bolen, B, Bolton, T, Bower, G, Brau, J, Breidenbach, M, Bugg, W, Burke, D, Burnett, T, Burrows, P, Busza, W, Calcaterra, A, Caldwell, D, Calloway, D, Camanzi, B, Carpinelli, M, Cassell, R, Castaldi, R, Castro, A, Cavalli Sforza, M, Chou, A, Church, E, Cohn, H, Coller, J, Cook, V, Cotton, R, Cowan, R, Coyne, D, Crawford, G, D'Oliveira, A, Damerell, C, Daoudi, M, de Groot, N, De Sangro, R, Dell'Orso, R, Dervan, P, Dima, M, Dong, D, Du, P, Dubois, R, Eisenstein, B, Elia, R, Etzion, E, Fahey, S, Falciai, D, Fan, C, Fernandez, J, Faro, M, Frey, R, Gillman, T, Gladding, G, Gonzalez, S, Hart, E, Harton, J, Hasan, A, Hasegawa, Y, Hasuko, K, Hedges, S, Hertzbach, S, Hildreth, M, Huber, J, Huffer, M, Hughes, E, Hwang, H, Iwasaki, Y, Jackson, D, Jacques, P, Jaros, J, Jiang, Z, Johnson, A, Johnson, J, Johnson, R, Junk, T, Kajikawa, R, Kalelkar, M, Kang, H, Karliner, I, Kawahara, H, Kendall, H, Kim, Y, King, M, King, R, Kofler, R, Krishna, N, Kroeger, R, Labs, J, Langston, M, Lath, A, Lauber, J, Leith, D, Lia, V, Liu, M, Liu, X, Loreti, M, Lu, A, Lynch, H, Ma, J, Mancinelli, G, Manly, S, Mantovani, G, Markiewicz, T, Maruyama, T, Masuda, H, Mazzucato, E, Mckemey, A, Meadows, B, Messner, R, Mockett, P, Moffeit, K, Moore, T, Muller, D, Nagamine, T, Narita, S, Nauenberg, U, Neal, H, Nussbaum, M, Ohnishi, Y, Oishi, N, Onoprienko, D, Osborne, L, Panvini, R, Park, C, Park, H, Pavel, T, Peruzzi, I, Piccolo, M, Piemontese, L, Pieroni, E, Pitts, K, Plano, R, Prepost, R, Prescott, C, Punkar, G, Quigley, J, Ratcliff, B, Reeves, T, Reidy, J, Reinertsen, P, Rensing, P, Rochester, L, Rowson, P, Russell, J, Saxton, O, Schall, T, Schindler, R, Schumm, B, Schwiening, J, Sen, S, Serbo, V, Shaevitz, M, Shank, J, Shapiro, G, Sherden, D, Shmakov, K, Simopoulos, C, Sinev, N, Smith, S, Smy, M, Snyder, J, Staengle, H, Stamer, P, Steiner, H, Steiner, R, Strauss, M, Su, D, Suekane, F, Sugiyama, A, Suzuki, S, Swartz, M, Szumilo, A, Takahashi, T, Taylor, F, Torrence, E, Trandafir, A, Turk, J, Usher, T, Va'Vra, J, Vannini, C, Vella, E, Venuti, J, Verdier, R, Verdini, P, Wagner, D, Wagner, S, Waite, A, Watts, S, Weidemann, A, Weiss, E, Whitaker, J, White, S, Wickens, F, Williams, D, Williams, S, Willocq, S, Wilson, R, Wisniewski, W, Woods, M, Word, G, Wyss, J, Yamamoto, R, Yamartino, J, Yang, X, Yashima, J, Yellin, S, Young, C, Yuta, H, Zapalac, G, Zdarko, R, and Zhou, J
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Physics ,Particle physics ,Meson ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Electron–positron annihilation ,Gluons ,Hadron ,FOS: Physical sciences ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Elementary particle ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Vertex (geometry) ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Particle decay ,B meson ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment ,Boson - Abstract
We report a new measurement of Rb = Gamma(Z0->b-bbar) / Gamma(Z0->hadrons) using a double tag technique, where the b hemisphere selection is based on the reconstructed mass of the B hadron decay vertex. The measurement was performed using a sample of 130k hadronic Z0 events, collected with the SLD at the SLC. The method utilizes the 3-D vertexing abilities of the CCD pixel vertex detector and the small stable SLC beams to obtain a high b-tagging efficiency and purity. We obtain Rb=0.2142+/-0.0034(stat.)+/-0.0015(syst.)+/-0.0002(R_c)., 11 pages including 3 eps files
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- 1998
22. Signaling Pathways Controlling Trophoblast Cell Differentiation: Src Family Protein Tyrosine Kinases in the Rat1
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Anne L. Burkhardt, Takayuki Kamei, Joseph B. Bolen, Belinda M. Chapman, Gary Hamlin, and Michael J. Soares
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Trophoblast ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,Biology ,Trophoblast giant cell differentiation ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reproductive Medicine ,LYN ,embryonic structures ,medicine ,Src family kinase ,Signal transduction ,Tyrosine kinase ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src - Abstract
Trophoblast giant cell differentiation is characterized by endoreduplication and expression of members of the prolactin (PRL) gene family and can be simulated in vitro via manipulations of the Rcho-1 trophoblast cell line. The regulation of trophoblast cell proliferation and differentiation involves tyrosine protein kinase signaling pathways. Treatment of Rcho-1 trophoblast cells with tyrosine kinase inhibitors disrupted differentiation-dependent expression of members of the PRL gene family and cytoskeletal organization. Activated p60 c-src , p62 c-yes , and p53/56 lyn were present in the Rcho-1 rat trophoblast cell line and in differentiated trophoblast cells isolated from the developing rat placenta. p60 c-src and p62 c-yes were active in proliferating and differentiating trophoblast cells. During proliferation, p62 c-yes exhibited distinct associations with other phosphoproteins (34, 66, 76, and 150 kDa). p53/56 lyn was activated only in differentiating trophoblast cells. p53/56 lyn showed a differentiation-dependent accumulation in cytoskeletal and membrane fractions, whereas p60 c-src levels were virtually invariant in both fractions. Expression patterns of csk, a negative regulator of Src family kinase activities, were not consistent with its involvement in the differentiation-dependent activation of p53/56 lyn ; however, there was some indication of the participation of a tyrosine phosphatase in the regulation of p53/56 lyn . In conclusion, p60 c- src , p62 c-yes , and p53/56 lyn patterns of activation in trophoblast cells are consistent with their involvement in the control of trophoblast cell proliferation and differentiation.
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- 1997
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23. Measurement of theBhadron energy distribution inZ0decays
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C. Fan, K.D. Shmakov, T.J. Pavel, R. Frey, A. P. Waite, T. Bolton, H. Staengle, Yukio Hasegawa, J. R. Johnson, R. Kajikawa, D. G. Coyne, Robert Wilson, J. A. Coller, Gilbert Shapiro, R. Verdier, T. Akagi, L. Piemontese, T. Nagamine, B. I. Einsenstein, X. Liu, S. S. Hertzbach, Henry W. Kendall, X. Yang, D. C. Williams, C. Baltay, H. Masuda, E. L. Hart, D. Aston, T. B. Moore, Enrico Pieroni, J. F. Labs, B. Bolen, D. Onoprienko, J. Schwiening, T. Schalk, V. Cook, D. Calloway, A. I. Trandafir, E. Mazzucato, A. Hasan, Michael H. Shaevitz, H. M. Steiner, Piero Giorgio Verdini, R. de Sangro, G. Mancinelli, Wit Busza, Roberto Dell'Orso, K. Hasuko, C. Vannini, J. D. Turk, R. E. Cassell, Martin Breidenbach, P.E. Rensing, M. Dima, B. Camanzi, Giancarlo Mantovani, R. Prepost, E. Church, H. Hwang, T. Junk, J. L. Harton, M. Loreti, J. Va'vra, J. J. Russell, E. Etzion, L.S. Osborne, J. Quigley, T. Takahashi, T. H. Burnett, C. Y. Prescott, P.Y.C. Du, J.J. Reidy, R. S. Panvini, D. Falciai, R. Messner, Stephen Robert Wagner, R. Dubois, J. S. Whitaker, R. A. Johnson, Stephen Watts, R. Cowan, D. Su, E. Vella, G. Baranko, A. S. Johnson, J. Wyss, Shiro Suzuki, S. L. White, M. Daoudi, N. Oishi, M. D. Hildreth, A. Chou, K.C. Moffeit, G. B. Word, P.L. Reinertsen, J.P. Venuti, C.J.S. Damerell, M. Piccolo, R.J. Plano, J. M. Yamartino, D. J. Sherden, W. J. Wisniewski, A.C. Benvenuti, N. B. Sinev, A. Sugiyama, M. Carpinelli, S. J. Yellin, S. Sen, C. H. Park, Bruce Schumm, N.M. Krishna, H. A. Neal, Yongduk Kim, M. Kalelkar, H. Kawahara, S. R. Smith, A.B. d'Oliveira, F. E. Taylor, G. Crawford, M.B. Barakat, R.D. Elia, S. Willocq, G. E. Gladding, Zihao Jiang, J. R. Bogart, A. Lu, R. K. Yamamoto, Rino Castaldi, H. O. Cohn, R. Ben-David, D. W. G. S. Leith, P.F. Jacques, J. Zhou, T. Gillman, V. V. Serbo, G. Blaylock, A. Calcaterra, S. Manly, P. C. Rowson, G. D. Punkar, N. De Groot, S. J. Hedges, W. W. Ash, R. Cotton, E. Torrence, H. J. Kang, M. Nussbaum, Minghui Liu, R. Steiner, Michael J. Fero, E. R. Weiss, R. W. Zdarko, S. Gonzalez, F. Suekane, J. A. Snyder, M.E. King, H. Yuta, M. Cavalli-Sforza, M. Langston, B. T. Meadows, K. T. Pitts, J. E. Brau, N.J. Allen, A. Lath, T. W. Reeves, O. Bardon, B. N. Ratcliff, E. W. Hughes, C. Simopoulos, K.G. Baird, S. H. Williams, A. K. McKemey, P. E. Stamer, D. O. Caldwell, Timothy Barklow, Thomas W. Markiewicz, M. E. Huffer, C. C. Young, D. J. Jackson, J. Yashima, S. Fahey, M. B. Smy, J. Ma, L. S. Rochester, G. M. Bilei, G. R. Bower, M. Swartz, James Shank, Andrea Castro, Y. Iwasaki, T. L. Usher, H. Park, G. H. Zapalac, P.J. Dervan, D. L. Wagner, U. Nauenberg, S. Narita, R. King, P. N. Burrows, Dario Bisello, Y. Ohnishi, O. H. Saxton, H. R. Band, Fred Wickens, T. Maruyama, K. Abe, M. Woods, R. R. Kofler, G. L. Bashindzhagyan, J. A. Lauber, H. L. Lynch, A. W. Weidemann, J. A. Jaros, P. M. Mockett, J. Huber, I. Karliner, M. G. Strauss, Dominik Müller, D. N. Dong, R. H. Schindler, A. Szumilo, R. Kroeger, I. M. Peruzzi, V. Lia, D. L. Burke, W. M. Bugg, A. O. Bazarko, and J. P. Fernandez
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Physics ,Quark ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Energy distribution ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Electron–positron annihilation ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Hadron ,7. Clean energy ,01 natural sciences ,Vertex (geometry) ,Nuclear physics ,0103 physical sciences ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment ,010306 general physics ,Lepton - Abstract
We have measured the $B$ hadron energy distribution in ${Z}^{0}$ decays using a sample of semileptonic $B$ decays recorded in the SLD experiment at SLAC. The energy of each tagged $B$ hadron was reconstructed using information from the lepton and a partially reconstructed charm-decay vertex. We compared the scaled energy distribution with several models of heavy quark fragmentation. The average scaled energy of primary $B$ hadrons was found to be $〈{x}_{{E}_{B}}〉=0.716\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.011(\mathrm{stat}{)}_{\ensuremath{-}0.022}^{+0.021}(\mathrm{syst})$.
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- 1997
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24. Measurement of theτNeutrino Helicity and Michel Parameters in Polarizede+e−Collisions
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K. Abe, T. Akagi, N. J. Allen, W. W. Ash, D. Aston, K. G. Baird, C. Baltay, H. R. Band, M. B. Barakat, G. Baranko, O. Bardon, T. L. Barklow, G. L. Bashindzhagyan, A. O. Bazarko, R. Ben-David, A. C. Benvenuti, G. M. Bilei, D. Bisello, G. Blaylock, J. R. Bogart, B. Bolen, T. Bolton, G. R. Bower, J. E. Brau, M. Breidenbach, W. M. Bugg, D. Burke, T. H. Burnett, P. N. Burrows, W. Busza, A. Calcaterra, D. O. Caldwell, D. Calloway, B. Camanzi, M. Carpinelli, R. Cassell, R. Castaldi, A. Castro, M. Cavalli-Sforza, A. Chou, E. Church, H. O. Cohn, J. A. Coller, V. Cook, R. Cotton, R. F. Cowan, D. G. Coyne, G. Crawford, A. D'Oliveira, C. J. S. Damerell, M. Daoudi, R. De Sangro, R. Dell'Orso, P. J. Dervan, M. Dima, D. N. Dong, P. Y. C. Du, R. Dubois, B. I. Eisenstein, R. Elia, E. Etzion, S. Fahey, D. Falciai, C. Fan, J. P. Fernandez, M. J. Fero, R. Frey, K. Furuno, T. Gillman, G. Gladding, S. Gonzalez, E. L. Hart, J. L. Harton, A. Hasan, Y. Hasegawa, K. Hasuko, S. J. Hedges, S. S. Hertzbach, M. D. Hildreth, J. Huber, M. E. Huffer, E. W. Hughes, H. Hwang, Y. Iwasaki, D. J. Jackson, P. Jacques, J. A. Jaros, A. S. Johnson, J. R. Johnson, R. A. Johnson, T. Junk, R. Kajikawa, M. Kalelkar, H. J. Kang, I. Karliner, H. Kawahara, H. W. Kendall, Y. D. Kim, M. E. King, R. King, R. R. Kofler, N. M. Krishna, R. S. Kroeger, J. F. Labs, M. Langston, A. Lath, J. A. Lauber, D. W. G. S. Leith, V. Lia, M. X. Liu, X. Liu, M. Loreti, A. Lu, H. L. Lynch, J. Ma, G. Mancinelli, S. Manly, G. Mantovani, T. W. Markiewicz, T. Maruyama, H. Masuda, E. Mazzucato, A. K. McKemey, B. T. Meadows, R. Messner, P. M. Mockett, K. C. Moffeit, T. B. Moore, D. Muller, T. Nagamine, S. Narita, U. Nauenberg, H. Neal, M. Nussbaum, Y. Ohnishi, L. S. Osborne, R. S. Panvini, C. H. Park, H. Park, T. J. Pavel, I. Peruzzi, M. Piccolo, L. Piemontese, E. Pieroni, K. T. Pitts, R. J. Plano, R. Prepost, C. Y. Prescott, G. D. Punkar, J. Quigley, B. N. Ratcliff, T. W. Reeves, J. Reidy, P. L. Reinertsen, P. E. Rensing, L. S. Rochester, P. C. Rowson, J. J. Russell, O. H. Saxton, T. Schalk, R. H. Schindler, B. A. Schumm, S. Sen, V. V. Serbo, M. H. Shaevitz, J. T. Shank, G. Shapiro, D. J. Sherden, K. D. Shmakov, C. Simopoulos, N. B. Sinev, S. R. Smith, M. B. Smy, J. A. Snyder, P. Stamer, H. Steiner, R. Steiner, M. G. Strauss, D. Su, F. Suekane, A. Sugiyama, S. Suzuki, M. Swartz, A. Szumilo, T. Takahashi, F. E. Taylor, E. Torrence, A. I. Trandafir, J. D. Turk, T. Usher, J. Va'vra, C. Vannini, E. Vella, J. P. Venuti, R. Verdier, P. G. Verdini, D. L. Wagner, S. R. Wagner, A. P. Waite, S. J. Watts, A. W. Weidemann, E. R. Weiss, J. S. Whitaker, S. L. White, F. J. Wickens, D. A. Williams, D. C. Williams, S. H. Williams, S. Willocq, R. J. Wilson, W. J. Wisniewski, M. Woods, G. B. Word, J. Wyss, R. K. Yamamoto, J. M. Yamartino, X. Yang, J. Yashima, S. J. Yellin, C. C. Young, H. Yuta, G. Zapalac, R. W. Zdarko, and J. Zhou
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Physics ,Particle physics ,Electron–positron annihilation ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Elementary particle ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Helicity ,Nuclear physics ,Particle decay ,Tau neutrino ,mental disorders ,Michel parameters ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Neutrino ,Lepton - Abstract
We present a new measurement of the tau neutrino helicity, hnu and the tau Michel parameters rho, eta, xi and the product delta xi. The analysis exploits the highly polarized SLC electron beam to extract these quantities directly from a measurement of the tau decay spectra, using the 1993-1995 SLD data sample of 4328 e+e- --> Z0 --> tau+tau- events. From the decays tau --> pi nu(tau) and tau --> rho nu(tau) we obtain a combined value hnu=-0.93+/-0.10+/-0.04. The leptonic decay channels yield combined values of rho=0.72+/-0.09+/-0.03, xi=1.05+/-0.35+/-0.04 and delta xi=0.88+/-0.27+/-0.04.
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- 1997
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25. Measurement of Leading Particle Effects in Decays ofZ0Bosons into Light Flavors
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T. W. Reeves, A. Chou, K.C. Moffeit, R. Dubois, S. R. Smith, H. A. Neal, S. Fahey, P.L. Reinertsen, A. Sugiyama, J. M. Yamartino, C. Y. Prescott, L. S. Rochester, Stephen Watts, R. R. Kofler, J. Quigley, J. Wyss, Michael J. Fero, E. R. Weiss, C. H. Park, Bruce Schumm, D. Su, T. Bolton, M. Dima, Stephen Robert Wagner, B. N. Ratcliff, A. Lu, C. Simopoulos, M. Cavalli-Sforza, B. T. Meadows, P. E. Stamer, M.B. Barakat, M. E. Huffer, C. C. Young, J. Yashima, J. D. Turk, V. V. Serbo, N.J. Allen, R.D. Elia, G. E. Gladding, J. Schwiening, A. I. Trandafir, M. Piccolo, Gilbert Shapiro, R. E. Cassell, P.E. Rensing, R. H. Schindler, R. Verdier, E. L. Hart, T. Nagamine, M. Kalelkar, T. Schalk, G. L. Bashindzhagyan, C. Vannini, E. Etzion, A. Hasan, M. Carpinelli, Michael H. Shaevitz, A. Szumilo, M. Loreti, B. Bolen, T. H. Burnett, W. J. Wisniewski, M. Langston, J. A. Coller, S. Manly, O. Bardon, F. E. Taylor, J. R. Bogart, D. Aston, S. J. Yellin, A. Calcaterra, K. Hasuko, R. Prepost, P.F. Jacques, R. Kroeger, D. Calloway, S. Sen, G. H. Zapalac, R. K. Yamamoto, N.M. Krishna, A. P. Waite, X. Yang, D. C. Williams, S. J. Hedges, O. H. Saxton, M. Nussbaum, R. Cowan, K. T. Pitts, Shiro Suzuki, Timothy Barklow, Piero Giorgio Verdini, X. Liu, S. S. Hertzbach, R. W. Zdarko, M.E. King, J. J. Russell, S. Willocq, A. S. Johnson, R. Steiner, H. R. Band, L.S. Osborne, Rino Castaldi, H. O. Cohn, K. Furuno, Giancarlo Mantovani, W. W. Ash, R. Messner, S. Gonzalez, M. D. Hildreth, V. Cook, K.D. Shmakov, Yukio Hasegawa, H. Hwang, H. L. Lynch, J. S. Whitaker, Alberto Benvenuti, R. Ben-David, G. D. Punkar, R. de Sangro, E. Vella, R. A. Johnson, J. E. Brau, A. W. Weidemann, J. Zhou, H. Kawahara, G. B. Word, D. G. Coyne, Henry W. Kendall, D. J. Sherden, C. Fan, J.P. Venuti, D. J. Jackson, Fred Wickens, D. W. G. S. Leith, C.J.S. Damerell, R. J. Wilson, A. O. Bazarko, Martin Breidenbach, R. Cotton, Yongduk Kim, C. Baltay, E. W. Hughes, J. A. Lauber, H. Masuda, S. H. Williams, J. Ma, Minghui Liu, D. Onoprienko, G. Blaylock, B. Camanzi, G. M. Bilei, G. R. Bower, R. S. Panvini, D. Falciai, G. Crawford, M. Swartz, James Shank, Andrea Castro, Wit Busza, F. Suekane, P. C. Rowson, J. A. Jaros, P.J. Dervan, H. Yuta, D. O. Caldwell, Thomas W. Markiewicz, T. Gillman, E. Church, T. Junk, J. L. Harton, S. Narita, Tadayuki Takahashi, J. P. Fernandez, P. M. Mockett, G. Baranko, M. B. Smy, Y. Iwasaki, K.G. Baird, David A. Williams, J. Huber, T. L. Usher, S. L. White, A. K. McKemey, R. King, R.J. Plano, I. Karliner, M. G. Strauss, Dominik Müller, H. Park, T. Maruyama, Y. Ohnishi, B. I. Eisenstein, D. N. Dong, J. A. Snyder, A. Lath, I. M. Peruzzi, E. Mazzucato, A.B. d'Oliveira, E. Torrence, H. J. Kang, Roberto Dell'Orso, J. Va'vra, J.J. Reidy, N. B. Sinev, D. L. Wagner, V. Lia, U. Nauenberg, D. L. Burke, W. M. Bugg, P. N. Burrows, Dario Bisello, T.J. Pavel, R. Frey, J. R. Johnson, R. Kajikawa, H. M. Steiner, T. Akagi, L. Piemontese, T. B. Moore, Enrico Pieroni, J. F. Labs, G. Mancinelli, P.Y.C. Du, M. Daoudi, K. Abe, and M. Woods
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Quark ,Physics ,Antiparticle ,Particle physics ,Meson ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,High Energy Physics::Lattice ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Hadron ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Elementary particle ,Quarkonium ,Nuclear physics ,Particle decay ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Boson - Abstract
We present evidence for leading particle production in hadronic decays of the Z{sup 0} boson to light-flavor jets. A polarized electron beam was used to tag quark and antiquark jets, and a vertex detector was employed to reject heavy-flavor events. Charged hadrons were identified with a Cherenkov ring imaging detector. In the quark jets, more high-momentum p, L, K{sup -}, and {bar K}{sup *0} were observed than their antiparticles, and vice versa for antiquark jets, providing direct evidence that the higher-momentum particles in jets are more likely to carry the primary quark or antiquark from the Z{sup 0} decay, and that s{bar s} production is suppressed in fragmentation. {copyright} {ital 1997} {ital The American Physical Society}
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- 1997
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26. Membrane IgM-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of CD19 requires a CD19 domain that mediates association with components of the B cell antigen receptor complex
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R H Carter, G M Doody, J B Bolen, and D T Fearon
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Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
CD19 enhances membrane IgM (mIgM) signaling and is required for B lymphocyte responses to T-dependent Ags. CD19 is tyrosine phosphorylated when mIgM is ligated and binds SH2 domain-containing signaling proteins. We suggest that the basis for phosphorylation is the association of CD19 with Syk and other components of the mIgM complex. IgM, CD22, Ig-alpha, Ig-beta, and Syk were coimmunoprecipitated with CD19 from detergent lysates of B lymphocytes. The association was maintained with a chimeric form of CD19 containing only the transmembrane domain and the membrane proximal 17 amino acids of the cytoplasmic domain encoded by exon 6. This sequence is sufficient to mediate the association, as a synthetic peptide of the exon 6-encoded region adsorbs IgM and Syk. Deletion of the juxtamembrane 17 amino acids of the cytoplasmic domain encoded by CD19 exon 6 abolishes association of CD19 with the mIgM complex. Deletion of these amino acids, which contain no tyrosines, also reduces mIgM-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the remainder of the CD19 cytoplasmic domain. Coligating this mutant CD19 to mIgM restores phosphorylation. Thus, a discrete region of the cytoplasmic domain regulates the tyrosine phosphorylation of CD19 in the activation of B cells by mIgM.
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- 1997
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27. Improved Measurement of the Left-RightZ0Cross Section Asymmetry
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K. Abe, I. Abt, T. Akagi, N. J. Allen, W. W. Ash, D. Aston, K. G. Baird, C. Baltay, H. R. Band, M. B. Barakat, G. Baranko, O. Bardon, T. L. Barklow, G. L. Bashindzhagyan, A. O. Bazarko, R. Ben-David, A. C. Benvenuti, G. M. Bilei, D. Bisello, G. Blaylock, J. R. Bogart, B. Bolen, T. Bolton, G. R. Bower, J. E. Brau, M. Breidenbach, W. M. Bugg, D. Burke, T. H. Burnett, P. N. Burrows, W. Busza, A. Calcaterra, D. O. Caldwell, D. Calloway, B. Camanzi, M. Carpinelli, R. Cassell, R. Castaldi, A. Castro, M. Cavalli-Sforza, A. Chou, E. Church, H. O. Cohn, J. A. Coller, V. Cook, R. Cotton, R. F. Cowan, D. G. Coyne, G. Crawford, A. D'Oliveira, C. J. S. Damerell, M. Daoudi, R. De Sangro, R. Dell'Orso, P. J. Dervan, M. Dima, D. N. Dong, P. Y. C. Du, R. Dubois, B. I. Eisenstein, R. Elia, E. Etzion, S. Fahey, D. Falciai, C. Fan, M. J. Fero, R. Frey, K. Furuno, T. Gillman, G. Gladding, S. Gonzalez, G. D. Hallewell, E. L. Hart, J. L. Harton, A. Hasan, Y. Hasegawa, K. Hasuko, S. J. Hedges, S. S. Hertzbach, M. D. Hildreth, J. Huber, M. E. Huffer, E. W. Hughes, H. Hwang, Y. Iwasaki, D. J. Jackson, P. Jacques, J. A. Jaros, A. S. Johnson, J. R. Johnson, R. A. Johnson, T. Junk, R. Kajikawa, M. Kalelkar, H. J. Kang, I. Karliner, H. Kawahara, H. W. Kendall, Y. D. Kim, M. E. King, R. King, R. R. Kofler, N. M. Krishna, R. S. Kroeger, J. F. Labs, M. Langston, A. Lath, J. A. Lauber, D. W. G. S. Leith, V. Lia, M. X. Liu, X. Liu, M. Loreti, A. Lu, H. L. Lynch, J. Ma, G. Mancinelli, S. Manly, G. Mantovani, T. W. Markiewicz, T. Maruyama, H. Masuda, E. Mazzucato, A. K. McKemey, B. T. Meadows, R. Messner, P. M. Mockett, K. C. Moffeit, T. B. Moore, D. Muller, T. Nagamine, S. Narita, U. Nauenberg, H. Neal, M. Nussbaum, Y. Ohnishi, L. S. Osborne, R. S. Panvini, C. H. Park, H. Park, T. J. Pavel, I. Peruzzi, M. Piccolo, L. Piemontese, E. Pieroni, K. T. Pitts, R. J. Plano, R. Prepost, C. Y. Prescott, G. D. Punkar, J. Quigley, B. N. Ratcliff, K. Reeves, T. W. Reeves, J. Reidy, P. L. Reinertsen, P. E. Rensing, L. S. Rochester, P. C. Rowson, J. J. Russell, O. H. Saxton, T. Schalk, R. H. Schindler, B. A. Schumm, J. Schwiening, S. Sen, V. V. Serbo, M. H. Shaevitz, J. T. Shank, G. Shapiro, D. J. Sherden, K. D. Shmakov, C. Simopoulos, N. B. Sinev, S. R. Smith, M. B. Smy, J. A. Snyder, P. Stamer, H. Steiner, R. Steiner, M. G. Strauss, D. Su, F. Suekane, A. Sugiyama, S. Suzuki, M. Swartz, A. Szumilo, T. Takahashi, F. E. Taylor, E. Torrence, A. I. Trandafir, J. D. Turk, T. Usher, J. Va'vra, C. Vannini, E. Vella, J. P. Venuti, R. Verdier, P. G. Verdini, D. L. Wagner, S. R. Wagner, A. P. Waite, S. J. Watts, A. W. Weidemann, E. R. Weiss, J. S. Whitaker, S. L. White, F. J. Wickens, D. A. Williams, D. C. Williams, S. H. Williams, S. Willocq, R. J. Wilson, W. J. Wisniewski, M. Woods, G. B. Word, J. Wyss, R. K. Yamamoto, J. M. Yamartino, X. Yang, S. J. Yellin, C. C. Young, H. Yuta, G. Zapalac, R. W. Zdarko, and J. Zhou
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Physics ,Particle physics ,Electron–positron annihilation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Weinberg angle ,Elementary particle ,Polarization (waves) ,Asymmetry ,Linear particle accelerator ,Nuclear physics ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment ,media_common ,Boson - Abstract
We present a new measurement of the left-right cross section asymmetry (ALR) for Z boson production by e+e- collisions. The measurement was performed at a center-of-mass energy of 91.28 GeV with the SLD detector at the SLAC Linear Collider (SLC). The luminosity-weighted average polarization of the SLC electron beam was (77.23+-0.52)%. Using a sample of 93,644 Z decays, we measure the pole-value of the asymmetry, ALR0, to be 0.1512+-0.0042(stat.)+-0.0011(syst.) which is equivalent to an effective weak mixing angle of sin**2(theta_eff)=0.23100+-0.00054(stat.)+-0.00014(syst.).
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- 1997
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28. Effects of the tyrosine-kinase inhibitor geldanamycin on ligand-induced HER-2/NEU activation, receptor expression and proliferation of HER-2-positive malignant cell lines
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Cheryl Cho, Joseph B. Bolen, Ivan D. Horak, Michael Pfreundschuh, Eva M. Horak, Ruth Lupu, Frank Hartmann, Thomas A. Waldmann, and M Stetler-Stevenson
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Cancer Research ,Cell growth ,Receptor expression ,Ansamycin ,Autophosphorylation ,Biological activity ,Geldanamycin ,Biology ,Molecular biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,FYN ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,polycyclic compounds ,Kinase activity - Abstract
Geldanamycin belongs to the family of benzoquinoid ansamycin tyrosine-kinase inhibitors. We have examined its effects on Her-2/neu kinase activity, protein expression level, and proliferation of Her-2+ malignant cells. In SK-BR-3 breast-cancer cells, short-time treatment with geldanamycin completely abrogated gp30-ligand-induced activation of Her-2 without a change of receptor-expression level. Longer treatment of intact cells with geldanamycin induced decreased steady-state Her-2 autophosphorylation activity, which correlated with reduction of Her-2 protein expression and phosphotyrosine content of several proteins. The decrease was time- and dose-dependent, starting after 1 hr at 100 nM concentration and reaching completion by 24 hr. The reduction of the Her-2 protein level probably resulted from increased degradation, since the Her-2 mRNA level remained constant. Geldanamycin effects were not specific for Her-2, since the non-receptor tyrosine-kinase fyn was inhibited equally. In contrast to these results, protein-kinase-C activity was not affected. In 3 other malignant cell lines expressing different amounts of Her-2 (SK-BR-3 > SK-OV-3 > OVCAR3 > MCF7), geldanamycin also effectively reduced Her-2-kinase activity proportionally to the decrease of protein expression. In contrast, in a [3H]-thymidine-uptake assay, cell growth was meaningfully inhibited by geldanamycin at nanomolar concentrations only in SK-BR-3 (IC50 2 nM) and MCF7 (IC50 20 nM), while OVCAR3 was only moderately sensitive (IC50 2 microM) and SK-OV-3 was clearly resistant to geldanamycin. In direct comparison with herbimycin A, another benzoquinoid ansamycin that has been more thoroughly characterized, the biologic effects of geldanamycin were more pronounced.
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- 1997
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29. First Measurement of the Left-Right Charge Asymmetry in HadronicZBoson Decays and a New Determination ofsin2θWeff
- Author
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K. Abe, I. Abt, T. Akagi, N. J. Allen, W. W. Ash, D. Aston, K. G. Baird, C. Baltay, H. R. Band, M. B. Barakat, G. Baranko, O. Bardon, T. L. Barklow, G. L. Bashindzhagyan, A. O. Bazarko, R. Ben-David, A. C. Benvenuti, G. M. Bilei, D. Bisello, G. Blaylock, J. R. Bogart, B. Bolen, T. Bolton, G. R. Bower, J. E. Brau, M. Breidenbach, W. M. Bugg, D. Burke, T. H. Burnett, P. N. Burrows, W. Busza, A. Calcaterra, D. O. Caldwell, D. Calloway, B. Camanzi, M. Carpinelli, R. Cassell, R. Castaldi, A. Castro, M. Cavalli-Sforza, A. Chou, E. Church, H. O. Cohn, J. A. Coller, V. Cook, R. Cotton, R. F. Cowan, D. G. Coyne, G. Crawford, A. D'Oliveira, C. J. S. Damerell, M. Daoudi, R. De Sangro, R. Dell'Orso, P. J. Dervan, M. Dima, D. N. Dong, P. Y. C. Du, R. Dubois, B. I. Eisenstein, R. Elia, E. Etzion, S. Fahey, D. Falciai, C. Fan, M. J. Fero, R. Frey, K. Furuno, T. Gillman, G. Gladding, S. Gonzalez, G. D. Hallewell, E. L. Hart, J. L. Harton, A. Hasan, Y. Hasegawa, K. Hasuko, S. Hedges, S. S. Hertzbach, M. D. Hildreth, J. Huber, M. E. Huffer, E. W. Hughes, H. Hwang, Y. Iwasaki, D. J. Jackson, P. Jacques, J. A. Jaros, A. S. Johnson, J. R. Johnson, R. A. Johnson, T. Junk, R. Kajikawa, M. Kalelkar, H. J. Kang, I. Karliner, H. Kawahara, H. W. Kendall, Y. D. Kim, M. E. King, R. King, R. R. Kofler, N. M. Krishna, R. S. Kroeger, J. F. Labs, M. Langston, A. Lath, J. A. Lauber, D. W. G. S. Leith, V. Lia, M. X. Liu, X. Liu, M. Loreti, A. Lu, H. L. Lynch, J. Ma, G. Mancinelli, S. Manly, G. Mantovani, T. W. Markiewicz, T. Maruyama, H. Masuda, E. Mazzucato, A. K. McKemey, B. T. Meadows, R. Messner, P. M. Mockett, K. C. Moffeit, T. B. Moore, D. Muller, T. Nagamine, S. Narita, U. Nauenberg, H. Neal, M. Nussbaum, Y. Ohnishi, L. S. Osborne, R. S. Panvini, C. H. Park, H. Park, T. J. Pavel, I. Peruzzi, M. Piccolo, L. Piemontese, E. Pieroni, K. T. Pitts, R. J. Plano, R. Prepost, C. Y. Prescott, G. D. Punkar, J. Quigley, B. N. Ratcliff, T. W. Reeves, J. Reidy, P. L. Reinertsen, P. E. Rensing, L. S. Rochester, P. C. Rowson, J. J. Russell, O. H. Saxton, T. Schalk, R. H. Schindler, B. A. Schumm, S. Sen, V. V. Serbo, M. H. Shaevitz, J. T. Shank, G. Shapiro, D. J. Sherden, K. D. Shmakov, C. Simopoulos, N. B. Sinev, S. R. Smith, M. B. Smy, J. A. Snyder, P. Stamer, H. Steiner, R. Steiner, M. G. Strauss, D. Su, F. Suekane, A. Sugiyama, S. Suzuki, M. Swartz, A. Szumilo, T. Takahashi, F. E. Taylor, E. Torrence, A. I. Trandafir, J. D. Turk, T. Usher, J. Va'vra, C. Vannini, E. Vella, J. P. Venuti, R. Verdier, P. G. Verdini, D. L. Wagner, S. R. Wagner, A. P. Waite, S. J. Watts, A. W. Weidemann, E. R. Weiss, J. S. Whitaker, S. L. White, F. J. Wickens, D. A. Williams, D. C. Williams, S. H. Williams, S. Willocq, R. J. Wilson, W. J. Wisniewski, M. Woods, G. B. Word, J. Wyss, R. K. Yamamoto, J. M. Yamartino, X. Yang, S. J. Yellin, C. C. Young, H. Yuta, G. Zapalac, R. W. Zdarko, and J. Zhou
- Subjects
Physics ,Particle physics ,Particle decay ,Electron–positron annihilation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Hadron ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Weinberg angle ,Elementary particle ,Asymmetry ,Boson ,media_common - Abstract
We present the first measurement of the left-right charge asymmetry ${A}_{Q}^{\mathrm{obs}}$ in hadronic $Z$ boson decays. This was performed at ${E}_{\mathrm{c}.\mathrm{m}.}\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}=\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}91.27\mathrm{GeV}$ with the SLD at the SLAC Linear Collider with a polarized electron beam. Using 89 838 events we obtain ${A}_{Q}^{\mathrm{obs}}\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}=\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}0.225\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.056\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.019$, which leads to a measurement of the electron left-right asymmetry parameter, ${A}_{e}\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}=\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}0.162\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.041\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.014$, and ${sin}^{2}{\ensuremath{\theta}}_{W}^{\mathrm{eff}}\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}=\phantom{\rule{0ex}{0ex}}0.2297\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.0052\ifmmode\pm\else\textpm\fi{}0.0018$. Also, the ${A}_{Q}^{\mathrm{obs}}$ measurement combined with the left-right cross section asymmetry determines ${A}_{e}$ independent of the value of the electron-beam polarization.
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- 1997
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30. Takeda's Oncology Discovery Strategy
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Brian DeSchuytner, Kyle Kuvalanka, Joseph B. Bolen, and Barbara Hibner
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Oncology ,Flexibility (engineering) ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biological Products ,Drug Industry ,business.industry ,Research ,Proteins ,Antineoplastic Agents ,General Medicine ,Protein Homeostasis ,California ,Hormones ,Unmet needs ,Japan ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Homeostasis ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Product (category theory) ,business - Abstract
Takeda's Oncology Discovery Strategy is tightly integrated and focused on first and fast-best- in-class products and product combinations. Core areas of expertise include hormones, protein homeostasis, biotherapeutics and signal transduction. Strategic imperatives for research success are understanding of unmet needs, focus on biological expertise in founda- tional areas of leadership and flexibility to adapt to new information.
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- 2013
31. HIV infection--induced posttranslational modification of T cell signaling molecules associated with disease progression
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Irena Stefanova, Noreen Jack, William A. Blattner, Robert Yarchoan, Kent J. Weinhold, Courtenay Bartholomew, C Peters, Joseph B. Bolen, Farley R. Cleghorn, David Venzon, Ivan D. Horak, David A. Schwartz, and M W Saville
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T-Lymphocytes ,T cell ,Immunoblotting ,Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell ,HIV Infections ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Biology ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fyn ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,FYN ,LYN ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,medicine ,Humans ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Phosphorylation ,B cell ,B-Lymphocytes ,ZAP-70 Protein-Tyrosine Kinase ,ZAP70 ,T-cell receptor ,CD28 ,Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, gamma-delta ,hemic and immune systems ,General Medicine ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,src-Family Kinases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphocyte Specific Protein Tyrosine Kinase p56(lck) ,Immunology ,Disease Progression ,HIV-1 ,Cancer research ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational ,Signal Transduction ,Research Article - Abstract
In attempt to elucidate the mechanism of the HIV infection induced T cell unresponsiveness, we studied signal-transducing molecules proximal to the T cell receptor (TCR) in T lymphocytes of HIV-infected individuals. Total amounts of protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) Lck, Fyn, and ZAP-70 and the zeta chain of the TCR were found significantly decreased in T cells of symptomatic/AIDS patients as well as in T cells of individuals in acute and early asymptomatic stages of HIV infection. Unexpectedly, the detection of Lck, Fyn, and ZAP-70 was reversed after the treatment of cell lysates with dithiothreitol. This suggests that PTKs Lck, Fyn, and ZAP-70 were modified by a mechanism altering the status of sulfhydryl groups. Moreover, this mechanism seems to affect selectively T cells of HIV infected patients since B cell PTKs Syk and Lyn were detected structurally and functionally intact. Interestingly, similar alterations of signaling molecules were not detected in T cells of HIV-infected long-term asymptomatic individuals. Modification of T cell PTKs may thus underlie the HIV-induced impairment of lymphocyte function and may potentially predict disease progression.
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- 1996
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32. BTK as a Mediator of Radiation-Induced Apoptosis in DT-40 Lymphoma B Cells
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Kevin G. Waddick, Tomohiro Kurosaki, Fatih M. Uckun, Joseph B. Bolen, Xiao Jun, Sandeep Mahajan, and Minoru Takata
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Lymphoma, B-Cell ,Receptors, Antigen, B-Cell ,Syk ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,src Homology Domains ,immune system diseases ,LYN ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Agammaglobulinaemia Tyrosine Kinase ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Animals ,Humans ,Bruton's tyrosine kinase ,Phosphorylation ,B-Lymphocytes ,Multidisciplinary ,Gene targeting ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Cell biology ,Immunoglobulin M ,Protein kinase domain ,Gamma Rays ,Gene Targeting ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Chickens ,Tyrosine kinase ,Proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src - Abstract
Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) is a member of the SRC-related TEC family of protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs). DT-40 lymphoma B cells, rendered BTK-deficient through targeted disruption of the btk gene by homologous recombination knockout, did not undergo radiation-induced apoptosis, but cells with disrupted lyn or syk genes did. Introduction of the wild-type, or a SRC homology 2 domain or a plecstrin homology domain mutant (but not a kinase domain mutant), human btk gene into BTK-deficient cells restored the apoptotic response to radiation. Thus, BTK is the PTK responsible for triggering radiation-induced apoptosis of lymphoma B cells, and its kinase domain is indispensable for the apoptotic response.
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- 1996
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33. Expression of exogenous p59fyn modulates signaling in an immature B cell line, WEHI-231
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Joseph B. Bolen, Joonsoo Kang, Yongjian Wu, Eiji Ido, Anne L. Burkhardt, Nobumichi Hozumi, Hai P. Nguyen, and Naoto Iwabuchi
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Lymphoma, B-Cell ,Genetic Vectors ,Immunology ,Naive B cell ,B-cell receptor ,Biology ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fyn ,Transfection ,Mice ,LYN ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,medicine ,Animals ,Immunology and Allergy ,B cell ,breakpoint cluster region ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Molecular biology ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Apoptosis ,Calcium ,Ectopic expression ,Signal transduction ,Cell Division ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The WEHI-231 B lymphoma line is representative of immature B cells, which undergo growth arrest/apoptosis following cross-linking of surface immunoglobulin M (sIgM). In B cells, sIgM engagement has been shown to induce immediate (within seconds) activation of src family protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) such as p53 lyn 56 lyn , p55blk, p56lck and p59fyn which are associated with B cell antigen receptor (BCR) complex. However, p59fyn expression is very low in both normal immature B cells and apoptosis-prone B cell lines, including WEHI-231. Such a finding prompted us to investigate the effects of ectopic expression of p59fyn in growth regulation of WEHI-231 cells. We have obtained WEHI-231 transfectants expressing the exogenous p59fyn by retroviral mediated gene transfer method. The transfectants demonstrated increased [Ca2+]i level in both the non-stimulated condition and sIgM cross-linking. The expression of ectopic p59fyn also increased the sensitivity of the transfectants to growth arrest signal by sIgM cross-linking. The results suggest that p59fyn can modulate signal transduction and growth regulation when expressed in the immature B cell line.
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- 1996
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34. TCR Activation of ZAP70 Is Impaired in CD4+CD8+ Thymocytes as a Consequence of Intrathymic Interactions that Diminish Available p56lck
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Ryo Abe, Jennifer M. Ashe, David L. Wiest, Joseph B. Bolen, and Alfred Singer
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Cell signaling ,CD8 Antigens ,CD3 ,Immunology ,Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Cell Communication ,Thymus Gland ,Binding, Competitive ,Mice ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,T-Lymphocyte Subsets ,Animals ,Immunology and Allergy ,ZAP-70 Protein-Tyrosine Kinase ,biology ,ZAP70 ,T-cell receptor ,Histocompatibility Antigens Class II ,hemic and immune systems ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Mice, Mutant Strains ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,src-Family Kinases ,Infectious Diseases ,Lymphocyte Specific Protein Tyrosine Kinase p56(lck) ,CD4 Antigens ,biology.protein ,Phosphorylation ,Signal transduction ,Tyrosine kinase ,CD8 ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The fate of developing CD4+CD8+ thymocytes is determined by signals transduced through surface TCR complexes. Here, we report that cross-linking of TCR on CD4+CD8+ thymocytes fails to activate ZAP70 protein tyrosine kinase and fails to initiate downstream signaling events, unless the TCR are coaggregated with surface coreceptor molecules. TCR signaling in CD4+CD8+ thymocytes is impaired because the number of available p56lck molecules is diminished by intrathymic CD4–Ia interactions that initially activate p56lck molecules, which are subsequently degraded. As a consequence of intrathymic CD4–Ia interactions, TCR ζ chains are initially phosphorylated to recruit ZAP70 molecules, but the recruited ZAP70 molecules are not subsequently phosphorylated, resulting in TCR complexes that are stably associated with inactive ZAP70 molecules. Thus, intrathymic interactions that diminish p56lck regulate TCR signaling thresholds and affect TCR structure in developing CD4+CD8+ thymocytes.
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- 1996
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35. Physical and Functional Interactions between Lyn and p34 Kinases in Irradiated Human B-cell Precursors
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Fatih M. Uckun, R. Bruce Rowley, Dorothea E. Myers, Lisa Tuel-Ahlgren, Kevin G. Waddick, Joseph B. Bolen, Anne L. Burkhardt, Xiao Jun, and Jizhong Jin
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Tyrosine-protein kinase CSK ,Kinase ,hemic and immune systems ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,SH2 domain ,environment and public health ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology ,enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,LYN ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Cancer research ,Phosphorylation ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Tyrosine ,Molecular Biology ,CDC2 Protein Kinase - Abstract
Exposure of human B-cell precursors (BCP) to ionizing radiation results in cell cycle arrest at the G2-M checkpoint as a result of inhibitory tyrosine phosphorylation of p34cdc2 . Here, we show that ionizing radiation promotes physical interactions between p34cdc2 and the Src family protein-tyrosine kinase Lyn in the cytoplasm of human BCP leading to tyrosine phosphorylation of p34cdc2. Lyn kinase immunoprecipitated from lysates of irradiated BCP as well as a full-length glutathione S-transferase (GST)-Lyn fusion protein-phosphorylated recombinant human p34cdc2 on tyrosine 15. Furthermore, Lyn kinase physically associated with and tyrosine-phosphorylated p34cdc2 kinase in vivo when co-expressed in COS-7 cells. Binding experiments with truncated GST-Lyn fusion proteins suggested a functional role for the SH3 rather than the SH2 domain of Lyn in Lyn-p34cdc2 interactions in BCP. The first 27 residues of the unique amino-terminal domain of Lyn were also essential for the ability of GST-Lyn fusion proteins to bind to p34cdc2 from BCP lysates. Ionizing radiation failed to cause tyrosine phosphorylation of p34cdc2 or G2 arrest in Lyn kinase-deficient BCP, supporting an important role of Lyn kinase in radiation-induced G2 phase-specific cell cycle arrest. Our findings implicate Lyn as an important cytoplasmic suppressor of p34cdc2 function.
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- 1996
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36. Endogenous Reactive Oxygen Intermediates Activate Tyrosine Kinases in Human Neutrophils
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Sergio Grinstein, Joseph B. Bolen, John H. Brumell, and Anne L. Burkhardt
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Neutrophils ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,In Vitro Techniques ,Biochemistry ,Receptor tyrosine kinase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Humans ,Syk Kinase ,Phosphorylation ,Tyrosine ,Phosphotyrosine ,Molecular Biology ,Enzyme Precursors ,NADPH oxidase ,biology ,Autophosphorylation ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Cell Biology ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Enzyme Activation ,Kinetics ,src-Family Kinases ,chemistry ,Guanosine 5'-O-(3-Thiotriphosphate) ,Lymphocyte Specific Protein Tyrosine Kinase p56(lck) ,biology.protein ,Vanadates ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Tyrosine kinase - Abstract
In response to invading microorganisms, neutrophils produce large amounts of superoxide and other reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) by assembly and activation of a multicomponent enzyme complex, the NADPH oxidase. While fulfilling a microbicidal role, ROI have also been postulated to serve as signaling molecules, because activation of the NADPH oxidase was found to be associated with increased tyrosine phosphorylation (Fialkow, L., Chan, C. K., Grinstein, S., and Downey, G.P. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 17131-17137). The mechanism whereby ROI induces phosphotyrosine accumulation was investigated using electroporated neutrophils stimulated with guanosine 5'-O-3-thiotriphosphate in order to bypass membrane receptors. In vitro immune complex assays and immunoblotting were used to identify five tyrosine kinases present in human neutrophils. Of these, p56/59hck, p72syk, and p77btk were activated during production of ROI. Interestingly, the in vitro autophosphorylation activities of p53/56lyn and p59fgr were found to decline with ROI production. The mode of regulation of p56/59hck was explored in detail. Oxidizing agents were unable to activate p56/59hck in vitro and, once activated in situ, reducing agents failed to inactivate it, suggesting that the effects of ROI are indirect. Tyrosine phosphorylation of p56/59hck paralleled its activation, and dephosphorylation in vitro reversed the stimulation. We therefore conclude that tyrosine phosphorylation is central to the regulation of p56/59hck and likely also of p72syk, which is similarly phosphorylated upon activation of the oxidase. Because ROI have been shown to reduce the activity of tyrosine phosphatases, we suggest that this inhibition allows constitutively active kinases to auto/transphosphorylate on stimulatory tyrosine residues, leading to an increase in their catalytic activity. Enhanced phosphotyrosine accumulation would then result from the combined effects of increased phosphorylation with decreased dephosphorylation.
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- 1996
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37. RANTES induces tyrosine kinase activity of stably complexed p125FAK and ZAP-70 in human T cells
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Hans Yssel, J B Bolen, T J Schall, M C Szabo, and K B Bacon
- Subjects
T cell ,T-Lymphocytes ,Immunology ,PTK2 ,Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell ,Focal adhesion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Cell Adhesion ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Phosphorylation ,Chemokine CCL5 ,Paxillin ,ZAP-70 Protein-Tyrosine Kinase ,biology ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Articles ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Phosphoproteins ,Molecular biology ,Receptor, Insulin ,Enzyme Activation ,Cytoskeletal Proteins ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Focal Adhesion Kinase 1 ,Focal Adhesion Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,biology.protein ,Signal transduction ,Tyrosine kinase ,Cell Adhesion Molecules - Abstract
The chemokine RANTES is a chemoattractant and activating factor for T lymphocytes. Investigation of the signal transduction mechanisms induced by RANTES in T cells revealed tyrosine phosphorylation of multiple protein species with prominent bands at 70-85 and 120-130 kD. Immunoprecipitation and Western analyses revealed that a protein of 125 kD was identical to the focal adhesion kinase (FAK) pp125FAK. RANTES stimulated phosphorylation of FAK as early as 30 seconds and immunoblots using antiphosphotyrosine monoclonal antibodies revealed that there was consistent phosphorylation of a 68-70 kD species in the pp125FAK immunoprecipitates. Immunoblotting and kinase assays showed this to be two separate proteins, the tyrosine kinase zeta-associated protein (ZAP) 70, and the focal adhesion protein paxillin. These results indicate a potentially important role for RANTES in the generation of T cell focal adhesions and subsequent cell activation via a molecular complex containing FAK, ZAP-70, and paxillin.
- Published
- 1996
38. Reconstitution of the B Cell Antigen Receptor Signaling Components in COS Cells
- Author
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Sandra J. Saouaf, Joseph B. Bolen, R. B. Rowley, Sandeep Mahajan, S. A. Kut, and Joseph Fargnoli
- Subjects
Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Gene Expression ,Receptors, Antigen, B-Cell ,Syk ,Protein Sorting Signals ,Biology ,Transfection ,Peptide Mapping ,environment and public health ,Biochemistry ,Cell Line ,FYN ,Cell surface receptor ,LYN ,Animals ,Humans ,Syk Kinase ,Receptors, Platelet-Derived Growth Factor ,Phosphorylation ,Tyrosine ,Molecular Biology ,Enzyme Precursors ,Binding Sites ,COS cells ,Receptors, IgE ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Molecular biology ,enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates) ,src-Family Kinases ,Tyrosine kinase ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
To elucidate interactions occurring between B cell protein tyrosine kinases and the signaling components of the B cell antigen receptor, we have co-transfected into COS cells individual tyrosine kinases together with chimeric cell surface receptors containing the cytoplasmic domains of Ig alpha or Ig beta. Of the tyrosine kinases transfected (Lyn, Blk, Hck, Syk, Fyn), only Blk was able to phosphorylate and subsequently associate with cotransfected Ig alpha and Ig beta chimeras in vivo. Association between Blk and the Ig alpha and Ig beta cytoplasmic domains was shown by mutational analyses to be the result of an SH2-phosphotyrosine interaction. We identified the tyrosine residues of the Ig alpha and Ig beta cytoplasmic domains was shown by mutational analyses to be the result of an SH2-phosphotyrosine interaction. We identified the tyrosine residues of the Ig alpha and Ig beta cytoplasmic domains phosphorylated by Blk. The enzymatic activity and membrane association of Blk were required for the observed phosphorylation of the Ig alpha and Ig beta chimeras. Sequences within the amino-terminal unique domain of Blk are responsible for recognition and subsequent phosphorylation of the Ig alpha chimera since transfer of the unique region of Blk to Fyn results in the chimeric kinase's ability to phosphorylate the cytoplasmic domain of Ig alpha. These findings indicate that the unique domain of Src family kinases may direct recognition of certain substrates leading to their phosphorylation.
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- 1995
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39. Exposure of B-lineage Lymphoid Cells to Low Energy Electromagnetic Fields Stimulates Lyn Kinase
- Author
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Tomohiro Kurosaki, Joseph B. Bolen, Minoru Takata, Andre Morgan, Richard A. Luben, Xiao Jun, Jizhong Jin, and Fatih M. Uckun
- Subjects
animal structures ,Lactams, Macrocyclic ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Syk ,Genistein ,Stimulation ,Biology ,environment and public health ,Biochemistry ,Cell Line ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Electromagnetic Fields ,LYN ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Benzoquinones ,Humans ,Syk Kinase ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Phosphotyrosine ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence ,Protein Kinase C ,Protein kinase C ,B-Lymphocytes ,Enzyme Precursors ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Quinones ,Myelin Basic Protein ,hemic and immune systems ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Cell Biology ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Phosphoproteins ,Isoflavones ,Peptide Fragments ,Cell biology ,enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates) ,Rifabutin ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,Cancer research - Abstract
Here, we present evidence that exposure of B-lineage lymphoid cells to low energy electromagnetic fields (EMF) stimulates the protein tyrosine kinases Lyn and Syk, results in tyrosine phosphorylation of multiple electrophoretically distinct substrates, and leads to downstream activation of protein kinase C (PKC). EMF exposure enhances protein tyrosine phosphorylation in Syk deficient but not in Lyn-deficient B-lineage lymphoid cells and stimulates Lyn kinase activity in wild-type as well as Syk-deficient B-lineage lymphoid cells. These results indicate that activation of Lyn kinase is sufficient and mandatory for EMF-induced tyrosine phosphorylation in B-lineage lymphoid cells. The PKC activity increases later than the Lyn activity and pretreatment with the PTK inhibitors genistein or herbimycin A abrogates the EMF-induced PKC signal. Thus, stimulation of Lyn is a proximal and mandatory step in EMF-induced activation of PKC in B-lineage lymphoid cells. Our observations prompt the hypothesis that a delicate growth regulatory balance might be altered in B-lineage lymphoid cells by EMF-induced activation of Lyn.
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- 1995
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40. Association of 75/80-kDa Phosphoproteins and the Tyrosine Kinases Lyn, Fyn, and Lck with the B Cell Molecule CD20
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Jeffrey A. Ledbetter, Joseph B. Bolen, Gary L. Schieven, Pauline Johnson, Julie P. Deans, and Lizabeth Kalt
- Subjects
Tyrosine-protein kinase CSK ,Cell Biology ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,SRC Family Tyrosine Kinase ,Biology ,SH2 domain ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Receptor tyrosine kinase ,SH3 domain ,immune system diseases ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Mitogen-activated protein kinase ,biology.protein ,Molecular Biology ,Proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src - Abstract
CD20, a non-glycosylated cell-surface protein expressed exclusively on B lymphocytes, is one of a family of 4-pass transmembrane molecules that also includes the β chain of the high affinity receptor for IgE. The precise function of CD20 is unknown, although in vitro effects of CD20-specific antibodies on resting B cells indicate that it is able to transduce an extracellular signal affecting the G0/G1 cell cycle transition. Previous studies have demonstrated that CD20-initiated intracellular signals involve tyrosine kinase activation and that CD20 is tightly associated with both serine and tyrosine kinases. Here, analysis of CD20-associated molecules has revealed that CD20 is associated with the Src family tyrosine kinases p56/53lyn, p56lck, and p59fyn and with 75/80-kDa proteins phosphorylated in vivo on tyrosine residues. Mutagenesis of CD20 was performed to define regions of CD20 involved in intermolecular interactions. Mutants were analyzed in the human T lymphoblastoid cell line Molt-4, in which ectopically expressed wild-type CD20 associated with p59fyn, p56lck, and 75/80-kDa phosphoproteins. Deletion of major portions of the cytoplasmic regions of CD20 did not abolish its association with either p75/80 or tyrosine kinases. The interaction between CD20 and the Src-related kinases is therefore likely to be independent of CD20 cytoplasmic domains and may occur indirectly. The interaction may be mediated by the p75/80 phosphoproteins, which were found to be tightly associated with the Src family kinases isolated from the CD20 complex.
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- 1995
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41. Nonreceptor protein tyrosine kinase involvement in signal transduction and immunodeficiency disease
- Author
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Joseph B. Bolen, Sandra J. Saouaf, and Anne L. Burkhardt
- Subjects
Cell signaling ,animal structures ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Immunology ,Cell ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Antigen ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Gene ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Mutation ,Immunologic Deficiency Syndromes ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,embryonic structures ,Signal transduction ,Tyrosine kinase ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The nonreceptor protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) have been grouped into 10 different enzyme families based on predicted amino acid sequences. As the number of enzymes belonging to the nonreceptor class of PTK is increasing, one challenge is to determine how these various classes of PTKs interact within the cell to promote signal transduction. Herein, the activation of four classes of nonreceptor PTKs is discussed in relation to their interactions with each other as well as with other signaling molecules during the process of lymphocyte surface antigen receptor-mediated activation. Recent findings of nonreceptor PTK loss-of-function mutations in different immunodeficiency diseases has revealed the important contribution of this group of enzymes to lymphocyte development.
- Published
- 1995
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42. Integrin-mediated Tyrosine Phosphorylation and Cytokine Message Induction in Monocytic Cells
- Author
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Tsung H. Lin, Krishna Mondal, Carlos Rosales, Rudy L. Juliano, Stephen Haskill, and Joseph B. Bolen
- Subjects
biology ,PTK2 ,Syk ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Cell Biology ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,SH2 domain ,environment and public health ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Receptor tyrosine kinase ,enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Molecular Biology ,Platelet-derived growth factor receptor ,Proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src - Abstract
Activation of cytoplasmic tyrosine kinases is an important aspect of signal transduction mediated by integrins. In the human monocytic cell line THP-1, either integrin-dependent cell adhesion to fibronectin or ligation of beta 1 integrins with antibodies causes a rapid and intense tyrosine phosphorylation of two sets of proteins of about 65-75 and 120-125 kDa. In addition, integrin ligation leads to nuclear translocation of the p50 and p65 subunits of the NF-kappa B transcription factor, to activation of a reporter gene driven by a promoter containing NF-kappa B sites, and to increased levels of mRNAs for immediate-early genes, including the cytokine interleukin (IL)-1 beta. The tyrosine kinase inhibitors genistein and herbimycin A block both integrin-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation and increases in IL-1 beta message levels, indicating a causal relationship between the two events. The components tyrosine phosphorylated subsequent to cell adhesion include paxillin, pp125FAK, and the SH2 domain containing tyrosine kinase Syk. In contrast, integrin ligation with antibodies induces tyrosine phosphorylation of Syk but not of FAK or paxillin. In adhering cells, pre-treatment with cytochalasin D suppresses tyrosine phosphorylation of FAK and paxillin but not of Syk, while IL-1 beta message induction is unaffected. These observations indicate that the Syk tyrosine kinase may be an important component of an integrin signaling pathway in monocytic cells, leading to activation of NF-kappa B and to increased levels of cytokine messages.
- Published
- 1995
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43. Syk Protein-tyrosine Kinase Is Regulated by Tyrosine-phosphorylated Iga/Ig/3 Immunoreceptor Tyrosine Activation Motif Binding and Autophosphorylation
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Anne L. Burkhardt, Hann-Guang Chao, Joseph B. Bolen, R. B. Rowley, and Gary R. Matsueda
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Chemistry ,Autophosphorylation ,Syk ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,hemic and immune systems ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Cell Biology ,SH2 domain ,environment and public health ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology ,enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,LYN ,Immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif ,Cancer research ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Molecular Biology ,Tyrosine kinase ,Proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src - Abstract
Syk is a cytoplasmic protein-tyrosine kinase containing two amino-terminal Src homology 2 domains that is activated following ligation of the B cell antigen receptor. Syk activation in B cells correlates with Syk tyrosine phosphorylation as well as with Syk SH2-mediated association with the tyrosine-phosphorylated Igα and Igβ B cell antigen receptor subunits. Tyrosine-phosphorylated peptide 20-mers representing Igα and Igβ immunoreceptor tyrosine activation motifs were synthesized and found to stimulate the specific activity of Syk by as much as 10-fold in vitro. Maximal phosphopeptide-induced Syk activation required both Syk SH2 domains and phosphorylation of both tyrosine residues present in the immunoreceptor tyrosine activation motif. The biochemical mechanism responsible for the phosphopeptide-induced Syk enzyme activation appears to be a function of Syk autophosphorylation. Our observations suggest the association of Syk tandem SH2 domains with the tyrosine-phosphorylated Igα and/or Igβ immunoreceptor tyrosine activation motifs in B cells stimulates Syk autophosphorylation leading to Syk enzyme activation.
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- 1995
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44. Molecular Cloning of Rodent p72Syk
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Joseph Fargnoli, R. Bruce Rowley, and Joseph B. Bolen
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Exon ,Protein splicing ,RNA splicing ,Alternative splicing ,Intron ,Exonic splicing enhancer ,Cell Biology ,Kinase activity ,Biology ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Peptide sequence - Abstract
Northern blot analysis of polyadenylated RNA prepared from RBL-2H3 cells revealed the presence of three distinct mRNAs encoding p72Syk, a protein-tyrosine kinase previously shown to be associated with the high affinity IgE receptor present on the surface of these cells (Hutchcroft, J. E., Geahlen, R. L., Deanin, G. G., and Oliver, J. M. (1992) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 89, 9107-9111). Here we report the full-length nucleotide sequence of two of these messages, as well as the complete predicted amino acid sequence of the rodent p72Syk protein-tyrosine kinase. In addition, we report evidence indicating alternative splicing of p72Syk mRNAs within RBL-2H3 cells. This splicing event results in the expression of two distinct protein isoforms that differ with respect to the presence of a 23-amino acid insert located within the region of the protein that separates the two SH2 domains from the catalytic domain. Both mRNAs arising from this splicing event appear to encode functional protein-tyrosine kinases, as expression of the corresponding cDNAs in COS cells results in the production of proteins of the expected sizes that possess intrinsic tyrosine specific kinase activity.
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- 1995
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45. Tyrosine phosphorylation and association of Syk with FcγRII in monocytic THP-1 cells
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J B Bolen, S Ghazizadeh, and H B Fleit
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Blotting, Western ,Syk ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Biochemistry ,Monocytes ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Syk Kinase ,Amino Acids ,Phosphorylation ,Phosphotyrosine ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,Cells, Cultured ,Receptor Aggregation ,Enzyme Precursors ,Chemistry ,Receptors, IgG ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,hemic and immune systems ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Cell Biology ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Precipitin Tests ,Molecular biology ,Tyrosine ,Fc-Gamma Receptor ,Signal transduction ,Tyrosine kinase ,Research Article ,Protein Binding ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Although the cytoplasmic portion of the low-affinity receptor for immunoglobulin G, Fc gamma RII, does not contain a kinase domain, rapid tyrosine phosphorylation of intracellular substrates occurs in response to aggregation of the receptor. The use of specific tyrosine kinase inhibitors has suggested that these phosphorylations are required for subsequent cellular responses. We previously demonstrated the coprecipitation of a tyrosine kinase activity with Fc gamma RII, suggesting that non-receptor tyrosine kinases might associate with the cytoplasmic domain of Fc gamma RII. Anti-receptor immune complex kinase assays revealed the coprecipitation of several phosphoproteins, most notably p56/53lyn, an Src-family protein tyrosine kinase (PTK), and a 72 kDa phosphoprotein. Here we identify the 72 kDa Fc gamma RII-associated protein as p72syk (Syk), a member of a newly described family of non-receptor PTKs. A rapid and transient tyrosine phosphorylation of Syk was observed following Fc gamma RII activation. Syk was also tyrosyl-phosphorylated following aggregation of the high-affinity Fc gamma receptor, Fc gamma RI. The Fc gamma RI activation did not result in association of Syk with Fc gamma RII, implying that distinct pools of Syk are activated upon aggregation of each receptor in a localized manner. These results demonstrate a physical association between Syk and Fc gamma RII and suggest that the molecules involved in Fc gamma RII signalling are very similar to the ones utilized by multichain immune recognition receptors such as the B-cell antigen receptor and the high-affinity IgE receptor.
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- 1995
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46. Protein tyrosine kinases in the initiation of antigen receptor signaling
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Joseph B. Bolen
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Models, Molecular ,biology ,Immunology ,Models, Immunological ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,SH2 domain ,Receptor tyrosine kinase ,Receptors, Antigen ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,ROR1 ,biology.protein ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,NCK1 ,Tyrosine kinase ,Signal Transduction ,Proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src - Abstract
Intracellular responses to antigen receptor engagement involve the activation of protein tyrosine kinases and the tyrosine phosphorylation of cellular proteins, including components of the antigen receptor. Phosphorylation of two tyrosine residues within an 18 amino acid segment of the cytoplasmic domain of antigen receptor subunits, and the subsequent association of either the Syk or Zap protein tyrosine kinase, has recently been shown to be required for successful antigen receptor signal propagation. The recent finding that distinct primary human immunodeficiencies result from mutations in genes encoding two non-transmembrane protein tyrosine kinases underscores the importance of this class of enzyme in antigen receptor signal transduction.
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- 1995
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47. Interaction of p72syk with the γ and β Subunits of the High-Affinity Receptor for Immunoglobulin E, FcεRI
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Lily Shiue, J. Green, O. M. Green, Jennifer L. Karas, Jay P. Morgenstern, Mary K. Ram, Marta K. Taylor, Mark J. Zoller, Lynne D. Zydowsky, Joseph B. Bolen, and Joan S. Brugge
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Syk ,hemic and immune systems ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,SH2 domain ,environment and public health ,Molecular biology ,Fusion protein ,enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates) ,Phosphorylation ,Tyrosine ,Molecular Biology ,Tyrosine kinase ,Gamma subunit ,Proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src - Abstract
Activation of protein tyrosine kinases is one of the initial events following aggregation of the high-affinity receptor for immunoglobulin E (Fc epsilon RI) on RBL-2H3 cells, a model mast cell line. The protein tyrosine kinase p72syk (Syk), which contains two Src homology 2 (SH2) domains, is activated and associates with phosphorylated Fc epsilon RI subunits after receptor aggregation. In this report, we used Syk SH2 domains, expressed in tandem or individually, as fusion proteins to identify Syk-binding proteins in RBL-2H3 lysates. We show that the tandem Syk SH2 domains selectively associate with tyrosine-phosphorylated forms of the gamma and beta subunits of Fc epsilon RI. The isolated carboxy-proximal SH2 domain exhibited a significantly higher affinity for the Fc epsilon RI subunits than did the amino-proximal domain. When in tandem, the Syk SH2 domains showed enhanced binding to phosphorylated gamma and beta subunits. The conserved tyrosine-based activation motifs contained in the cytoplasmic domains of the gamma and beta subunits, characterized by two YXXL/I sequences in tandem, represent potential high-affinity binding sites for the dual SH2 domains of Syk. Peptide competition studies indicated that Syk exhibits a higher affinity for the phosphorylated tyrosine activation motif of the gamma subunit than for that of the beta subunit. In addition, we show that Syk is the major protein in RBL-2H3 cells that is affinity isolated with phosphorylated peptides corresponding to the phosphorylated gamma subunit motif. These data suggest that Syk associates with the gamma subunit of the high-affinity receptor for immunoglobulin E through an interaction between the tandem SH2 domains of SH2 domains of Syk and the phosphorylated tyrosine activation motif of the gamma subunit and that Syk may be the major signaling protein that binds to Fc epsilon RI tyrosine activation motif of the gamma subunit and that Syk may be the major signaling protein that binds to Dc epsilon tyrosine activation motifs in RBL-2H3 cells.
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- 1995
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48. Temporal differences in the activation of three classes of non-transmembrane protein tyrosine kinases following B-cell antigen receptor surface engagement
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Joseph Fargnoli, Owen N. Witte, Sandra J. Saouaf, Joseph B. Bolen, R. B. Rowley, S. A. Kut, Anne L. Burkhardt, Satoshi Tsukada, and Sandeep Mahajan
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Time Factors ,Molecular Sequence Data ,B-cell receptor ,Receptors, Antigen, B-Cell ,Syk ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,Receptor tyrosine kinase ,Cell Line ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,LYN ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Phosphotyrosine ,Conserved Sequence ,B-Lymphocytes ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Phosphoproteins ,Molecular biology ,Enzyme Activation ,Kinetics ,chemistry ,Immunoglobulin G ,ROR1 ,biology.protein ,Tyrosine ,Tyrosine kinase ,Research Article - Abstract
We evaluated in WEHI 231 B cells the time-dependent responses of Lyn, Blk, Btk, Syk, and three members of the Jak family of protein tyrosine kinases following antibody-mediated surface engagement of the B-cell antigen receptor. Our results show that the enzyme activities of Lyn and Blk were stimulated within seconds of antigen receptor engagement and correlated with the initial tyrosine phosphorylation of the Ig alpha and Ig beta subunits of the B-cell antigen receptor. Btk enzyme activity was also transiently stimulated and was maximal at approximately 5 min after B-cell receptor surface binding. Syk activity gradually increased to a maximum at 10-30 min following receptor ligation and was found to parallel the association of Syk with the tyrosine phosphorylated Ig alpha and Ig beta subunits of the receptor. While the specific activities of the Jak1, Jak2, and Tyk2 protein tyrosine kinases were unaltered following B-cell receptor ligation, the abundance of Jak1 and Jak2 were increased 3- to 4-fold within 10 min of receptor engagement. These results demonstrate that multiple families of non-transmembrane protein tyrosine kinases are temporally regulated during the process of B-cell antigen receptor-initiated intracellular signal transduction.
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- 1994
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49. Temporal regulation of non-transmembrane protein tyrosine kinase enzyme activity following T cell antigen receptor engagement
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Joseph Fargnoli, M. Prendergast, B. Stealey, Anne L. Burkhardt, Sandeep Mahajan, Joseph B. Bolen, and R. B. Rowley
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Tyrosine-protein kinase CSK ,ZAP70 ,CD28 ,Syk ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,hemic and immune systems ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Cell Biology ,environment and public health ,Biochemistry ,Tropomyosin receptor kinase C ,Molecular biology ,enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,FYN ,chemistry ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Molecular Biology ,Tyrosine kinase - Abstract
We evaluated in Jurkat T cells the time-dependent responses of Fyn, Lck, Syk, and Zap following antibody-mediated cross-linking of the T cell antigen receptor. Our results show that the protein kinase activities of Fyn and Lck were activated within seconds of receptor cross-linking. Fyn activity, as measured by autophosphorylation and tyrosine phosphorylation of an exogenous substrate, was maximal 5 s to 1 min following receptor cross-linking. Lck was also found to be activated within 5 s of antigen receptor cross-linking but differed from Fyn in that Lck activity was elevated for at least 30 min. Syk and Zap protein kinase activities were found to peak between 5 and 10 min following receptor cross-linking, returning to approximately basal activity levels by 60 min. The protein kinase activities of both Syk and Zap were found to parallel their reactivity in immunoblotting experiments with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies. Both Syk and Zap were found to associate with the tyrosine-phosphorylated zeta subunit of the T cell antigen receptor. These observations imply that T cell antigen receptor signal transduction involves the activation of multiple members of at least two different families of non-transmembrane protein tyrosine kinases.
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- 1994
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50. ZAP-70 tyrosine kinase, CD45, and T cell receptor involvement in UV- and H2O2-induced T cell signal transduction
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Gary L. Schieven, Jeffrey A. Ledbetter, Steven B. Kanner, Joseph B. Bolen, Jean M. Kirihara, Robert S. Mittler, and Steven G. Nadler
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biology ,T cell ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,Cell Biology ,Protein tyrosine phosphatase ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Cell surface receptor ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Phosphorylation ,Signal transduction ,Molecular Biology ,Tyrosine kinase ,Platelet-derived growth factor receptor - Abstract
Several mammalian responses to UV irradiation, including the activation of NF-kappa B, are believed to involve tyrosine phosphorylation. UV irradiation and H2O2 treatment of T lymphocytes induce protein tyrosine phosphorylation and Ca2+ signals similar to those observed following biological stimulation. We have examined the role of cell surface molecules in these responses. Normal T lymphocytes whose surface expression of CD3 was depleted showed impaired UV-induced tyrosine phosphorylation and Ca2+ signals. Similarly, Jurkat T cell lines deficient in CD3 or CD45 expression also gave impaired UV responses. However, all these cell types still gave strong Ca2+ and tyrosine phosphorylation responses to H2O2. The T cell tyrosine kinase ZAP-70 was found to be highly responsive to UV and H2O2 treatment. ZAP-70 responsiveness to UV required expression of both CD3 and CD45, whereas only CD3 was required for the response to H2O2. UV-induced activation of NF-kappa B was blocked by CD3 depletion, indicating the importance of such cell surface molecules in biological responses to UV. In nonlymphoid cells, the epidermal growth factor receptor displayed increased tyrosine phosphorylation within seconds of UV irradiation. These results suggest that UV-induced signal transduction is mediated via cell surface receptors that normally respond to biological stimulation, whereas H2O2 is able to partially bypass this requirement.
- Published
- 1994
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