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MedicineAnatomy and Physiology

ErB-2/HER2 Oncogene in Breast Cancer: Does Bivalency of Growth Factors Drive Tumoorigenicity Through Receptor Heterodimerization

Authors: Yosef Yarden; WEIZMANN INST OF SCIENCE REHOVOT (ISRAEL)
Abstract:
The hypothesis that an overexpressed ErbB-2 can transform epithelial cells by enhancing binding of many stromal ligands has been tested with neuregulins. Neuregulins and other epidermal growth factor (EGF-) like ligands exert their pleiotropic effects and oncogenic signals through four ErbB receptor tyrosine kinases capable of generating homo- and hetero- dimeric combinations. Ligand-induced dimerization of ErbB proteins is driven by the apparent bivalence of EGF-like molecules. In the case of neuregulin-1 the two putative receptor- binding sites localize, in part, to the two termini of the EGF-like motif. We show that chemical coupling of the two sites can reconstitute bio-activity. The short synthetic ligand, but not derivative peptides, specifically activated the most transforming receptor heterodimer, namely: a combination of ErbB-2, a ligand-less oncogenic receptor, and ErbB-3, a kinase-defective receptor. No other ErbB combination, including those containing ErbB-4, underwent stimulation. Although its binding affinity was compromised, the analog, like neuregulins, stimulated receptor phosphorylation, intracellular signaling, and proliferation of cells. These results imply that miniaturization of neuregulins and their precise targeting to specific ErbB combinations are feasible. Within the framework of the IDEA research, this last line of evidence joins the previously reported findings in collectively supporting a bivalent mode of ligand-ErbB interactions.

Limitations: APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE
Description: Final rept. 1 Oct 1997-30 Sep 2000
Pages: 174
Report Date: OCT 2000
Contract Number: DAMD17-97-1-7290
Report Number: A578783
Keywords relating to this report:
*BREAST CANCER
*EPIDERMIS
*GROWTH(PHYSIOLOGY)
*GROWTH_PHYSIOLOGY_
*ONCOGENIC VIRUSES
*RECEPTOR SITES(PHYSIOLOGY)
*RECEPTOR SITES_PHYSIOLOGY_
CELLS_BIOLOGY_
CHEMICALS
COUPLING_INTERACTION_
DRIVES
EPITHELIUM
HYPOTHESES
LIGANDS
MINIATURIZATION
PEPTIDES
PHOSPHORUS TRANSFERASES
PHOSPHORYLATION
PRECISION
PROTEINS
SENSE ORGANS
SHORT RANGE_TIME_
STIMULATION_PHYSIOLOGY_
TARGETING
TYROSINE
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