These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: The v-erbA oncogene requires cooperation with tyrosine kinases to arrest erythroid differentiation induced by ligand-activated endogenous c-erbA and retinoic acid receptor.
    Author: Schroeder C, Gibson L, Beug H.
    Journal: Oncogene; 1992 Feb; 7(2):203-16. PubMed ID: 1347913.
    Abstract:
    The v-erbA oncogene, a mutated version of the thyroid hormone receptor alpha (c-erbA/TR-alpha), cooperates with tyrosine kinase oncogenes in erythroblast transformation. Here we show that the ligand-activated, endogenous retinoic acid receptor (RAR-alpha), in cooperation with c-erbA/TR-alpha, efficiently reverses the transforming effect of kinase oncogenes, overcoming oncogene-induced self-renewal by triggering terminal differentiation of the transformed cells into healthy erythrocytes. This differentiation induction was accompanied by up-regulation of erythrocyte gene expression. Similarly, RAR-alpha and over-expressed exogenous c-erbA/TR-alpha efficiently abolished the differentiation arrest caused by v-erbA, while the low levels of endogenous TR-alpha had no effect. In contrast, transformation by v-erbA plus a kinase oncogene was not affected at all by ligand-activated endogenous or over-expressed exogenous TR-alpha and RAR-alpha. These results suggest that oncogene cooperation is required to protect leukemic erythroblasts from differentiation induction via endogenous, nuclear hormone receptors. Endogenous c-erbA/TR-alpha and RAR-alpha apparently cooperated in abolishing erythroblast self-renewal and inducing differentiation, since the respective ligands acted in a synergistic fashion, and overexpressed, non-ligand-bound c-erbA/TR-alpha suppressed endogenous RAR-alpha function in differentiation induction. Genetic evidence is presented that this functional cooperation requires the receptor dimerization domain, suggesting that TR-alpha/RAR-alpha heterodimers play a role in regulation of erythroid differentiation.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]