Publication | Closed Access
Ligand-Induced Transformation by a Noninternalizing Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor
412
Citations
28
References
1990
Year
Signal TransductionSignaling PathwayHuman GrowthMedicineReceptor Tyrosine KinaseAttenuation MechanismNormal Mitogenic ResponseFibroblast Growth FactorCytoskeletonInternalization-defective ReceptorCell GrowthSystems BiologyLigand-induced TransformationCell BiologyCell SignalingCellular PhysiologyExtracellular Matrix
Identification of a mutant epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor that does not undergo downregulation has provided a genetic probe to investigate the role of internalization in ligand-induced mitogenesis. Contact-inhibited cells expressing this internalization-defective receptor exhibited a normal mitogenic response at significantly lower ligand concentrations than did cells expressing wild-type receptors. A transformed phenotype and anchorage-independent growth were observed at ligand concentrations that failed to elicit these responses in cells expressing wild-type receptors. These findings imply that activation of the protein tyrosine kinase activity at the cell membrane is sufficient for the growth-enhancing effects of EGF. Thus, downregulation can serve as an attenuation mechanism, without which transformation ensues.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1987 | 893 | |
1980 | 794 | |
1987 | 657 | |
1987 | 600 | |
1983 | 513 | |
1987 | 486 | |
1989 | 478 | |
1983 | 445 | |
1987 | 445 | |
1989 | 424 |
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