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Ligand-Induced Transformation by a Noninternalizing Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor

412

Citations

28

References

1990

Year

Abstract

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.

References

YearCitations

1987

893

1980

794

1987

657

1987

600

1983

513

1987

486

1989

478

1983

445

1987

445

1989

424

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