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Showing papers by "Jacqueline Bromberg published in 1999"


Journal ArticleDOI
06 Aug 1999-Cell
TL;DR: Substitution of two cysteine residues within the C-terminal loop of the SH2 domain of Stat3 produces a molecule that dimerizes spontaneously, binds to DNA, and activates transcription.

2,750 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
15 Oct 1999
TL;DR: Substitution of two cysteine residues within the C-terminal loop of the SH2 domain of Stat3 produces a molecule that dimerizes spontaneously, binds to DNA, and activates transcription.
Abstract: STATs are latent transcription factors that mediate cytokine- and growth factor-directed transcription. In many human cancers and transformed cell lines, Stat3 is persistently activated, and in cell culture, active Stat3 is either required for transformation, enhances transformation, or blocks apoptosis. We report that substitution of two cysteine residues within the C-terminal loop of the SH2 domain of Stat3 produces a molecule that dimerizes spontaneously, binds to DNA, and activates transcription. The Stat3-C molecule in immortalized fibroblasts causes cellular transformation scored by colony formation in soft agar and tumor formation in nude mice. Thus, the activated Stat3 molecule by itself can mediate cellular transformation and the experiments focus attention on the importance of constitutive Stat3 activation in human tumors.

875 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Compared the potentials of the intracellular domains of Eyk molecules derived from c-Eyk and v- Eyk to transform rat 3Y1 fibroblasts indicates that activation of Stat3 enhances transformation efficiency and cooperates with another pathway to induce transformation.
Abstract: The receptor tyrosine kinase Eyk, a member of the Axl/Tyro3 subfamily, activates the STAT pathway and transforms cells when constitutively activated. Here, we compared the potentials of the intracellular domains of Eyk molecules derived from c-Eyk and v-Eyk to transform rat 3Y1 fibroblasts. The v-Eyk molecule induced higher numbers of transformants in soft agar and stronger activation of Stat3; levels of Stat1 activation by the two Eyk molecules were similar. A mutation in the sequence Y933VPL, present in c-Eyk, to the v-Eyk sequence Y933VPQ led to increased activation of Stat3 and increased transformation efficiency. However, altering another sequence, Y862VNT, present in both Eyk molecules to F862VNT markedly decreased transformation without impairing Stat3 activation. These results indicate that activation of Stat3 enhances transformation efficiency and cooperates with another pathway to induce transformation.

121 citations



Patent
31 Jul 1999
TL;DR: In this article, a modified Stat protein has at least one cysteine residue which may interact with the corresponding cystine residue on another modified stat protein to form a dimer.
Abstract: The invention is directed to constitutively active Stat proteins and methods for their preparation. The modified Stat proteins have at least one cysteine residue which may interact with the corresponding cysteine residue on another modified Stat protein to form a dimer. The constitutively active Stat proteins are capable of binding to DNA and activating transcription in the absence of tyrosine phosphorylation. Cell lines expressing the modified Stat protein exhibit a transformed phenotype and are capable of forming tumors in nude mice. Methods are describe utilizing the modified Stat proteins of the invention in the absence and presence of tyrosine phosphorylation in identifying agents capable of modulating Stat protein dimerization, transcriptional activity, and cellular transformation in vitro and in vivo. The invention is also directed to polynucleotides encoding modified, constitutively active Stat proteins.

10 citations