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A dominant negative mutation suppresses the function of normal epidermal growth factor receptors by heterodimerization.

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TLDR
It is proposed that heterodimerization with defective EGF receptors functions as a dominant negative mutation suppressing the activation and response of normal receptors by formation of unproductive heterodimers.
Abstract
Recent studies provide evidence that defective receptors can function as a dominant negative mutation suppressing the action of wild-type receptors. This causes various diminished responses in cell culture and developmental disorders in murine embryogenesis. Here, we describe a model system and a potential mechanism underlying the dominant suppressing response caused by defective epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptors. We used cultured 3T3 cells coexpressing human wild-type receptors and an inactive deletion mutant lacking most of the cytoplasmic domain. When expressed alone, EGF was able to stimulate the dimerization of either wild-type or mutant receptors in living cells as revealed by chemical covalent cross-linking experiments. In response to EGF, heterodimers and homodimers of wild-type and mutant receptors were observed in cells coexpressing both receptor species. However, only homodimers of wild-type EGF receptors underwent EGF-induced tyrosine autophosphorylation in living cells. These results indicate that the integrity of both receptor moieties within receptor dimers is essential for kinase activation and autophosphorylation. Moreover, the presence of mutant receptors in cells expressing wild-type receptors diminished the number of high-affinity binding sites for EGF, reduced the rate of receptor endocytosis and degradation, and diminished biological signalling via EGF receptors. We propose that heterodimerization with defective EGF receptors functions as a dominant negative mutation suppressing the activation and response of normal receptors by formation of unproductive heterodimers.

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An Allosteric Mechanism for Activation of the Kinase Domain of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor

TL;DR: It is found that the EGFR kinase domain can be activated by increasing its local concentration or by mutating a leucine in the activation loop, which suggests that the Kinase domain is intrinsically autoinhibited, and an intermolecular interaction promotes its activation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of transactivation of the EGF receptor in signalling by G-protein-coupled receptors

TL;DR: It is reported here that the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and the neu oncoprotein become rapidly tyrosine-phosphorylated upon stimulation of Rat-1 cells with the GPCR agonists endothelin-1, lysophosphatic acid and thrombin, suggesting that there is an intracellular mechanism for transactivation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Glioblastoma growth inhibited in vivo by a dominant-negative Flk-1 mutant

TL;DR: The biological relevance of the VEGF/Flk-1 receptor/ligand system for angiogenesis is investigated using a retrovirus encoding a dominant-negative mutant of the Flk- 1/VEGF receptor to infect endothelial target cells in vivo, and tumour growth is prevented in nude mice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reiterative Use of the EGF Receptor Triggers Differentiation of All Cell Types in the Drosophila Eye

TL;DR: The view of eye development is broadened to include the whole ommatidium and it is suggested that reiterative activation of DER is critical for triggering the differentiation of all cell types.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Signal transduction by receptors with tyrosine kinase activity

TL;DR: Cet article synthese montre comment des recepteurs membranaires a activite tyrosine kinase peuvent etre impliques dans la transduction and notamment jouent le role de signal de the transduction.
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Human epidermal growth factor receptor cDNA sequence and aberrant expression of the amplified gene in A431 epidermoid carcinoma cells

TL;DR: The complete 1,210-amino acid sequence of the human epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor precursor, deduced from cDNA clones derived from placental and A431 carcinoma cells, reveals close similarity between the entire predicted ν-erb-B mRNA oncogene product and the receptor transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains.
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Epidermal growth factor.

TL;DR: Epidermal growth factor is a signaling molecule that stimulates the growth of epidermal tissues during development and throughout life and led to the 1986 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine awarded to Cohen and Rita Levi–Montalcini.
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The proto-oncogene c-kit encoding a transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptor maps to the mouse W locus.

TL;DR: Observations provide the first example of a germ-line mutation in a mammalian proto-oncogene and implicate the c-kit gene as a candidate for the W locus and provide a molecular entry into this important region of the mouse genome.
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The dominant-white spotting (W) locus of the mouse encodes the c-kit proto-oncogene.

TL;DR: It is shown here that the c-kit gene is disrupted in two spontaneous mutant W alleles, W44 and Wx, which strongly support the identification of c-Kit as the gene product of the W locus.
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