Chaperones in cell cycle regulation and mitogenic signal transduction: a review
暂无分享,去创建一个
L Rensing | L. Rensing | K. Helmbrecht | E. Zeise | K Helmbrecht | E Zeise
[1] J. Momand,et al. Heat Shock Protein 84 Forms a Complex with Mutant p53 Protein Predominantly within a Cytoplasmic Compartment of the Cell* , 1996, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[2] L. Neckers,et al. Polyubiquitination and Proteasomal Degradation of the p185c-erbB-2 Receptor Protein-tyrosine Kinase Induced by Geldanamycin* , 1996, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[3] S. Mizuno,et al. Conversion of epidermal growth factor (EGF) into a stimulatory ligand for A431-cell growth by herbimycin A by decreasing the level of expression of EGF receptor. , 1994, The Biochemical journal.
[4] L. Weber,et al. Sequence and regulation of a gene encoding a human 89-kilodalton heat shock protein , 1989, Molecular and cellular biology.
[5] M. Oren,et al. Specific interaction between the p53 cellular tumour antigen and major heat shock proteins , 1986, Nature.
[6] Y. Shi,et al. The transport of proteins into the nucleus requires the 70-kilodalton heat shock protein or its cytosolic cognate , 1992, Molecular and cellular biology.
[7] L. Hansen,et al. Differential regulation of HSC70, HSP70, HSP90α, and HSP90β mRNA expression by mitogen activation and heat shock in human lymphocytes , 1991 .
[8] M. Sherman,et al. Oncogenic potential of Hsp72 , 1999, Oncogene.
[9] T. Smithgall,et al. A pathway of multi-chaperone interactions common to diverse regulatory proteins: estrogen receptor, Fes tyrosine kinase, heat shock transcription factor Hsf1, and the aryl hydrocarbon receptor. , 1996, Cell stress & chaperones.
[10] M. Ferrarini,et al. Unusual expression and localization of heat‐shock proteins in human tumor cells , 1992, International journal of cancer.
[11] R. Morimoto,et al. Cell cycle-dependent association of HSP70 with specific cellular proteins , 1989, The Journal of cell biology.
[12] J. Harper,et al. Mammalian p50Cdc37 is a protein kinase-targeting subunit of Hsp90 that binds and stabilizes Cdk4. , 1996, Genes & development.
[13] G. Klein,et al. Nuclear colocalization of c-myc protein and hsp70 in cells transfected with human wild-type and mutant c-myc genes. , 1992, Experimental cell research.
[14] K. Suzuki,et al. Augmented expression of HSP72 protein in normal human fibroblasts irradiated with ultraviolet light. , 1992, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[15] J. B. Rattner,et al. hsp70 is localized to the centrosome of dividing HeLa cells. , 1991, Experimental cell research.
[16] S. Kaul,et al. NIH 3T3 cells malignantly transformed by mot-2 show inactivation and cytoplasmic sequestration of the p53 protein , 1999, Cell Research.
[17] Seokjoong Kim,et al. Specific expression of heat shock protein HspA2 in human male germ cells. , 1999, Molecular human reproduction.
[18] M. Clarke,et al. Alteration of p53 conformation and induction of apoptosis in a murine erythroleukemia cell line by dimethylsulfoxide. , 1994, Leukemia research.
[19] N. Imamoto,et al. 70-kDa heat-shock cognate protein colocalizes with karyophilic proteins into the nucleus during their transport in vitro. , 1993, Experimental cell research.
[20] J. Brugge,et al. Interaction between the Rous sarcoma virus transforming protein and two cellular phosphoproteins: analysis of the turnover and distribution of this complex , 1983, Molecular and cellular biology.
[21] A. Ziemiecki,et al. Association of the heat shock protein hsp90 with steroid hormone receptors and tyrosine kinase oncogene products. , 1986, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[22] F. Boschelli,et al. CDC37 is required for p60v-src activity in yeast. , 1996, Molecular biology of the cell.
[23] D. Johnson,et al. Role of E2F in cell cycle control and cancer. , 1998, Frontiers in bioscience : a journal and virtual library.
[24] L. Neckers,et al. Mutant conformation of p53 translated in vitro or in vivo requires functional HSP90. , 1996, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[25] D. Rowe,et al. Protein-protein interactions between Epstein-Barr virus nuclear antigen-LP and cellular gene products: binding of 70-kilodalton heat shock proteins. , 1996, Virology.
[26] G. Stein,et al. Expression of heat shock genes during differentiation of mammalian osteoblasts and promyelocytic leukemia cells , 1992, Journal of cellular biochemistry.
[27] D. Dix,et al. Targeted gene disruption of Hsp70-2 results in failed meiosis, germ cell apoptosis, and male infertility. , 1996, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[28] L. Neckers,et al. p185 Binds to GRP94 in Vivo , 1996, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[29] J. Reinstein,et al. Mechanism of regulation of hsp70 chaperones by DnaJ cochaperones. , 1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[30] T. Jacks,et al. The retinoblastoma gene family in differentiation and development , 1999, Oncogene.
[31] A. Colberg-Poley,et al. Induction of cellular hsp70 expression by human cytomegalovirus , 1990, Journal of virology.
[32] A. De Maio,et al. Heat shock proteins: facts, thoughts, and dreams. , 1999, Shock.
[33] D. Goldfarb,et al. In vivo nuclear transport kinetics in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: a role for heat shock protein 70 during targeting and translocation , 1996, The Journal of cell biology.
[34] Ronit Vogt Sionov,et al. The cellular response to p53: the decision between life and death , 1999, Oncogene.
[35] H. Oppermann,et al. A cellular protein that associates with the transforming protein of Rous sarcoma virus is also a heat-shock protein. , 1981, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[36] R. Morimoto,et al. Transcription of the human hsp70 gene is induced by serum stimulation. , 1985, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[37] P. Sutphin,et al. The Physical Association of Multiple Molecular Chaperone Proteins with Mutant p53 Is Altered by Geldanamycin, an hsp90-Binding Agent , 1998, Molecular and Cellular Biology.
[38] S. Horman,et al. Anti‐sense inhibition of small‐heat‐shock‐protein (HSP27) expression in MCF‐7 mammary‐carcinoma cells induces their spontaneous acquisition of a secretory phenotype , 1999, International journal of cancer.
[39] C. Feldherr,et al. The permeability of the nuclear envelope in dividing and nondividing cell cultures , 1990, The Journal of cell biology.
[40] N. Vilaboa,et al. Modulation of HSP70 and HSP27 gene expression by the differentiation inducer sodium butyrate in U-937 human promonocytic leukemia cells. , 1995, Leukemia research.
[41] M. Matsumoto,et al. Cloning of a hsp70-related gene expressed in mouse spermatids. , 1990, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[42] T. Hunter,et al. Protein kinases and phosphatases: The Yin and Yang of protein phosphorylation and signaling , 1995, Cell.
[43] C. Georgopoulos,et al. Role of the Escherichia coli DnaK and DnaJ heat shock proteins in the initiation of bacteriophage lambda DNA replication. , 1988, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[44] A. Levine,et al. Activating mutations for transformation by p53 produce a gene product that forms an hsc70-p53 complex with an altered half-life , 1988, Molecular and cellular biology.
[45] D. Dix,et al. Developmentally regulated expression of Hsp70-2 and a Hsp70-2/lacZ transgene during spermatogenesis. , 1996, Developmental biology.
[46] P. Hainaut,et al. Interaction of heat‐shock protein 70 with p53 translated in vitro: evidence for interaction with dimeric p53 and for a role in the regulation of p53 conformation. , 1992, The EMBO journal.
[47] J. Hoskins,et al. Function of DnaJ and DnaK as chaperones in origin-specific DNA binding by RepA , 1991, Nature.
[48] P. Russell,et al. A role for Hsp90 in cell cycle control: Wee1 tyrosine kinase activity requires interaction with Hsp90. , 1994, The EMBO journal.
[49] F. Hartl. Molecular chaperones in cellular protein folding , 1996, Nature.
[50] E. Baulieu,et al. Cell Cycle Regulation of the Chicken hsp90α Expression , 1993 .
[51] S. Lindquist,et al. The function of heat-shock proteins in stress tolerance: degradation and reactivation of damaged proteins. , 1993, Annual review of genetics.
[52] J. Nevins. Induction of the synthesis of a 70,000 dalton mammalian heat shock protein by the adenovirus E1A gene product , 1982, Cell.
[53] Z. Naito,et al. Expression of hsp90 and cyclin D1 in human breast cancer. , 1999, Cancer letters.
[54] A. Levine,et al. Immunological evidence for the association of p53 with a heat shock protein, hsc70, in p53-plus-ras-transformed cell lines , 1987, Molecular and cellular biology.
[55] J. Bishop,et al. Transit of pp60v-src to the plasma membrane. , 1982, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[56] J. Bishop,et al. Torso, a receptor tyrosine kinase required for embryonic pattern formation, shares substrates with the sevenless and EGF-R pathways in Drosophila. , 1993, Genes & development.
[57] J. Hoskins,et al. DnaJ, DnaK, and GrpE heat shock proteins are required in oriP1 DNA replication solely at the RepA monomerization step. , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[58] G. Leclercq,et al. Changes in the phosphorylation status of the 27 kDa heat shock protein (HSP27) associated with the modulation of growth and/or differentiation in MCF‐7 cells , 1997, Cell proliferation.
[59] D. DeFranco,et al. Differential roles of heat shock protein 70 in the in vitro nuclear import of glucocorticoid receptor and simian virus 40 large tumor antigen , 1994, Molecular and cellular biology.
[60] C. Feldherr,et al. Regulation of nuclear transport in proliferating and quiescent cells. , 1993, Experimental cell research.
[61] L. Rensing,et al. Heat shock‐induced arrests in different cell cycle phases of rat C6‐glioma cells are attenuated in heat shock‐primed thermotolerant cells , 2000, Cell proliferation.
[62] L. Neckers,et al. Geldanamycin-induced destabilization of Raf-1 involves the proteasome. , 1997, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[63] I. M. Marks,et al. The amino-terminal transforming region of simian virus 40 large T and small t antigens functions as a J domain , 1997, Molecular and cellular biology.
[64] R. Morimoto,et al. Analysis of the specificity and mechanism of transcriptional activation of the human hsp70 gene during infection by DNA viruses , 1991, Journal of virology.
[65] P. Sharp,et al. Regulation of heat shock protein 70 gene expression by c-myc , 1984, Nature.
[66] J. Satoh,et al. Cytokines and Growth Factors Induce HSP27 Phosphorylation in Human Astrocytes , 1995, Journal of neuropathology and experimental neurology.
[67] Yazaki,et al. Biphasic activation of two mitogen-activated protein kinases during the cell cycle in mammalian cells. , 1992, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[68] D. Jeoung,et al. Human major HSP70 protein complements the localization and functional defects of cytoplasmic mutant SV40 T antigen in Swiss 3T3 mouse fibroblast cells. , 1991, Genes & development.
[69] Péter Csermely,et al. Stress of life : from molecules to man , 1998 .
[70] J. Milner,et al. Correlation between the conformational phenotype of p53 and its subcellular location. , 1992, Oncogene.
[71] J Milner,et al. Flexibility: the key to p53 function? , 1995, Trends in biochemical sciences.
[72] M. Bornens,et al. Identification of an HSP70-related protein associated with the centrosome from dinoflagellates to human cells. , 1995, Journal of cell science.
[73] L. Neckers,et al. Geldanamycin selectively destabilizes and conformationally alters mutated p53. , 1995, Oncogene.
[74] The hsc70 gene which is slightly induced by heat is the main virus inducible member of the hsp70 gene family , 1994, FEBS letters.
[75] J. Brugge,et al. Association of the transforming proteins of Rous, Fujinami, and Y73 avian sarcoma viruses with the same two cellular proteins , 1982, Molecular and cellular biology.
[76] R. Davis,et al. The native structure of the activated Raf protein kinase is a membrane-bound multi-subunit complex. , 1994, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[77] J. Marks,et al. Immune response to p53 is dependent upon p53/HSP70 complexes in breast cancers. , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[78] T G Cotter,et al. Heat shock proteins increase resistance to apoptosis. , 1996, Experimental cell research.
[79] S. Mizuno,et al. Inhibition of transforming activity of tyrosine kinase oncogenes by herbimycin A. , 1988, Virology.
[80] J. Decaprio,et al. The J Domain of Simian Virus 40 Large T Antigen Is Required To Functionally Inactivate RB Family Proteins , 1998, Molecular and Cellular Biology.
[81] H Umezawa,et al. Phenotypic change from transformed to normal induced by benzoquinonoid ansamycins accompanies inactivation of p60src in rat kidney cells infected with Rous sarcoma virus , 1986, Molecular and cellular biology.
[82] R. Reddel,et al. Inactivation of Tumor Suppressor p53 by Mot-2, a hsp70 Family Member* , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[83] B. Brenner,et al. Modulation of stress protein (hsp27 and hsp70) expression in CD4+ lymphocytic cells following acute infection with human immunodeficiency virus type-1. , 1997, Virology.
[84] D. Lane,et al. Activating mutations in p53 produce a common conformational effect. A monoclonal antibody specific for the mutant form. , 1990, The EMBO journal.
[85] S. Mizuno,et al. Accelerated degradation of 160 kDa epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor precursor by the tyrosine kinase inhibitor herbimycin A in the endoplasmic reticulum of A431 human epidermoid carcinoma cells. , 1994, The Biochemical journal.
[86] P. May,et al. Immunological evidence for the association between simian virus 40 115-kDa super T antigen and hsp70 proteins in rat, monkey, and human cells. , 1991, Virology.
[87] S. Lindquist,et al. Mutational analysis of Hsp90 function: interactions with a steroid receptor and a protein kinase , 1995, Molecular and cellular biology.
[88] H. Echols,et al. Activity of the Hsp70 chaperone complex--DnaK, DnaJ, and GrpE--in initiating phage lambda DNA replication by sequestering and releasing lambda P protein. , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[89] A. Yen,et al. Retinoic acid induced mitogen-activated protein (MAP)/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) kinase-dependent MAP kinase activation needed to elicit HL-60 cell differentiation and growth arrest. , 1998, Cancer research.
[90] J. Decaprio,et al. Inactivation of pRB-related proteins p130 and p107 mediated by the J domain of simian virus 40 large T antigen , 1997, Molecular and cellular biology.
[91] J. Decaprio,et al. The DnaJ domain of polyomavirus large T antigen is required to regulate Rb family tumor suppressor function , 1997, Journal of virology.
[92] J. Stock. Signal transduction: Gyrating protein kinases , 1999, Current Biology.
[93] R. Jove,et al. Reconstitution of the multiprotein complex of pp60src, hsp90, and p50 in a cell-free system. , 1992, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[94] I. Tohnai,et al. Interaction between hsp70 and hsp40, eukaryotic homologues of DnaK and DnaJ, in human cells expressing mutant‐type p53 , 1995, FEBS letters.
[95] S. Meloche. Cell cycle reentry of mammalian fibroblasts is accompanied by the sustained activation of P44mapk and P42mapk isoforms in the G1 phase and their inactivation at the G1/s transition , 1995, Journal of cellular physiology.
[96] S. N. Agoff,et al. Regulation of the human hsp70 promoter by p53. , 1993, Science.
[97] H. Nawata,et al. High constitutive expression of heat shock protein 90α in human acute leukemia cells , 1992 .
[98] W. Pratt. The hsp90-based Chaperone System: Involvement in Signal Transduction from a Variety of Hormone and Growth Factor Receptors , 1998, Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine.
[99] R. Davis,et al. MAPKs: new JNK expands the group. , 1994, Trends in biochemical sciences.
[100] P. Jansen-Dürr,et al. E2F target genes and cell‐cycle checkpoint control , 1999, BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology.
[101] David F. Smith,et al. Hop as an Adaptor in the Heat Shock Protein 70 (Hsp70) and Hsp90 Chaperone Machinery* , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[102] D. Dix,et al. HSP70-2 is required for desynapsis of synaptonemal complexes during meiotic prophase in juvenile and adult mouse spermatocytes. , 1997, Development.
[103] M. Mathews,et al. Transactivation of host and viral genes by the adenovirus E1B 19K tumor antigen. , 1987, Oncogene.
[104] G. Evan,et al. Nuclear colocalization of cellular and viral myc proteins with HSP70 in myc-overexpressing cells , 1991, Journal of virology.
[105] A. Takahashi,et al. Accumulation of mutant p53 and hsp72 by heat treatment, and their association in a human glioblastoma cell line. , 1995, International journal of hyperthermia : the official journal of European Society for Hyperthermic Oncology, North American Hyperthermia Group.
[106] J. Selkirk,et al. Tumor suppressor p53 gene forms multiple isoforms: Evidence for single lucus origin and cytoplasmic complex formation with heat shock proteins , 1996 .
[107] E. Craig,et al. Heat-shock proteins as molecular chaperones. , 1994, European journal of biochemistry.
[108] D. Wolgemuth,et al. Developmental-stage-specific expression of the hsp70 gene family during differentiation of the mammalian male germ line , 1987, Molecular and cellular biology.
[109] J. Selkirk,et al. HSP binding and mitochondrial localization of p53 protein in human HT1080 and mouse C3H10T1/2 cell lines. , 1996, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[110] D. Latchman,et al. The role of the 90-kDa heat shock protein in cell cycle control and differentiation of the monoblastoid cell line U937. , 1996, Experimental cell research.
[111] P. Sutphin,et al. Geldanamycin-stimulated destabilization of mutated p53 is mediated by the proteasome in vivo , 1997, Oncogene.
[112] L. Rensing,et al. Nuclear translocation of stress protein Hsc70 during S phase in rat C6 glioma cells. , 1998, Cell stress & chaperones.
[113] O. Halevy,et al. Different tumor-derived p53 mutants exhibit distinct biological activities. , 1990, Science.
[114] M. Jäättelä. Over‐expression of hsp70 confers tumorigenicity to mouse fibrosarcoma cells , 1995, International journal of cancer.
[115] B. Cochran,et al. p50cdc37 Acting in Concert with Hsp90 Is Required for Raf-1 Function , 1999, Molecular and Cellular Biology.
[116] C. Georgopoulos,et al. Initiation of lambda DNA replication with purified host‐ and bacteriophage‐encoded proteins: the role of the dnaK, dnaJ and grpE heat shock proteins. , 1989, The EMBO journal.
[117] L. Neckers,et al. Destabilization of Raf-1 by geldanamycin leads to disruption of the Raf-1-MEK-mitogen-activated protein kinase signalling pathway , 1996, Molecular and cellular biology.
[118] K. Klempnauer,et al. TATA-box dependent trans-activation of the human HSP70 promoter by Myb proteins. , 1993, Oncogene.
[119] M. Yarmolinsky,et al. Participation of Escherichia coli heat shock proteins DnaJ, DnaK, and GrpE in P1 plasmid replication , 1989, Journal of bacteriology.
[120] E. Ottinger,et al. Modular Folding and Evidence for Phosphorylation-induced Stabilization of an hsp90-dependent Kinase* , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[121] W. Welch,et al. Medium tumor antigen of polyomavirus transformation-defective mutant NG59 is associated with 73-kilodalton heat shock protein , 1987, Journal of virology.
[122] G. Rubin,et al. Mutations in Hsp83 and cdc37 impair signaling by the sevenless receptor tyrosine kinase in Drosophila , 1994, Cell.
[123] T. R. Broker,et al. Human Hsp70 and Hsp40 Chaperone Proteins Facilitate Human Papillomavirus-11 E1 Protein Binding to the Origin and Stimulate Cell-free DNA Replication* , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[124] R. Kobayashi,et al. Physical Interaction of Mammalian CDC37 with CDK4* , 1996, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[125] J. V. Vanden Heuvel,et al. A 50 kilodalton protein associated with raf and pp60(v-src) protein kinases is a mammalian homolog of the cell cycle control protein cdc37. , 1997, Biochemistry.
[126] S. Mizuno,et al. Mechanism of reversion of Rous sarcoma virus transformation by herbimycin A: reduction of total phosphotyrosine levels due to reduced kinase activity and increased turnover of p60v-src1. , 1989, Cancer research.
[127] W. Miller,et al. 28-kDa Mammalian Heat Shock Protein, a Novel Substrate of a Growth Regulatory Protease Involved in Differentiation of Human Leukemia Cells (*) , 1995, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[128] S. Pelech,et al. MAP kinase-dependent pathways in cell cycle control. , 1995, Progress in cell cycle research.
[129] R. Matts,et al. Association of Hsp90 with cellular Src-family kinases in a cell-free system correlates with altered kinase structure and function. , 1994, Biochemistry.
[130] N. Sato,et al. The Molecular Chaperones in Cell Cycle Control , 1998, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[131] B. Cochran,et al. p50 cdc37 Binds Directly to the Catalytic Domain of Raf as Well as to a Site on hsp90 That Is Topologically Adjacent to the Tetratricopeptide Repeat Binding Site* , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[132] G. Perdew,et al. A 50-kDa cytosolic protein complexed with the 90-kDa heat shock protein (hsp90) is the same protein complexed with pp60v-src hsp90 in cells transformed by the Rous sarcoma virus. , 1991, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[133] T. Curran,et al. Pro-Leu-Ser/Thr-Pro is a consensus primary sequence for substrate protein phosphorylation. Characterization of the phosphorylation of c-myc and c-jun proteins by an epidermal growth factor receptor threonine 669 protein kinase. , 1991, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[134] S. Hilsenbeck,et al. The small heat shock protein hsp27 increases invasiveness but decreases motility of breast cancer cells. , 1997, Invasion & metastasis.
[135] T. Taira,et al. c-myc protein complex binds to two sites in human hsp70 promoter region. , 1992, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[136] E. White,et al. Both viral (adenovirus E1B) and cellular (hsp 70, p53) components interact with centrosomes , 1994, Journal of cellular physiology.
[137] M. Pirity,et al. THE FUNCTION OF HEAT‐SHOCK PROTEINS IN STRESS TOLERANCE , 1994, Cell biology international.
[138] J. Landry,et al. Induction of Chinese hamster HSP27 gene expression in mouse cells confers resistance to heat shock. HSP27 stabilization of the microfilament organization. , 1993, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[139] E. Solary,et al. HSP27 inhibits cytochrome c‐dependent activation of procaspase‐9 , 1999, FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.
[140] M. Peter. The regulation of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CKIs). , 1997, Progress in cell cycle research.
[141] Y. Chen,et al. A new member of the hsp90 family of molecular chaperones interacts with the retinoblastoma protein during mitosis and after heat shock , 1996, Molecular and cellular biology.
[142] L. Neckers,et al. Inhibition of heat shock protein HSP90-pp60v-src heteroprotein complex formation by benzoquinone ansamycins: essential role for stress proteins in oncogenic transformation. , 1994, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[143] R. Kudo,et al. Demonstration of selective protein complexes of p53 with 73 kDa heat shock cognate protein, but not with 72 kDa heat shock protein in human tumor cells. , 1993, Cancer letters.
[144] A. Black,et al. Regulation of E2F: a family of transcription factors involved in proliferation control. , 1999, Gene.
[145] R. Treisman,et al. Regulation of transcription by MAP kinase cascades. , 1996, Current opinion in cell biology.
[146] H. Dosch,et al. The growth transformation of human B cells involves superinduction of hsp70 and hsp90. , 1993, Virology.
[147] D. Chattoraj,et al. Replication of mini-P1 plasmid DNA in vitro requires two initiation proteins, encoded by the repA gene of phage P1 and the dnaA gene of Escherichia coli. , 1987, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[148] J. Sredy,et al. Phosphorylation of HSP25 during lens cell differentiation. , 1997, Experimental eye research.
[149] E. Hafen,et al. The heat shock protein 83 (Hsp83) is required for Raf‐mediated signalling in Drosophila , 1997, The EMBO journal.
[150] M. Morange,et al. Hsp25 and the p38 MAPK pathway are involved in differentiation of cardiomyocytes. , 2000, Developmental biology.
[151] E. Solary,et al. Heat shock protein 27 enhances the tumorigenicity of immunogenic rat colon carcinoma cell clones. , 1998, Cancer research.
[152] H. Auer,et al. HSP70 overexpression mediates the escape of a doxorubicin-induced G2 cell cycle arrest. , 1996, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[153] P. Silver,et al. DnaJ/hsp40 chaperone domain of SV40 large T antigen promotes efficient viral DNA replication. , 1997, Genes & development.
[154] Mikhail V. Blagosklonny,et al. Disruption of the Raf-1-Hsp90 Molecular Complex Results in Destabilization of Raf-1 and Loss of Raf-1-Ras Association (*) , 1995, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[155] H. Echols,et al. Specialized nucleoprotein structures at the origin of replication of bacteriophage lambda. Protein association and disassociation reactions responsible for localized initiation of replication. , 1989, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[156] S. Lindquist,et al. Maturation of the tyrosine kinase c-src as a kinase and as a substrate depends on the molecular chaperone Hsp90. , 1999, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[157] J. Pouysségur,et al. Mitogen-activated protein kinases p42mapk and p44mapk are required for fibroblast proliferation. , 1993, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[158] I. Faraoni,et al. HSP70 production and inhibition of cell proliferation in Molt-4 T-cells after cell-to-cell transmission of HTLV-I: effect of PGA1. , 1995, Leukemia research.
[159] Jonathan A. Cooper,et al. Mitogen and stress response pathways: MAP kinase cascades and phosphatase regulation in mammals and yeast. , 1995, Current opinion in cell biology.
[160] C. Smythe,et al. PD 98059 prevents establishment of the spindle assembly checkpoint and inhibits the G2-M transition in meiotic but not mitotic cell cycles in Xenopus. , 1998, Experimental cell research.
[161] A. Murray,et al. A MAP kinase-dependent spindle assembly checkpoint in Xenopus egg extracts , 1994, Cell.
[162] William T Gerthoffer,et al. Phosphorylation of the 27-kDa heat shock protein via p38 MAP kinase and MAPKAP kinase in smooth muscle. , 1997, American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology.
[163] D. Dix,et al. Morphological analysis of germ cell apoptosis during postnatal testis development in normal and Hsp70‐2 knockout mice , 1997, Developmental dynamics : an official publication of the American Association of Anatomists.
[164] O. Bischof,et al. Cell cycle‐dependent association of Gag‐Mil and hsp90 , 1994, FEBS letters.
[165] C. Alfano,et al. Ordered assembly of nucleoprotein structures at the bacteriophage lambda replication origin during the initiation of DNA replication. , 1989, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[166] Shuji Takahashi,et al. 70-kDa Heat Shock Cognate Protein Interacts Directly with the N-terminal Region of the Retinoblastoma Gene Product pRb , 1995, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[167] J. Milner,et al. p53 is associated with p34cdc2 in transformed cells. , 1990, The EMBO journal.
[168] F. Taieb,et al. Human retinoblastoma protein (Rb) is phosphorylated by cdc2 kinase and MAP kinase in Xenopus maturing oocytes , 1998, FEBS letters.
[169] Kun-Liang Guan,et al. Kinase Suppressor of Ras Forms a Multiprotein Signaling Complex and Modulates MEK Localization , 1999, Molecular and Cellular Biology.
[170] F. Trautinger,et al. Increased expression of the M(r) 27,000 heat shock protein (hsp27) in in vitro differentiated normal human keratinocytes. , 1994, Cell growth & differentiation : the molecular biology journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
[171] T. Hunter,et al. The transforming proteins of PRCII virus and Rous sarcoma virus form a complex with the same two cellular phosphoproteins , 1982, Journal of virology.
[172] R. Reddel,et al. Malignant transformation of NIH3T3 cells by overexpression of mot-2 protei , 1998, Oncogene.
[173] M. Oren,et al. The gene for the rat heat-shock cognate, hsc70, can suppress oncogene-mediated transformation. , 1992, Cell growth & differentiation : the molecular biology journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
[174] R. Herrera,et al. A role for the MEK/MAPK pathway in PMA-induced cell cycle arrest: modulation of megakaryocytic differentiation of K562 cells. , 1998, Experimental cell research.
[175] W. Samson,et al. Heat shock protein is a unique marker of growth arrest during macrophage differentiation of HL‐60 cells , 1993, Journal of cellular physiology.
[176] D O Morgan,et al. Cyclin-dependent kinases: engines, clocks, and microprocessors. , 1997, Annual review of cell and developmental biology.
[177] J. Buchner,et al. The HsP90 Family : an overview , 1997 .
[178] P. Miller,et al. Depletion of the erbB-2 gene product p185 by benzoquinoid ansamycins. , 1994, Cancer research.
[179] S. Horman,et al. ANTISENSE INHIBITION OF THE 27 kDa HEAT SHOCK PROTEIN PRODUCTION AFFECTS GROWTH RATE AND CYTOSKELETAL ORGANIZATION IN MCF‐7 CELLS , 1996, Cell biology international.
[180] S. Lindquist,et al. Cdc37 is a molecular chaperone with specific functions in signal transduction. , 1997, Genes & development.
[181] M. Kitagawa,et al. 73-kDa heat shock cognate protein interacts directly with P27Kip1, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, during G1/S transition. , 1999, Biochemical and biophysical research communications.
[182] N. Rosen,et al. Herbimycin A Induces the 20 S Proteasome- and Ubiquitindependent Degradation of Receptor Tyrosine Kinases (*) , 1995, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[183] C. Hunt,et al. Identification and sequence analysis of a new member of the mouse HSP70 gene family and characterization of its unique cellular and developmental pattern of expression in the male germ line , 1988, Molecular and cellular biology.
[184] K. Higashi,et al. Down modulation of N-myc, heat-shock protein 70, and nucleolin during the differentiation of human neuroblastoma cells. , 1991, Journal of biochemistry.
[185] N. Sato,et al. Protein interaction of retinoblastoma gene product pRb110 with M(r) 73,000 heat shock cognate protein. , 1993, Cancer research.
[186] E. Baulieu,et al. Growth factors acting via tyrosine kinase receptors induce HSP90 alpha gene expression. , 1991, Growth factors.
[187] Balraj Singh,et al. Evidence of an interaction between Mos and Hsp70: a role of the Mos residue serine 3 in mediating Hsp70 association , 1999, Oncogene.
[188] K. Takeshita,et al. Biphasic translocation of a 70 kDa heat shock protein in human cytomegalovirus-infected cells. , 1999, The Journal of general virology.
[189] S. Lindquist,et al. Heat-shock protein hsp90 governs the activity of pp60v-src kinase. , 1993, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[190] J. Endicott,et al. Cyclin-dependent kinases: inhibition and substrate recognition. , 1999, Current opinion in structural biology.
[191] W. Kolch,et al. Nerve Growth Factor-mediated Activation of the Mitogen-activated Protein (MAP) Kinase Cascade Involves a Signaling Complex Containing B-Raf and HSP90* , 1996, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[192] L. Rensing,et al. Heat shock effects on cell cycle progression , 2000, Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences CMLS.
[193] C. Alfano,et al. Heat shock protein-mediated disassembly of nucleoprotein structures is required for the initiation of bacteriophage lambda DNA replication. , 1989, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[194] J. Jenkins,et al. Mutant p53 proteins bind hsp 72/73 cellular heat shock-related proteins in SV40-transformed monkey cells. , 1987, Oncogene.
[195] D. Dix. Hsp70 expression and function during gametogenesis. , 1997, Cell stress & chaperones.
[196] J. Hoskins,et al. Monomerization of RepA dimers by heat shock proteins activates binding to DNA replication origin. , 1991, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[197] Z. Naito,et al. Expression and Roles of Heat Shock Proteins in Human Breast Cancer , 1996, Japanese journal of cancer research : Gann.
[198] R. Weinberg,et al. Identification of a protein associated with p21ras by chemical crosslinking. , 1989, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[199] Role of heat shock protein HSP70-2 in spermatogenesis. , 1999, Reviews of reproduction.
[200] R. Weinberg,et al. An interaction between p21ras and heat shock protein hsp60, a chaperonin. , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[201] R. E. Gordon. From Molecules to Man , 1981 .
[202] B. Vogelstein,et al. Mutant p53 DNA clones from human colon carcinomas cooperate with ras in transforming primary rat cells: a comparison of the "hot spot" mutant phenotypes. , 1990, Cell growth & differentiation : the molecular biology journal of the American Association for Cancer Research.
[203] E. Estey,et al. Altered conformation of the p53 protein in myeloid leukemia cells and mitogen-stimulated normal blood cells. , 1992, Oncogene.
[204] E. Krebs,et al. The MAPK signaling cascade , 1995, FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.
[205] M. Fox,et al. Expression of HSP70 Induced in CHO Cells by 45.0" C Hyperthermia Is Cell Cycle Associated and DNA Synthesis Dependent , 1995 .
[206] N. Jones,et al. The E1A 13S product of adenovirus 5 activates transcription of the cellular human HSP70 gene , 1986, Molecular and cellular biology.
[207] R. Morimoto,et al. Mitogen and lymphokine stimulation of heat shock proteins in T lymphocytes. , 1988, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[208] K. Matsunaga,et al. Specific expression of HSP27 in human tumor cell lines in vitro. , 1997, In vivo.
[209] H. Echols,et al. Function of the GrpE heat shock protein in bidirectional unwinding and replication from the origin of phage lambda. , 1993, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[210] M J Schlesinger,et al. Heat shock proteins. , 1990, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[211] N. Sagata. What does mos do in oocytes and somatic cells? , 1997, BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology.
[212] David Stokoe,et al. Identification of MAPKAP kinase 2 as a major enzyme responsible for the phosphorylation of the small mammalian heat shock proteins , 1992, FEBS letters.
[213] D. Dix,et al. HSP70-2 is required for CDC2 kinase activity in meiosis I of mouse spermatocytes. , 1997, Development.
[214] D. Johnson,et al. Cyclins and cell cycle checkpoints. , 1999, Annual review of pharmacology and toxicology.
[215] D. J. Barrett,et al. Hsp90-mediated folding of the lymphoid cell kinase p56lck. , 1996, Biochemistry.
[216] É. Khandjian,et al. Simian virus 40 and polyoma virus induce synthesis of heat shock proteins in permissive cells , 1983, Molecular and cellular biology.
[217] D. Portilla,et al. Purification of a Novel Calcium-independent Phospholipase A2 from Rabbit Kidney* , 1996, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[218] C. Zuker,et al. Protein folding and the regulation of signaling pathways , 1994, Cell.
[219] R. Morimoto,et al. Expression of human HSP70 during the synthetic phase of the cell cycle. , 1986, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[220] J. Momand,et al. Geldanamycin prevents nuclear translocation of mutant p53. , 1997, Experimental cell research.
[221] S. Chaufour,et al. Transient accumulation, phosphorylation and changes in the oligomerization of Hsp27 during retinoic acid-induced differentiation of HL-60 cells: possible role in the control of cellular growth and differentiation. , 1996, Cell stress & chaperones.
[222] P. Csermely,et al. Signalling and transport through the nuclear membrane. , 1995, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[223] P. Mehlen,et al. The serum-induced phosphorylation of mammalian hsp27 correlates with changes in its intracellular localization and levels of oligomerization. , 1994, European journal of biochemistry.
[224] J. Landry,et al. Regulation of actin filament dynamics by p38 map kinase-mediated phosphorylation of heat shock protein 27. , 1997, Journal of cell science.
[225] J. Butel,et al. Association of a cellular heat shock protein with simian virus 40 large T antigen in transformed cells , 1989, Journal of virology.
[226] D. Housman,et al. Decreased expression of the stress protein HSP70 is an early event in murine erythroleukemic cell differentiation. , 1988, Molecular and cellular biology.
[227] R. Jove,et al. Raf exists in a native heterocomplex with hsp90 and p50 that can be reconstituted in a cell-free system. , 1993, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[228] J. Pouysségur,et al. Cyclin D1 Expression Is Regulated Positively by the p42/p44MAPK and Negatively by the p38/HOGMAPK Pathway* , 1996, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[229] J. Nevins,et al. Selective induction of human heat shock gene transcription by the adenovirus E1A gene products, including the 12S E1A product , 1987, Molecular and cellular biology.
[230] R. Jove,et al. The hsp90-binding Antibiotic Geldanamycin Decreases Raf Levels and Epidermal Growth Factor Signaling without Disrupting Formation of Signaling Complexes or Reducing the Specific Enzymatic Activity of Raf Kinase* , 1997, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[231] K. Suzuki,et al. Modulation of cell growth and mutation induction by introduction of the expression vector of human hsp70 gene. , 1994, Experimental cell research.
[232] J. Nevins,et al. Transcriptional activation and subsequent control of the human heat shock gene during adenovirus infection , 1983, Molecular and cellular biology.
[233] C. Kirkpatrick,et al. Induction of stress proteins in human endothelial cells by heavy metal ions and heat shock. , 1999, American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology.
[234] J. Buchner,et al. How chaperones fold proteins. , 1998, Biological chemistry.
[235] W. Pratt. The role of the hsp90-based chaperone system in signal transduction by nuclear receptors and receptors signaling via MAP kinase. , 1997, Annual review of pharmacology and toxicology.
[236] M. Peterson,et al. Mitogen activation induces the enhanced synthesis of two heat-shock proteins in human lymphocytes , 1988, Journal of Cell Biology.
[237] C. Anderson,et al. Human HSP27 is phosphorylated at serines 78 and 82 by heat shock and mitogen-activated kinases that recognize the same amino acid motif as S6 kinase II. , 1992, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[238] M. Miyagi,et al. Antibodies against 70-kD heat shock cognate protein inhibit mediated nuclear import of karyophilic proteins , 1992, The Journal of cell biology.
[239] D. A. O’Brien,et al. Heat-shock cognate protein (hsc71) and related proteins in mouse spermatogenic cells. , 1989, Biology of reproduction.