Porter A C, Vaillancourt R R
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, College of Pharmacy, The University of Arizona, Tucson 85721, USA.
Oncogene. 1998 Sep 17;17(11 Reviews):1343-52. doi: 10.1038/sj.onc.1202171.
Oncogenesis is a complicated process involving signal transduction pathways that mediate many different physiological events. Typically, oncogenes cause unregulated cell growth and this phenotype has been attributed to the growth-stimulating activity of oncogenes such as ras and src. In recent years, much research effort has focused on proteins that function downstream of Ras, leading to the identification of the Ras/Raf/MAPK pathway, because activation of this pathway leads to cellular proliferation. Activated receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) also utilize this pathway to mediate their growth-stimulating effects. However, RTKs activate many other signaling proteins that are not involved in the cellular proliferation process, per se and we are learning that these pathways also contribute to the oncogenic process. In fact, RTKs and many of the proteins involved in RTK-dependent signal transduction can also function as oncogenes. For example, the catalytic subunit of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (P13-K) was recently identified as an oncogenic protein. The scope of pathways that are activated by oncogenic RTKs is expanding. Thus, not only do RTKs activate Ras-dependent pathways that drive proliferation, RTKs activate P13-K-dependent pathways which also contribute to the oncogenic mechanism. P13-K can initiate changes in gene transcription, cytoskeletal changes through beta-catenin, changes in cell motility through the tumor suppressor, adenomatous polyposis coli (APC), and phosphorylation of BAD, a protein involved in apoptotic and antiapoptotic signaling. There is also cross-talk between RTKs and the oncostatin cytokine receptor which may positively and negatively influence oncogenesis. For this review, we will focus on oncogenic RTKs and the network of cellular proteins that are activated by RTKs because multiple, divergent pathways are responsible for oncogenesis.
肿瘤发生是一个复杂的过程,涉及介导许多不同生理事件的信号转导通路。通常,癌基因会导致细胞生长失控,这种表型归因于癌基因(如ras和src)的生长刺激活性。近年来,许多研究工作都集中在Ras下游发挥作用的蛋白质上,从而导致了Ras/Raf/MAPK通路的发现,因为该通路的激活会导致细胞增殖。活化的受体酪氨酸激酶(RTK)也利用这条通路来介导其生长刺激作用。然而,RTK会激活许多本身并不参与细胞增殖过程的其他信号蛋白,并且我们了解到这些通路也有助于肿瘤发生过程。事实上,RTK和许多参与RTK依赖性信号转导的蛋白质也可以作为癌基因发挥作用。例如,磷酸肌醇3激酶(P13-K)的催化亚基最近被鉴定为一种致癌蛋白。致癌RTK激活的通路范围正在扩大。因此,RTK不仅激活驱动增殖的Ras依赖性通路,还激活P13-K依赖性通路,这也有助于致癌机制。P13-K可以引发基因转录的变化、通过β-连环蛋白引起细胞骨架的变化、通过肿瘤抑制因子腺瘤性息肉病大肠杆菌(APC)引起细胞运动的变化,以及使参与凋亡和抗凋亡信号传导的BAD蛋白磷酸化。RTK与制瘤素细胞因子受体之间也存在相互作用,这可能对肿瘤发生产生正向和负向影响。在本综述中,我们将聚焦于致癌RTK以及由RTK激活的细胞蛋白质网络,因为多种不同的通路参与了肿瘤发生。