43 research outputs found

    Protein phosphorylation in normal and neoplastic development. Phosphorylation of proteins endogenous to foetal tissues and tumours.

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    The abilities of proteins endogenous to normal and neoplastic tissues to serve as substrates in a protein-phosphorylation reaction in vitro were compared. After the tissue extracts were incubated with [gamma-32P]ATP, the phosphorylated proteins were separated by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and the dried gels were subjected to radioautography. Considerable incorporation of 32P into a protein of mol.wt. 135000 was observed with extracts from foetal tissues and tumours, but only minimal incorporation into this protein occurred when extracts from adult tissues were used. The ability of this protein to become phosphorylated in vitro may be related to cell proliferation. When ascites cells were incubated with [32P]Pi, one of the major phosphoproteins migrated on sodium dodecyl suphate/polyacrylamide gels at mol.wt. 135000, suggesting that this protein can be phosphorylated both in intact cells and broken-cell preparations. A protein of mol.wt. 87000 was highly phosphorylatable in extracts from solid tumours, but was not phosphorylated in extracts from ascites tumours, foetal or adult tissues. The phosphorylation pattern of these two proteins can thus distinguish solid neoplasms and normal adult tissues from ascites tumours and from foetal tissues. A protein of mol.wt. 49000, which was the most labelled protein in adult tissues, was also one of the major phosphoproteins in foetal and neoplastic tissues. Numerous mechanisms are postulated to explain how the extent of 32P incorporation into a protein could vary as a function of biological state

    Assessment of red cell sodium transport in essential hypertension

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    Protein phosphorylation in normal and neoplastic development. Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase activity in urethane-induced pulmonary tumours.

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    The cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase specific activities of cytosol fractions from urethane-induced lung tumours and from normal mouse lung were determined. Both basal and cyclic AMP-stimulated activities in tumours were twofold higher than those of normal lung. Since neonatal and adult lung cytosols have identical kinase activities, the high activity in tumours appears to be a tumour-specific property

    Down syndrome fibroblasts are hyperresponsive to beta-adrenergic stimulation.

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    Chromosomal assignment of the gene for the human beta 2-adrenergic receptor.

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