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Cytoplasmic Signaling Circuitry Programs Many of the Traits of Cancer
CHAPTER 6 Cytoplasmic Signaling Circuitry Programs Many of the Traits of Cancer Signaling cascades
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A signaling pathway reaches from the cell surface into the nucleus
Expression of immediate early genes
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cycloheximide Immediate vs. delayed early genes
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Serum-induced alterations of cell shape.
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The Ras protein stands in the middle of a complex signaling cascade
Structure of the fly eye. Son of sevenless
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Tyrosine phosphorylation controls the location and thereby the actions of many cytoplasmic signaling proteins Domain structure of the Src protein
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Structure and function of SH2 and SH3 domains
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Attraction of signal-transducing proteins by phosphorylated receptors
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Protein interaction domains as modular units of protein structure
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Structure and function of Src
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SH2 and SH3 groups explain how growth factor receptors activate Ras and acquire signaling specificity Intermolecular links forgets by the Grb2 and Shc bridging proteins
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Ras-regulated signaling pathways: A cascade of kinases forms one of three important signaling pathways downstream of Ras The Ras effector loop
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The Ras ->Raf ->MAP kinase pathway
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Ras-regulated signaling pathways: a second downstream pathway controls inositol lipids and the Akt/PKB kinase The PI3K kinase pathway
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Biochemistry of lipid bilayers
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Activation of PI3K by Ras, growth factor receptors and somatic mutation.
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Migration of PH-containing proteins to PIP3 in the plasma membrane
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Docking of PH domains to PIP3
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AKT/PKB and the control of cell growth
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Ras-regulated signaling pathways: a third downstream pathway acts through Ral, a distant cousin of Ras Ral and the control of cytoskeleton
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The Jak–STAT pathway allows signals to be transmitted from the plasma membrane directly to the nucleus
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Constitutive activation of STAT3
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Cell adhesion receptors emit signals that converge with those released by growth factor receptors
Integrin signaling
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Anoikis and morphogenesis
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The Wnt–β-catenin pathway contributes to cell proliferation
Multiple roles of b-catenin
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Regulation of b-catenin signaling
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G-protein–coupled receptors can also drive normal and neoplastic proliferation
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Four additional “dual-address” signaling pathways contribute in various ways to normal and neoplastic proliferation
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Deregulation of dual-address pathways in human cancers
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Well-designed signaling circuits require both negative and positive feedback controls
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Two-dimensional signaling maps
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Ras effector pathways
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Frequencies of oncogene activation in various human tumors
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Structure of a signaling pathway
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Homework: Due on 10/27 (Monday), 6 PM Handwritten only, no electronic version, within 5 A4 pages. Q: Please describe the Warburg effect of cancer cells. What’s the molecular mechanism and application?
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