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EXPRESSION OF HERSTATIN, AN ALTERNATIVE HER-2 / NEW PRODUCT, IN CELLS EXPRESSING EITHER P185HER-2 OR EGF RECEPTOR HAS THE RECEPTOR ACTIVITY AND CELL GROWTH
EXPRESSION OF HERSTATIN, AN ALTERNATIVE HER-2 / NEW PRODUCT, IN CELLS EXPRESSING EITHER P185HER-2 OR EGF RECEPTOR HAS THE RECEPTOR ACTIVITY AND CELL GROWTH
An alternative HER-2/neu product, herstatin, consists of subdomains I and II from the ectodomain of p185HER-2 and a unique 79 amino acid C-terminus encoded by intron 8. Recombinant herstatin added to cells was found to bind to and inhibit p185HER-2. The effects of ectopic expression of herstatin in combination with either p185HER-2 or with its homolog, the EGF receptor, in several cell lines was studied. Cotransfection of herstatin with HER-2 inhibited p185HER-2 levels and caused an approximate 8-fold reduction in p185 tyrosine phosphorylation. Inhibition ofp185HER-2 tyrosine phosphorylation corresponded to a dramatic decline in colony formation by cells that coexpressed p185HER-2 and herstatin. Herstatin also interferred with EGF activation of the EGF receptor in cotransfected cells as demonstrated by impaired receptor tyrosine phosphorylation, reduced receptor down-regulation, and growth suppression. For both p185HER-2 and the EGF receptor, the extent of inhibition was affected by the expression levels of herstatin relative to the receptor. Herstatin is an autoinhibitor of p185HER-2 and expands its inhibitory activity to another member of the group I family of receptor tyrosine kinases, the EGF receptor. Herstatin blocked the activated Akt-mediated EGF survival signal, as well as transforming growth factor alpha (TGFalpha)-mediated EGF receptor activation, survival signal and proliferation signal. Purified recombinant herstatin specifically inhibited human carcinoma cells that over-express HER-2, and was effectively absorbed into the blood of intraperitoneally injected mice, where it was not proteolytically degraded and was present for between one and three hours. Herstatin was shown to be efficacious in rat and mouse xenograft models of human cancer.
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