Literature DB >> 1734444

Effects of v-src oncogene activation on radiation sensitivity in drug-sensitive and in multidrug-resistant rat fibroblasts.

D S Shimm1, P R Miller, T Lin, P P Moulinier, A B Hill.   

Abstract

Recent work has implicated the activated ras oncogene, whose gene product is a G-protein located in the plasma membrane, as well as the activated raf oncogene, whose gene product is a membrane-associated protein kinase, in contributing to radioresistance. Another transforming oncogene whose gene product is localized to the plasma membrane is v-src. We have examined a rat fibroblast line (RAT-1) infected with an avian sarcoma virus carrying a temperature-sensitive mutation in the v-src tyrosine kinase domain (LA-24). At 40 degrees C, LA-24 cells have a flat morphology and grow as a contact-inhibited monolayer, while at 35 degrees C, LA-24 cells have a transformed morphology, lose contact inhibition, grow in soft agar, and exhibit 3.5-fold higher tyrosine kinase activity. The parental RAT-1 line, not infected by the virus, grows at both temperatures as a contact-inhibited monolayer. This well-characterized system represents a good model for examining the effect of v-src transformation on radiosensitivity. RAT-1 and LA-24 cells grown at 35 and 40 degrees C were irradiated with graded doses of radiation, and clonogenic survival was assayed. For LA-24 cells grown at 35 and 40 degrees C, and for RAT-1 cells grown at 35 and 40 degrees C, calculated D0, n, alpha, and beta values did not differ significantly. To determine whether there might be differences in radiation damage repair capacity too subtle to detect by comparing radiation survival curves, sublethal damage repair capacity was assessed. There was no difference in sublethal damage repair capacity for LA-24 cells grown at 35 or 40 degrees C. Other studies have associated multidrug resistance with radioresistance. We have examined the radiation sensitivity of two colchicine-resistant LA-24 clones with four- to fivefold amplification of the P-glycoprotein gene, which are four-to fivefold more resistant to colchicine than the parental LA-24 line. In these multidrug-resistant clones, v-src activation does appear to increase radiation resistance. This did not appear to be due to alteration in cell cycle kinetics. We conclude that oncogene activation, or even protein kinase activity per se, does not necessarily lead to radiation resistance. Rather, radiation resistance following oncogene activation depends upon the oncogene and cell line studied, and perhaps upon specific protein phosphorylation.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1734444

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiat Res        ISSN: 0033-7587            Impact factor:   2.841


  3 in total

1.  Combined RAF1 protein expression and p53 mutational status provides a strong predictor of cellular radiosensitivity.

Authors:  H M Warenius; M Jones; T Gorman; R McLeish; L Seabra; R Barraclough; P Rudland
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2000-10       Impact factor: 7.640

2.  Aggregation of lipid rafts activates c-met and c-Src in non-small cell lung cancer cells.

Authors:  Juan Zeng; Heying Zhang; Yonggang Tan; Cheng Sun; Yusi Liang; Jinyang Yu; Huawei Zou
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2018-05-30       Impact factor: 4.430

3.  Fos is an essential component of the mammalian UV response.

Authors:  M Schreiber; B Baumann; M Cotten; P Angel; E F Wagner
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  1995-11-01       Impact factor: 11.598

  3 in total

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