| Literature DB >> 22988500 |
A K M Mahbub Hasan1, Takashi Ijiri, Ken-Ichi Sato.
Abstract
Protein-tyrosine phosphorylation, which is catalyzed by protein-tyrosine kinase (PTK), plays a pivotal role in a variety of cellular functions related to health and disease. The discovery of the viral oncogene Src (v-Src) and its cellular nontransforming counterpart (c-Src), as the first example of PTK, has opened a window to study the relationship between protein-tyrosine phosphorylation and the biology and medicine of cancer. In this paper, we focus on the roles played by Src and other PTKs in cancer cell-specific behavior, that is, evasion of apoptosis or cell death under stressful extracellular and/or intracellular microenvironments (i.e., hypoxia, anoikis, hypoglycemia, and serum deprivation).Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22988500 PMCID: PMC3439988 DOI: 10.1155/2012/483796
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Signal Transduct ISSN: 2090-1747
Figure 1Signal transduction mechanism of anti-apoptosis in cancer cells. Highlighted here is the involvement of PTK signaling via nonreceptor PTKs such as SFKs, receptor PTKs such as EGFR, and cytoplasmic PTKs such as Abl and FAK in and around the plasma membranes. Several kinds of microenvironmental shortage for cell viability (e.g., hypoxia, lack of cell-cell or cell-ECM contact, hypoglycemia, deprivation of serum) act as signals (MESs, microenvironmental signals) for the responses of cancer cells (sensing of MESs, PTK signaling, other genomic and nongenomic signaling, and their crosstalk). These signaling networks support the cancer cells to undergo anti-apoptosis and active proliferation that lead to the other malignant features of cancer.