THE V-MOS AND C-HA-RAS ONCOPROTEINS EXERT SIMILAR EFFECTS ON THE PATTERN OF PROTEIN-SYNTHESIS
- 1 June 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 4 (6) , 799-803
Abstract
The effects of the ras and the mos oncogenes products on the pattern of newly synthesized proteins was investigated in NIH3T3 cell lines. A conditional expression system which allowed hormonal induction of the oncogenes was utilized to detect effects on the accumulation of oncoproteins by two dimensional gel electrophoresis of crude cell extracts. Strong and reproducible changes of protein synthesis following the expression of the ras and mas oncogenes were detected. Transiently induced synthesis of four proteins with a molecular mass of 23 kDa, 32 kDa, 35 kD, and 47 kDa was observed. These changes were qualitatively indistinguishable in both, ras and mos oncogene expressing cells. This is in agreement with the notion that the two oncogene products act on a common signal transduction pathway. Serum mediated growth induction of quiescent NIH3T3 cells led to a different pattern of altered protein synthesis. We observed the transient alteration in the synthesis rates of three proteins with a molecular mass of 27 kDa, 47 kDa and 52 kDa. Only the 47 kDa protein was also subject to regulation by the oncoproteins. One of the proteins whose synthesis was strongly induced by the ras and mos oncogene products is also expressed by heat shock.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- ras GENESAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 1987
- Insulin induction of Xenopus laevis oocyte maturation is inhibited by monoclonal antibody against p21 ras proteins.Molecular and Cellular Biology, 1987
- Immediate induction of a 45 K secreted glycoprotein by serum and growth factors in quiescent mouse 3T3 cellsExperimental Cell Research, 1987
- Serine kinase activity associated with moloney murine sarcoma virus-124-encoded p37mosVirology, 1985
- The expression of heat shock genes during normal development in Drosophila melanogaster (heat shock/abundant transcripts/developmental regulation)Molecular Genetics and Genomics, 1984
- The glucocorticoid domain: Steroid-mediated changes in the rate of synthesis of rat hepatoma proteinsCell, 1977