The mas oncogene as a neural peptide receptor: expression, regulation and mechanism of action
- PMID: 2197067
- DOI: 10.1002/9780470513927.ch3
The mas oncogene as a neural peptide receptor: expression, regulation and mechanism of action
Abstract
The human mas oncogene, which renders transfected NIH/3T3 cells tumorigenic, was identified as a subtype of angiotensin receptor by transient expression in Xenopus oocytes and stable expression in the mammalian neuronal cell line, NG115-401L. The mas receptor preferentially recognizes angiotensin III, and is expressed at high levels in brain. The mas/angiotensin receptor functions through the breakdown of inositol lipids and can drive DNA synthesis, unlike another inositol-linked peptide receptor, that for bradykinin. Comparative analysis of several early biochemical events elicited by either angiotensin or bradykinin stimulation of mas-transfected cells has not indicated a specific difference correlated with mitogenic activity. In particular, the inositol lipid kinase, phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase, thought to be involved in the mitogenic mechanism of platelet-derived growth factor receptors, is unaffected by activation of mas. These results have shown that a proto-oncogene encodes a neural peptide receptor, indicating that peptide receptors may be involved in differentiation and proliferation processes, as are other identified proto-oncogenes.
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