화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.337, No.1, 289-296, 2005
KIT (c-kit oncogene product) pathway is constitutively activated in human testicular germ cell tumors
We investigated the expression of KIT (product of c-kit oncogene), gain-of-function mutations, and activation of its downstream signal transduction in human testicular cancers. KIT was expressed in 88% (22/25) of seminomas and in 44.4% (4/9) of non-seminomas compared to adjacent normal testicular tissue. Nine of the KIT-expressing seminomas had mutations (40.9%; 9/22) in the e-kit gene; two cases in exon 11 and 7 cases in exon 17. Two of these mutations in exon 17 were novel, and the other seven mutations were identical to the already known gain-of-function mutations which cause activation of KIT without ligand stem cell factor. All of the mutant KIT and 53.8% (7/13) of wild-type KIT were phosphorylated (activated) and associated with phosphorylated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K). Akt was also phosphorylated in these seminomas, suggesting that the KIT-PI3K-Akt pathway is activated in seminoma. These findings suggest that the KIT-PI3K-Akt pathway is constitutively activated in testicular germ cell tumors, due to overexpression of KIT protein and/or gain-of-function mutations in the c-kit gene. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.