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Dive into the research topics where Diane Breckenridge is active.

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Featured researches published by Diane Breckenridge.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Potent blockade of hepatocyte growth factor-stimulated cell motility, matrix invasion and branching morphogenesis by antagonists of Grb2 Src homology 2 domain interactions.

Nese Atabey; Yang Gao; Zhu-Jun Yao; Diane Breckenridge; Lilian Soon; Jesus V. Soriano; Terrence R. Burke; Donald P. Bottaro

Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) stimulates mitogenesis, motogenesis, and morphogenesis in a wide range of cellular targets during development, homeostasis and tissue regeneration. Inappropriate HGF signaling occurs in several human cancers, and the ability of HGF to initiate a program of protease production, cell dissociation, and motility has been shown to promote cellular invasion and is strongly linked to tumor metastasis. Upon HGF binding, several tyrosines within the intracellular domain of its receptor, c-Met, become phosphorylated and mediate the binding of effector proteins, such as Grb2. Grb2 binding through its SH2 domain is thought to link c-Met with downstream mediators of cell proliferation, shape change, and motility. We analyzed the effects of Grb2 SH2 domain antagonists on HGF signaling and observed potent blockade of cell motility, matrix invasion, and branching morphogenesis, with ED50 values of 30 nm or less, but only modest inhibition of mitogenesis. These compounds are 1000–10,000-fold more potent anti-motility agents than any previously characterized Grb2 SH2 domain antagonists. Our results suggest that SH2 domain-mediated c-Met-Grb2 interaction contributes primarily to the motogenic and morphogenic responses to HGF, and that these compounds may have therapeutic application as anti-metastatic agents for tumors where the HGF signaling pathway is active.


Oncogene | 1999

Differential signaling by alternative HGF isoforms through c-Met: activation of both MAP kinase and PI 3-kinase pathways is insufficient for mitogenesis

Regina M. Day; Vittoria Cioce; Diane Breckenridge; Paola Castagnino; Donald P. Bottaro

HGF/NK2, a naturally occurring truncated HGF isoform, antagonizes the mitogenic and morphogenic activities of full length HGF, but stimulates cell scatter, or the motogenic response to HGF. We studied postreceptor signaling by these HGF isoforms in the human breast epithelial cell line 184B5, and in murine myeloid progenitor 32D cells transfected with c-Met, the human HGF receptor (32D/c-Met). HGF stimulated DNA synthesis in 184B5 and 32D/c-Met cells, while HGF/NK2 was mitogenically inactive, despite the ability of HGF/NK2 to stimulate c-Met autophosphorylation, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) in both cell systems. In 184B5 cells, HGF stimulated sustained MAPK activation, while activation by HGF/NK2 declined rapidly. In contrast, both isoforms activated MAPK with rapidly attenuated kinetics in 32D/c-Met cells. In both cell systems the increased motility observed in response to either HGF or HGF/NK2 treatment was more potently blocked by the PI3 kinase inhibitor wortmannin, than by PD98059, an inhibitor of MAPK kinase (MEK1). These data suggest that (1) alternative HGF isoforms signaling through c-Met generate both common and distinct biological responses, (2) the extent and duration of ligand-stimulated c-Met and MAPK activities are dependent on the cellular context and are not predictive of mitogenic signaling, and (3) in at least some HGF target cells, the activation of both MAPK and PI3K signaling pathways is insufficient for mitogenesis elicited through c-Met.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Disassociation of Met-Mediated Biological Responses In Vivo: the Natural Hepatocyte Growth Factor/Scatter Factor Splice Variant NK2 Antagonizes Growth but Facilitates Metastasis

Toshiyuki Otsuka; John Leonard Jakubczak; Wilfred D. Vieira; Donald P. Bottaro; Diane Breckenridge; William J. LaRochelle; Glenn Merlino

ABSTRACT Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) stimulates numerous cellular activities capable of contributing to the metastatic phenotype, including growth, motility, invasiveness, and morphogenetic transformation. When inappropriately expressed in vivo, an HGF/SF transgene induces numerous hyperplastic and neoplastic lesions. NK1 and NK2 are natural splice variants of HGF/SF; all interact with a common receptor, Met. Although both agonistic and antagonistic properties have been ascribed to each isoform in vitro, NK1 retains the full spectrum of HGF/SF-like activities when expressed as a transgene in vivo. Here we report that transgenic mice broadly expressing NK2 exhibit none of the phenotypes characteristic of HGF/SF or NK1 transgenic mice. Instead, when coexpressed in NK2-HGF/SF bitransgenic mice, NK2 antagonizes the pathological consequences of HGF/SF and discourages the subcutaneous growth of transplanted Met-containing melanoma cells. Remarkably, the metastatic efficiency of these same melanoma cells is dramatically enhanced in NK2 transgenic host mice relative to wild-type recipients, rivaling levels achieved in HGF/SF and NK1 transgenic hosts. Considered in conjunction with reports that in vitro NK2 induces scatter, but not other activities, these data strongly suggest that cellular motility is a critical determinant of metastasis. Moreover, our results demonstrate how alternatively structured ligands can be exploited in vivo to functionally dissociate Met-mediated activities and their downstream pathways.


Oncogene | 2000

Neu differentiation factor/heregulin induction by hepatocyte and keratinocyte growth factors

Paola Castagnino; Matthew V. Lorenzi; Juddi Yeh; Diane Breckenridge; Hiromi Sakata; Barbara Munz; Sabine Werner; Donald P. Bottaro

Hepatocyte growth-factor (HGF) is a potent, widely produced, pleiotropic mediator of mesenchymal-epithelial interaction. In a study of changes in gene expression initiated by HGF in Balb/MK keratinocytes, we observed the induction of Neu-differentiation factor (NDF) mRNA (also known as heregulin, or HRG). Further characterization of the regulation of NDF expression in Balb/MK keratinocytes revealed potent induction by keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) and epidermal growth factor (EGF), but not by HGF/NK2, an alternative HGF isoform with motogenic but not mitogenic or morphogenic activities. Sustained treatment (8 h) of Balb/MK cells with KGF stimulated secretion of mature NDF protein into the culture medium, and Balb/MK cells treated with purified recombinant NDF protein showed increased DNA synthesis. We also found evidence of NDF induction in two models of tissue repair in mice: in full-thickness skin wounds, following locally increased KGF production, and in kidney after partial hepatectomy, following elevation of circulating HGF levels. These results reveal that mesenchymally-derived HGF and KGF can activate autocrine NDF signaling in their epithelial targets, and suggest that this mechanism contributes to the coordination of stages of wound repair, and possibly development, where these growth factors act in concert to direct epithelial proliferation, morphogenesis and differentiation.


Oncogene | 2002

Mitogenic synergy through multilevel convergence of hepatocyte growth factor and interleukin-4 signaling pathways

Regina M. Day; Lilian Soon; Diane Breckenridge; Benjamin Bridges; Bharvin Kr Patel; Ling Mei Wang; Seth J. Corey; Donald P. Bottaro

Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) regulates various physiological and developmental processes in concert with other growth factors, cytokines and hormones. We examined interactions between cell signaling events elicited by HGF and the cytokine interleukin (IL)-4, in the IL-3-dependent murine myeloid cell line 32D transfected with the human HGF receptor, c-Met. HGF was a potent mitogen in these cells, and prevented apoptosis in response to IL-3 withdrawal. IL-4 showed modest anti-apoptotic activity, but no significant mitogenic activity. IL-4 synergistically enhanced HGF-stimulated DNA synthesis, whereas only additive prevention of apoptosis was observed. IL-4 did not enhance HGF-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation of c-Met or Shc. In contrast, HGF-stimulated activation of MAP kinases was enhanced by IL-4, suggesting that the IL-4 and HGF signaling pathways converge upstream of these events. Although phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitors diminished HGF-induced mitogenesis, anti-apoptosis, and MAP kinase activation, IL-4 enhanced HGF signaling persisted even in the presence of these inhibitors. IL-4 enhancement of HGF signaling was partially blocked in 32D/c-Met cells treated with inhibitors of MEK1 or c-Src kinases, completely blocked by expression of a catalytically inactive mutant of Janus kinase 3 (Jak3), and increased in 32D/c-Met cells overexpressing STAT6. Our results suggest that the IL-4 and HGF pathways converge at multiple levels, and that IL-4-dependent Jak3 and STAT6 activities modulate signaling events independent of PI3K to enhance HGF-dependent mitogenesis in myeloid cells, and possibly other common cellular targets.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Dissociation of Heparan Sulfate and Receptor Binding Domains of Hepatocyte Growth Factor Reveals That Heparan Sulfate-c-Met Interaction Facilitates Signaling

Jeffrey S. Rubin; Regina M. Day; Diane Breckenridge; Nese Atabey; William G. Taylor; Stephen J. Stahl; Paul T. Wingfield; Joshua D. Kaufman; Ralph Schwall; Donald P. Bottaro


Archive | 2000

Inhibition of cell motility and angiogenesis

Donald P. Bottaro; Safiye N. Atabey; Jesus V. Soriano; Diane Breckenridge; Zhu-Jun Yao; Yang Gao; Terrence R. Burke


Archive | 2007

Tripeptides for treating cancer metastasis, prostate cancer and melanoma

Donald P. Bottaro; Alessio Giubellino; Safiye N. Atabey; Jesus V. Soriano; Diane Breckenridge; Terrence R. Burke


Archive | 2000

Hemmung der zellmotilität und angiogenese mit grb2 sh2-domäne inhibitoren Inhibition of cell motility and angiogenesis with GRB2 SH2-domain inhibitors

Safiye N. Atabey; Donald P. Bottaro; Diane Breckenridge; Terrence R. Burke; Yang Branford Gao; Jesus V. Soriano; Zhu-Jun Yao


Archive | 2000

Inhibition de la motilite cellulaire et de l'angiogenese par les inhibiteurs du domaine grb2 sh2

Donald P. Bottaro; Safiye N. Atabey; Jesus V. Soriano; Diane Breckenridge; Zhu-Jun Yao; Yang Gao; Terrence R. Burke

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Donald P. Bottaro

Government of the United States of America

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Jesus V. Soriano

National Institutes of Health

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Terrence R. Burke

National Institutes of Health

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Yang Gao

National Institutes of Health

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Zhu-Jun Yao

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Regina M. Day

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Lilian Soon

National Institutes of Health

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Nese Atabey

National Institutes of Health

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Paola Castagnino

National Institutes of Health

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Bharvin Kr Patel

National Institutes of Health

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