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Featured researches published by Douglas R. Lowy.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1991

The bovine papillomavirus E5 oncogene can cooperate with ras : identification of p21 amino acids critical for transformation by c-rasH but not v-rasH

Berthe M. Willumsen; William C. Vass; Thierry Velu; Alex G. Papageorge; John T. Schiller; Douglas R. Lowy

We have previously used a series of insertion-deletion mutants of the mutationally activated v-rasH gene to identify several regions of the encoded protein that are dispensable for cellular transformation (B. M. Willumsen, A. G. Papageorge, H.-F. Kung, E. Bekesi, T. Robins, M. Johnsen, W. C. Vass, and D. R. Lowy, Mol. Cell. Biol. 6:2646-2654, 1986). To determine if some of these amino acids are more important for the biological activity of c-rasH, we have now tested many of the same insertion-deletion mutants in the c-rasH form for their ability to transform NIH 3T3 cells. Since the transforming activity of c-rasH is low, we have used cotransfection with the bovine papillomavirus (BPV) genome to develop a more sensitive transformation assay for c-rasH mutants. The increased sensitivity of the assay, which is seen both in focal transformation and in anchorage-independent growth, is mediated by cooperation between the BPV E5 gene and ras. E5-dependent cooperation was seen for v-rasH as well as for c-rasH, which suggests that the major effect of E5 was to increase the susceptibility of the cell to transformation to a given level of ras activity. The cooperation assay was used to test the potential importance, in c-rasH, of codons 93 to 108, 123 to 130, and 166 to 183, which were nonessential for v-rasH transformation. Relative to the respective transforming activity of wild-type c-rasH and v-rasH, mutants with lesions in codons 102 and 103 were significantly less active in their c-rasH forms than in their v-rasH forms. We conclude that a region including amino acids 102 and 103 encodes a function that is more critical to c-rasH than to v-rasH. Guanine nucleotide exchange is one function that is compatible with such a phenotype.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1989

Functional heterogeneity of proto-oncogene tyrosine kinases: the C terminus of the human epidermal growth factor receptor facilitates cell proliferation.

Thierry Velu; William C. Vass; Douglas R. Lowy; L Beguinot

Previous reports have indicated that the C termini of the membrane-associated tyrosine kinases encoded by c-src and c-fms proto-oncogenes have a negative effect on their biological activity and that this effect is mediated by their C-terminal tyrosine residue. To determine whether this was true for the human epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor, which is also a membrane-associated tyrosine kinase proto-oncogene, we have constructed two premature termination mutants, dc19 and dc63, that delete the C-terminal 19 and 63 amino acids, respectively, from the human full-length receptor (hEGFR). The smaller deletion removes the C-terminal tyrosine residue, while the larger deletion removes the two most C-terminal tyrosines; similar deletions are found in v-erbB. As previously shown for the gene encoding the full-length EGF receptor, the two C-terminal mutants induced EGF-dependent focal transformation and anchorage-independent growth of NIH 3T3 cells. However, both dc19 and dc63 were quantitatively less efficient than the gene encoding the full-length receptor, with dc63 being less active than dc19. Although the C-terminal mutants displayed lower biological activity than the gene encoding the full-length receptor, the mutant receptors were found to be similar in several respects to the full-length receptor. These parameters included receptor localization, stability in the absence of EGF, receptor half-life in the presence of EGF, EGF binding, extent of EGF-dependent autophosphorylation in vitro, and EGF-dependent phosphorylation of an exogenous substrate in vitro. Therefore, the C-terminal 63 amino acids of the human receptor have no detectable influence on EGF-dependent early events. We conclude that in contrast


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1986

A transforming ras gene can provide an essential function ordinarily supplied by an endogenous ras gene.

Alex G. Papageorge; Berthe M. Willumsen; M. Johnsen; Hsiang-Fu Kung; D W Stacey; William C. Vass; Douglas R. Lowy

Microinjection of monoclonal antibody Y13-259, which reacts with all known mammalian and yeast ras-encoded proteins, has previously been shown to prevent NIH 3T3 cells from entering the S phase (L. S. Mulcahy, M. R. Smith, and D. W. Stacey, Nature [London] 313:241-243, 1985). We have now found several transformation-competent mutant v-rasH genes whose protein products in transformed NIH 3T3 cells are not immunoprecipitated by this monoclonal antibody. These mutant proteins are, however, precipitated by a different anti-ras antibody. Each of these mutants lacks Met-72 of v-rasH. In contrast to the result for cells transformed by wild-type v-rasH, Y13-259 microinjection of NIH 3T3 cells transformed by these mutant ras genes did not prevent the cells from entering the S phase. These results imply that a transformation-competent ras gene can supply a normal essential function for NIH 3T3 cells. When the proteins encoded by the mutant ras genes were overproduced in Escherichia coli, several mutant proteins that lacked Met-72 failed to bind Y13-259 in a Western blot. However, a ras protein from a mutant lacking amino antibody, but a ras protein from a mutant lacking amino acids 72 to 84 did not. These results suggest that Y13-259 may bind to a higher ordered structure that has been restored in the mutant lacking amino acids 72 to 82.


Archive | 2004

Preventive Human Papillomavirus Vaccines

John T. Schiller; Douglas R. Lowy

Prophylactic vaccines against infectious diseases are among the most successful and cost effective public health interventions ever devised. They have led to the eradication of small pox and will likely soon lead to the eradication of polio. Prophylactic vaccination has also effectively controlled other infectious diseases, including rubella, mumps, tetanus, and diphtheria (Ulmer and Liu, 2002). Perhaps the most important implication of the establishment of sexually transmitted HPV infection as the central cause of cervical cancer (Bosch et al., 2002) is the potential for cervical cancer prevention through prophylactic vaccination against the oncogenic HPVs. This chapter will focus on the development of vaccines to prevent infection and neoplastic disease by oncogenic HPV types that infect the genital tract. However, similar vaccines are being developed to prevent infection by the non-oncogenic types that are largely responsible for genital warts.


Archive | 1989

Transforming Genes of Bovine and Human Papillomaviruses

Douglas R. Lowy; John T. Schiller

Papillomaviruses (PVs) induce benign epithelial tumors in their natural hosts. The best-characterized members of this virus group are the human papillomaviruses (HPV), bovine papillomaviruses (BPV), and cottontail rabbit papillomavirus (CRPV). PVs have also been isolated from many other mammals, as well as from birds. More than 50 different HPV genotypes have now been identified [1–3].


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1995

Serologic Response to Human Papillomavirus Type 16 (HPV-16) Virus-like Particles in HPV-16 DNA-Positive Invasive Cervical Cancer and Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia Grade III Patients and Controls from Colombia and Spain

Bernadete Nonnenmacher; Nancy L. Hubbert; Reinhard Kirnbauer; Keerti V. Shah; Nubia Muñoz; F. Xavier Bosch; Silvia de Sanjosé; Raphael P. Viscidi; Douglas R. Lowy; John T. Schiller


Archive | 1993

Self-assembling recombinant papillomavirus capsid proteins

Douglas R. Lowy; John T. Schiller; Reinhard Kirnbauer


Archive | 1999

Virus-like particles for the induction of autoantibodies

John T. Schiller; Bryce Chackerian; Douglas R. Lowy


Archive | 1997

Ichimeric papillomavirus-like particles

Douglas R. Lowy; John T. Schiller; Heather L. Greenstone


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1988

p21-ras effector domain mutants constructed by "cassette" mutagenesis.

J C Stone; William C. Vass; Berthe M. Willumsen; Douglas R. Lowy

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William C. Vass

National Institutes of Health

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Elliot J. Androphy

National Institutes of Health

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Heather L. Greenstone

National Institutes of Health

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Rolando Herrero

International Agency for Research on Cancer

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Alex G. Papageorge

National Institutes of Health

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Carolina Porras

National Institutes of Health

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