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Charlotte Rorsman

Uppsala University

Publishes on Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases, Ubiquitin and proteasome pathways, Intracranial Aneurysms: Treatment and Complications. 19 papers and 1.4k citations.

19Publications
1.4kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Dimerization of B-type Platelet-derived Growth Factor Receptors Occurs After Ligand Binding and Is Closely Associated with Receptor Kinase Activation
Carl‐Henrik Heldin, A Ernlund, Charlotte Rorsman et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|1989
Cited by 359Open Access

Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) was found to induce dimerization of purified B-type PDGF receptors, as analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis after covalent cross-linking using disuccinimidyl suberate. PDGF-BB was 20-fold more effective than PDGF-AB; PDGF-AA was without effect. The dimerization was dose-dependent and was maximal at 0.5-2 micrograms/ml PDGF-BB; at higher concentrations dimerization was less abundant. This indicates that dimerization occurred when one PDGF-BB molecule bound two receptor molecules. The dimerization correlated to activation of the tyrosine kinase of the receptor, determined as autophosphorylation, but was not dependent on phosphorylation reactions because it occurred also in the absence of ATP. Furthermore, dimerization of the receptor correlated with the ability to phosphorylate phosphofructokinase, an exogenous substrate. The complex of ligand and receptor dimer was stable; it resisted electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions, as well as gel chromatography. The present data indicate that intermolecular mechanisms are involved in signal transduction from the external ligand binding domain to the internal effector domains of the B-type PDGF receptor.

Selective platelet-derived growth factor receptor kinase blockers reverse sis-transformation.
Cited by 273

A novel class of tyrosine kinase blockers represented by the tyrphostins AG1295 and AG1296 is described. These compounds inhibit selectively the platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptor kinase and the PDGF-dependent DNA synthesis in Swiss 3T3 cells and in porcine aorta endothelial cells with 50% inhibitory concentrations below 5 and 1 microM, respectively. The PDGF receptor blockers have not effect on epidermal growth factor receptor autophosphorylation; weak effects on DNA synthesis stimulated by insulin, by epidermal growth factor, or by a combination of both; and over an order of magnitude weaker blocking effect on fibroblast growth factor-dependent DNA synthesis. AG1296 potently inhibits signaling of human PDGF alpha- and beta-receptors as well as of the related stem cell factor receptor (c-Kit) but has no effect on autophosphorylation of the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor KDR or on DNA synthesis induced by vascular endothelial growth factor in porcine aortic endothelial cells. Treatment by AG1296 reverses the transformed phenotype of sis-transfected NIH 3T3 cells but has no effect on src-transformed NIH 3T3 cells or on the activity of the kinase p60c-src(F527) immunoprecipitated from these cells. These potent and selective compounds represent leads for the development of novel agents to combat tumors driven by PDGF or to inhibit PDGF action in other diseases in which PDGF plays a key role, such as restenosis.

Platelet-derived Growth Factor Stimulates Membrane Lipid Synthesis Through Activation of Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase and Sterol Regulatory Element-binding Proteins
Jean‐Baptiste Demoulin, Johan Ericsson, Anders Kallin et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|2004
Cited by 124Open Access

We analyzed the transcriptional program elicited by stimulation of normal human fibroblasts with platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) using cDNA microarrays. 103 significantly regulated transcripts that had not been previously linked to PDGF signaling were identified. Among them, a cluster of genes involved in fatty acid and cholesterol biosynthesis, including stearoyl-CoA desaturase (SCD), fatty acid synthase, and hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA synthase (HMGCS), was up-regulated by PDGF after 24 h of treatment, and their expression correlated with increased membrane lipid production. These genes are known to be controlled by sterol regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBP). PDGF increased the amount of mature SREBP-1 and regulated the promoters of SCD and HMGCS in an SREBP-dependent manner. In line with these results, blocking SREBP processing by addition of 25-hydroxycholesterol blunted the effects of PDGF on lipogenic enzymes. SREBP activation was dependent on the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) pathway, as judged from the effects of the inhibitor LY294002 and mutation of the PDGFbeta receptor tyrosines that bind the PI3K adaptor subunit p85. Fibroblast growth factors (FGF-2 and FGF-4) and other growth factors mimicked the effects of PDGF on NIH3T3 and human fibroblasts. In conclusion, our results suggest that growth factors induce membrane lipid synthesis via the activation SREBP and PI3K.

Lack of evidence of stimulatory autoantibodies to platelet‐derived growth factor receptor in patients with systemic sclerosis
Jean-François Classen, Dan Henrohn, Fredrik Rorsman et al.|Arthritis & Rheumatism|2009
Cited by 94

OBJECTIVE: Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is a severe connective tissue disease of unknown etiology, characterized by fibrosis of the skin and multiple internal organs. Recent findings suggested that the disease is driven by stimulatory autoantibodies to platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), which stimulate the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and collagen by fibroblasts. These results opened novel avenues of research into the diagnosis and treatment of SSc. The present study was undertaken to confirm the presence of anti-PDGFR antibodies in patients with SSc. METHODS: Immunoglobulins from 37 patients with SSc were purified by protein A/G chromatography. PDGFR activation was tested using 4 different sensitive bioassays, i.e., cell proliferation, ROS production, signal transduction, and receptor phosphorylation; the latter was also tested in a separate population of 7 patients with SSc from a different research center. RESULTS: Purified IgG samples from patients with SSc were positive when tested for antinuclear autoantibodies, but did not specifically activate PDGFRalpha or PDGFRbeta in any of the tests. Cell stimulation with PDGF itself consistently produced a strong signal. CONCLUSION: The present results raise questions regarding the existence of agonistic autoantibodies to PDGFR in SSc.