Axl receptor tyrosine kinase stimulated by the vitamin K-dependent protein encoded by growth-arrest-specific gene 6
Abstract
THE Axl receptor tyrosine kinase was identified as a protein encoded by a transforming gene from primary human myeloid leukaemia cells by DNA-mediated transformation of NIH 3T3 cells1-3. Axl is the founding member of a family of related receptors that includes Eyk4, encoded by a chicken proto-oncogene originally described as a retroviral transforming gene, and c-Mer5, encoded by a human protooncogene expressed in neoplastic B- and T-cell lines. The transforming activity of Axl demonstrates that the receptor can drive cellular proliferation. The function of Axl in non-transformed cells and tissues is unknown, but may involve the stimulation of cell proliferation in response to an appropriate signal, namely a ligand that activates the receptor. We report here the purification of an Axl stimulatory factor, and its identification as the product of growth-arrest-specific gene 6 (ref. 6). This is, to our knowledge, the first description of a ligand for the Axl family of receptors.
- Publication:
-
Nature
- Pub Date:
- February 1995
- DOI:
- 10.1038/373623a0
- Bibcode:
- 1995Natur.373..623V