| CELL SIGNALING TECHNOLOGY, INC. Patent applications |
| Patent application number | Title | Published |
| 20120101108 | Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase In Kidney Cancer - The invention provides methods to identify, diagnose, and treat kidney cancer through the detection of expression and/or activity of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK). The detection of the presence of a polypeptide with ALK kinase activity (e.g., by detecting expression and/or activity of the polypeptide), identify those kidney cancers that are likely to respond to an ALK-inhibiting therapeutic. | 04-26-2012 |
| 20110287445 | Mutant ROS Expression In Human Cancer - The invention provides the identification of the presence of mutant ROS protein in human cancer. In some embodiments, the mutant ROS are FIG-ROS fusion proteins comprising part of the FIG protein fused to the kinase domain of the ROS kinase. In some embodiments, the mutant ROS is the overexpression of wild-type ROS in cancerous tissues (or tissues suspected of being cancerous) where, in normal tissue of that same tissue type, ROS is not expressed or is expressed at lower levels. The mutant ROS proteins of the invention are anticipated to drive the proliferation and survival of a subgroup of human cancers, particularly in cancers of the liver (including bile duct), pancreas, kidney, and testes. The invention therefore provides, in part, isolated polynucleotides and vectors encoding the disclosed mutant ROS polypeptides (e.g., a FIG-ROS(S) fusion polypeptide), probes for detecting it, isolated mutant polypeptides, recombinant polypeptides, and reagents for detecting the fusion and truncated polypeptides. The identification of the mutant ROS polypeptides enables new methods for determining the presence of these mutant ROS polypeptides in a biological sample, methods for screening for compounds that inhibit the proteins, and methods for inhibiting the progression of a cancer characterized by the mutant polynucleotides or polypeptides, which are also provided by the invention. | 11-24-2011 |
| 20110244445 | Mass spectroscopy analysis of mutant polypeptides in biological samples - The invention relates to a method for determining the presence of at least one distinct polypeptide in a biological sample comprising contacting the biological sample with a hydrolyzing agent, wherein the hydrolyzing agent is capable of hydrolyzing the distinct polypeptide in a sequence-specific manner such that at least one distinct peptide having a predetermined peptide measured accurate mass would result if the at least one distinct polypeptide were present in the biological sample, to obtain a hydrolyzed sample; bringing the hydrolyzed sample in contact with a substrate comprising at least one immobilized binding partner, wherein the at least one immobilized binding partner is capable of specifically binding the distinct peptide; removing the hydrolyzed sample from the substrate in a manner such that the distinct peptide would remain bound to the immobilized binding partner; contacting the substrate with an elution solution, wherein the distinct peptide would dissociate from the immobilized binding partner into the elution solution; subjecting a portion of the elution solution to liquid chromatography to segregate a plurality of molecules in the portion of the elution solution to obtain sorted molecules; determining the measured accurate mass of at least one sorted molecule present in the elution solution; and determining the presence of the at least one distinct polypeptide in the biological sample when a measured accurate mass of at least one molecule is substantially equal to the predetermined peptide measured accurate mass. | 10-06-2011 |
| 20110195447 | Identification of Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma (NSCLC) Tumors Expressing PDGFR-ALPHA - The invention discloses a previously unidentified subset of mammalian non-small cell lung carcinomas (NSCLC) in which platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha (PDGFRα) is expressed and is driving the disease, and provides methods for identifying a mammalian NSCLC tumor that belongs to a subset of NSCLC tumors in which PDGFRα is expressed, and for identifying a NSCLC tumor that is likely to respond to a PDGFRα-inhibiting therapeutic. The invention also provides methods for inhibiting the progression of a mammalian NSCLC tumor in which PDGFRα is expressed, and for determining whether a compound inhibits the progression of a PDGFRα-expressing mammalian NSCLC tumor. | 08-11-2011 |
| 20110143368 | Tyrosine phosphorylation sites - The invention discloses 142 novel phosphorylation sites identified in carcinoma, peptides (including AQUA peptides) comprising a phosphorylation site of the invention, antibodies specifically bind to a novel phosphorylation site of the invention, and diagnostic and therapeutic uses of the above. | 06-16-2011 |
| 20110136149 | METHOD FOR PREDICTING THE RESPONSE TO HER2-DIRECTED THERAPY - This invention provides methods for determining or predicting response to HER2-directed therapy in an individual. | 06-09-2011 |
| 20110130547 | Reagents For The Detection Of Protein Phosphorylation In EGFR Signaling Pathways - The invention discloses 168 novel phosphorylation sites identified in signal transduction proteins and pathways downstream of, and including, EGFR kinase, and provides phosphorylation-site specific antibodies and heavy-isotope labeled peptides (AQUA peptides) for the selective detection and quantification of these phosphorylated sites/proteins, as well as methods of using the reagents for such purpose. Among the phosphorylation sites identified are sites occurring in the following protein types: Actin Binding proteins, Adaptor/Scaffold proteins, Calcium-Binding Proteins, Cell Cycle Regulation proteins, Cytoskeletal proteins, DNA Binding and Replication Proteins, GTPase Activating proteins, Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor proteins, Lipid Kinases, Receptor Tyrosine Kinases, Receptor Tyrosine Kinase ligands, Protein Kinases, Receptor and Protein Phosphatases, Transcription Factor proteins, Tumor Suppressor proteins, and Vesicle proteins. | 06-02-2011 |
| 20110111424 | ANALYSIS OF UBIQUITINATED POLYPEPTIDES - The invention relates to antibody reagents that specifically bind to peptides carrying a ubiquitin remnant from a digested or chemically treated biological sample. The reagents allow the technician to identify ubiquitinated polypeptides as well as the sites of ubiquitination on them. The reagents are preferably employed in proteomic analysis using mass spectrometry. The antibody reagents specifically bind to the remnant of ubiquitin (i.e., a diglycine modified epsilon amine of lysine) left on a peptide which as been generated by digesting or chemically treating ubiquitinated proteins. The inventive antibody reagents' affinity to the ubiquitin remnant does not depend on the remaining amino acid sequences flanking the modified (i.e., ubiquitinated) lysine, i.e., they are context independent. | 05-12-2011 |
| 20110104820 | Tyrosine, Serine, And Threonine Phosphorylation Sites - The invention discloses 94 novel phosphorylation sites identified in carcinoma and leukemia, peptides (including AQUA peptides) comprising a phosphorylation site of the invention, antibodies that specifically bind to a novel phosphorylation site of the invention, and diagnostic and therapeutic uses of the above. | 05-05-2011 |
| 20110059463 | Serine and Threonine Phosphorylation Sites - The invention discloses 726 novel phosphorylation sites identified in carcinoma and leukemia, peptides (including AQUA peptides) comprising a phosphorylation site of the invention, antibodies that specifically bind to a novel phosphorylation site of the invention, and diagnostic and therapeutic uses of the above. | 03-10-2011 |
| 20110045603 | Serine, Threonine, and Tyrosine Phosphorylation Sites - The invention discloses 990 novel phosphorylation sites identified in carcinoma and leukemia, peptides (including AQUA peptides) comprising a phosphorylation site of the invention, antibodies specifically bind to a novel phosphorylation site of the invention, and diagnostic and therapeutic uses of the above. | 02-24-2011 |
| 20110045534 | Nucleic Acid Cassette For Producing Recombinant Antibodies - The invention provides a nucleic acid cassette comprising components in the following structure: A-B-C, wherein “A” is a nucleic acid sequence encoding a light chain of a first antibody (or antigen binding domain thereof), “B” is a nucleic acid sequence encoding a 2A peptide, “C” is a nucleic acid sequence encoding a heavy chain of a second antibody (or antigen binding domain thereof), and “−” is a phosphodiester or phosphorothioate bond. Also provided are methods for making recombinant antibodies using the nucleic acid cassette of the invention, cells and vector comprising the nucleic acid cassette of the invention, and kits for making the nucleic acid cassette of the invention. | 02-24-2011 |
| 20110021546 | Gene Defects And Mutant ALK Kinase In Human Solid Tumors - In accordance with the invention, novel gene deletions and translocations involving chromosome 2 resulting in fusion proteins combining part of Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK) kinase with part of a secondary protein have now been identified in human solid tumors, e.g. non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC). Secondary proteins include Echinoderm Microtubule-Associated Protein-Like 4 (EML-4) and TRK-Fusion Gene (TFG). The EML4-ALK fusion protein, which retains ALK tyrosine kinase activity, was confirmed to drive the proliferation and survival of NSCLC characterized by this mutation. The invention therefore provides, in part, isolated polynucleotides and vectors encoding the disclosed mutant ALK kinase polypeptides, probes for detecting it, isolated mutant polypeptides, recombinant polypeptides, and reagents for detecting the fusion and truncated polypeptides. The disclosed identification of this new fusion protein enables new methods for determining the presence of these mutant ALK kinase polypeptides in a biological sample, methods for screening for compounds that inhibit the proteins, and methods for inhibiting the progression of a cancer characterized by the mutant polynucleotides or polypeptides, which are also provided by the invention. | 01-27-2011 |
| 20100266580 | TRANSLOCATION AND MUTANT TNK1 KINASE IN HUMAN LYMPHOMA - In accordance with the invention, a novel gene translocation in human Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) that results in a fusion protein combining part of C17ORF61 with Thirty-eight-negative kinase 1 (Tnk1) kinase has now been identified. The TNK1-C17ORF61 fusion protein, which retains TNK1 tyrosine kinase activity, was confirmed to drive the proliferation and survival of Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL) cell line, L-540. The invention therefore provides, in part, isolated polynucleotides and vectors encoding the disclosed mutant TNK1 kinase polypeptides, probes for detecting it, isolated mutant polypeptides, recombinant polypeptides, and reagents for detecting the fusion and truncated polypeptides. The disclosed identification of this new fusion protein and truncated kinase enables new methods for determining the presence of these mutant TNK1 kinase polypeptides in a biological sample, methods for screening for compounds that inhibit the proteins, and methods for inhibiting the progression of a cancer characterized by the mutant polynucleotides or polypeptides, which are also provided by the invention. | 10-21-2010 |
| 20100221737 | Translocation and Mutant ROS Kinase in Human Non-Small Cell Lung Carcinoma - In accordance with the invention, a novel gene translocation, (5q32, 6q22), in human non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) that results in a fusion proteins combining part of CD74 with Proto-oncogene Tyrosine Protein Kinase ROS Precursor (ROS) kinase has now been identified. The CD74-ROS fusion protein is anticipated to drive the proliferation and survival of a subgroup of NSCLC tumors. The invention therefore provides, in part, isolated polynucleotides and vectors encoding the disclosed mutant ROS kinase polypeptides, probes for detecting it, isolated mutant polypeptides, recombinant polypeptides, and reagents for detecting the fusion and truncated polypeptides. The disclosed identification of the new fusion protein enables new methods for determining the presence of these mutant ROS kinase polypeptides in a biological sample, methods for screening for compounds that inhibit the proteins, and methods for inhibiting the progression of a cancer characterized by the mutant polynucleotides or polypeptides, which are also provided by the invention. | 09-02-2010 |
| 20100216718 | Cancer Classification and Methods of Use - The present invention relates to methods of classifying cancer cells based on the presence, absence or level of a tyrosine kinase or a phosphorylated tyrosine kinase. The present invention also relates to methods of treating cancer using cancer classification. The present invention further relates to methods of determining the effectiveness of a treatment for cancer using cancer classification. | 08-26-2010 |
| 20100151483 | REAGENTS FOR THE DETECTION OF PROTEIN PHOSPHORYLATION IN SIGNALING PATHWAYS - The invention discloses novel phosphorylation sites identified in signal transduction proteins and pathways, and provides phosphorylation-site specific antibodies and heavy-isotope labeled peptides (AQUA peptides) for the selective detection and quantification of these phosphorylated sites/proteins, as well as methods of using the reagents for such purpose. Among the phosphorylation sites identified are sites occurring in the following protein types: adaptor/scaffold proteins, adhesion/extracellular matrix protein, apoptosis proteins, calcium binding proteins, cell cycle regulation proteins, chaperone proteins, chromatin, DNA binding/repair/replication proteins, cytoskeletal proteins, endoplasmic reticulum or golgi proteins, enzyme proteins, G/regulator proteins, inhibitor proteins, motor/contractile proteins, phosphatase, protease, Ser/Thr protein kinases, protein kinase (Tyr)s, receptor/channel/cell surface proteins, RNA binding proteins, transcriptional regulators, tumor suppressor proteins, ubiquitan conjugating system proteins and proteins of unknown function. | 06-17-2010 |
| 20100143918 | TRANSLOCATION AND MUTANT ROS KINASE IN HUMAN NON-SMALL CELL LUNG CARCINOMA - In accordance with the invention, a novel gene translocation, (4p15, 6q22), in human non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) that results in fusion proteins combining part of Sodium-dependent Phosphate Transporter Isoform NaPi-3b protein (SLC34A2) with Proto-oncogene Tyrosine Protein Kinase ROS Precursor (ROS) kinase has now been identified. The SLC34A2-ROS fusion proteins are anticipated to drive the proliferation and survival of cancer cells, and particularly drive the proliferation and survival of a subgroup of NSCLC tumor cells. The invention therefore provides, in part, isolated polynucleotides and vectors encoding the disclosed mutant ROS kinase polypeptides, probes for detecting it, isolated mutant polypeptides, recombinant polypeptides, and reagents for detecting the fusion and truncated polypeptides. The disclosed identification of the new fusion protein enables new methods for determining the presence of these mutant ROS kinase polypeptides in a biological sample, methods for screening for compounds that inhibit the proteins, and methods for inhibiting the progression of a cancer characterized by the mutant polynucleotides or polypeptides, which are also provided by the invention. | 06-10-2010 |
| 20100120055 | TYROSINE PHOSPHORYLATION SITES - The invention discloses 318 novel phosphorylation sites identified in carcinoma, peptides (including AQUA peptides) comprising a phosphorylation site of the invention, antibodies specifically bind to a novel phosphorylation site of the invention, and diagnostic and therapeutic uses of the above. | 05-13-2010 |
| 20090325189 | Tyrosine phosphorylation sites - The invention discloses 443 novel phosphorylation sites identified in leukemia, peptides (including AQUA peptides) comprising a phosphorylation site of the invention, antibodies specifically bind to a novel phosphorylation site of the invention, and diagnostic and therapeutic uses of the above. | 12-31-2009 |
| 20090285796 | MUTANT JAK3 KINASE IN HUMAN LEUKEMIA - In accordance with the invention, a novel activating mutation (alanine 572 to valine) in JAK3 kinase has been discovered in human acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). The mutant JAK3 kinase was confirmed to drive the proliferation and survival of acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (AML-M7). The invention therefore provides, in part, isolated polynucleotides and vectors encoding the disclosed mutant JAK3 kinase polypeptides, probes for detecting it, isolated mutant polypeptides, recombinant polypeptides, and reagents for detecting the mutant polypeptides. The disclosed identification of this new mutant protein and enables new methods for determining the presence of mutant JAK3 kinase polypeptides in a biological sample, methods for screening for compounds that inhibit the mutant proteins, and methods for inhibiting the progression of a cancer characterized by the mutant polynucleotides or polypeptides, which are also provided by the invention. | 11-19-2009 |