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Query: EC:1.14.16.2 (
tyrosine hydroxylase
)
14,760
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Butyrate modulates specific gene expression through various second-messenger signal transduction systems including activation of the PKA/cAMP pathway (Decastro, M., Nankova, B.B., Shah, P., Patel, P., Mally, P.V., Mishra, R., La Gamma, E.F., 2005. Short chain fatty acids regulate
tyrosine hydroxylase
gene expression through a cAMP-dependent signaling pathway, Brain Res. Mol. Brain Res. 142 28-38; Mally, P., Mishra, R., Gandhi, S., Decastro, M.H., Nankova, B.B., Lagamma, E.F., 2004. Stereospecific regulation of
tyrosine hydroxylase
and proenkephalin genes by short-chain fatty acids in rat PC12 cells, Pediatr. Res. 55 847-854). In the current report, we provide additional evidence that exposure to butyrate causes a rapid activation of the MAP kinase pathway, associated with increased phosphorylation of CREB. Under these conditions, no changes in relative amounts of CREB protein were observed by Western blot. Pre-treatment with the MAPK specific inhibitor (U0126) or the adenylate cyclase inhibitor dideoxyadenosine (ddA) abolished the butyrate-induced: (i) accumulation of TH mRNA, (ii) the phosphorylation of
ERK1
/2 as well as (iii) CREB phosphorylation. PC12 cells transfected with a TH promoter-luciferase reporter gene showed a robust induction in response to butyrate that was significantly reduced after co-transfection of either of two dominant-negative CREB expression vectors. Nuclear run-on assays demonstrated that butyrate increases endogenous TH gene transcription. We conclude that the initial steps of butyrate-induced gene activation are mediated through the CREB/CREB family of transcription factors which are coupled to both the MAP kinase and cAMP-dependent second messenger systems. Our data delineate a molecular mechanism through which short chain fatty acid's, their related drug-congeners (e.g., valproate) or even diet-derived butyrate (from fermentation of carbohydrates in the gut) can in principle, modulate brain catecholaminergic systems by modifying TH gene expression, dopaminergic levels and the corresponding animal behavior. These molecular relationships also offer a plausible explanation of how the well-recognized clinical effects of ketogenic diets can alter human behavior via the same central mechanisms.
...
PMID:Short chain fatty acids induce TH gene expression via ERK-dependent phosphorylation of CREB protein. 1685 87
Isolation and propagation of neural stem cells derived from human brain tissue uniquely enables the study of human neurogenesis in vitro. In addition, ex vivo-expanded human neural stem/precursor cells (NPCs) may offer novel therapeutic strategies. We investigated the effects of extracellular nucleotides on the proliferation and differentiation of human mesencephalic neural stem/precursor cells (hmNPCs). When combined with the mitogens epidermal growth factor and fibroblast growth factor 2, UTP (1 microm) boosted proliferation of hmNPCs as shown by increased expression of the proliferation marker proliferating cell nuclear antigen (330%). UTP-induced proliferation was abrogated by the preferential P2Y receptor blocker pyridoxal phosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulphonic acid (PPADS). UTP also stimulated dopaminergic differentiation. Treatment with UTP (100 microm) increased the number of
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH)-positive cells and TH protein by 267 and 319% respectively. UTP-stimulated dopaminergic differentiation of hmNPCs was blocked by the P2 receptor antagonists suramin (10 microm) and PPADS (100 microm). In addition, UDP (1 microm) enhanced TH protein expression by 194%. During differentiation, treatment with UTP stimulated the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) pathway. Both
ERK1
/2 phosphorylation and dopaminergic differentiation were inhibited by U0126, a selective ERK kinase inhibitor, as well as by suramin. When other P2 receptor agonists (ATP, ADP and adenosine 5'-O-(2-thiophosphate) (ADPbetaS); all 100 microm) were applied, both proliferation and dopaminergic differentiation of NPCs were compromised. We conclude that uracil nucleotides exert specific P2 receptor-mediated effects on midbrain-derived human NPCs, and may be used to enhance both proliferation and dopaminergic differentiation.
...
PMID:Uracil nucleotides stimulate human neural precursor cell proliferation and dopaminergic differentiation: involvement of MEK/ERK signalling. 1707 58
We have investigated the effect of KHG21834, a benzothiazole derivative, on the amyloid beta protein (Abeta)-induced cell death in rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells and rat cortical and mesencephalic neuron-glia cultures. KHG21834 attenuated the Abeta(25-35)-induced apoptotic death in PC12 cells determined by characteristic morphological alterations and positive in situ terminal end-labeling (TUNEL). In the cortical neuron-glia cultures, KHG21834 reduced the Abeta(25-35)-induced apoptosis determined by TUNEL staining. Immunocytochemical analysis and Western blot analysis of Abeta(25-35)-induced neurotoxicity in mesencephalic neuron-glia cultures with anti-
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH) antibody showed that Abeta(25-35) decreased the expression of TH protein by 60% and KHG21834 significantly attenuated the Abeta(25-35)-induced reduction in the expression of TH. Moreover, KHG21834 attenuates Abeta(25-35)-induced toxicity concomitant with the reduction of activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1/2 to a lesser extent.
ERK1
was more sensitively affected than ERK2 in attenuation of Abeta(25-35)-induced phosphorylation by KHG21834. These results demonstrated that KHG21834 was capable of protecting neuronal cells from Abeta(25-35)-induced degeneration.
...
PMID:Protective effect of benzothiazole derivative KHG21834 on amyloid beta-induced neurotoxicity in PC12 cells and cortical and mesencephalic neurons. 1771 46
Isoflurane, propofol and ketamine are representative general anesthetics with distinct molecular mechanisms of action that have neuroprotective properties in models of excitotoxic ischemic damage. We characterized the effects of these agents on neuronal glutamate and dopamine signaling by profiling drug-induced changes in brain intracellular protein phosphorylation in vivo to test the hypothesis that they affect common downstream effectors. Anesthetic-treated and control mice were killed instantly by focused microwave irradiation, frontal cortex and striatum were removed, and the phosphorylation profile of specific neuronal signaling proteins was analyzed by immunoblotting with a panel of phospho-specific antibodies. At anesthetic doses that produced loss of righting reflex, isoflurane, propofol, and ketamine all reduced phosphorylation of the activating residue T183 of ERK2 (but not of
ERK1
); S897 of the NR1 NMDA receptor subunit; and S831 (but not S845) of the GluR1 AMPA receptor subunit in cerebral cortex. At sub-anesthetic doses, these drugs only reduced phosphorylation of ERK2. Isoflurane and ketamine also reduced phosphorylation of spinophilin at S94, but oppositely regulated phosphorylation of presynaptic (
tyrosine hydroxylase
) and postsynaptic (DARPP-32) markers of dopaminergic neurotransmission in striatum. These data reveal both shared and agent-specific actions of CNS depressant drugs on critical intracellular protein phosphorylation signaling pathways that integrate multiple second messenger systems. Reduced phosphorylation of ionotropic glutamate receptors by all three anesthetics indicates depression of normal glutamatergic synaptic transmission and reduced potential excitotoxicity. This novel approach indicates a role for phosphorylation-mediated down-regulation of glutamatergic synaptic transmission by general anesthetics and identifies specific in vivo targets for focused evaluation of anesthetic mechanisms.
...
PMID:General anesthetics selectively modulate glutamatergic and dopaminergic signaling via site-specific phosphorylation in vivo. 1782 4
The orphan nuclear receptor NURR1 is critical for the development of mesencephalic dopamine neurons and directly regulates
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH) via specific NGFI-B response elements (NBRE). We identified a Parkinson's disease patient with a NURR1 mutation, resulting in a p.Ser125Cys change, immediately adjacent to the putative
ERK1
/2 phosphorylation site. Here we show, in dopaminergic SK-N-AS human neuroblastoma cells, that this substitution markedly attenuated NURR1-induced transcriptional activation through a human TH promoter NBRE. Furthermore, in SK-N-AS cells co-transfected with the dopamine-D2S receptor and NURR1, the dopamine-D2 agonist quinpirole stimulated
ERK1
/2 phosphorylation and enhanced transcriptional activation by wild-type NURR1 but not the p.Ser125Cys NURR1 mutant, and these actions were blocked by the specific MEK1/2 inhibitor PD98059. These results indicate that Ser125 is critical for basal and
ERK1
/2-induced NURR1 activity and suggest a role for this and other NURR1 mutations in the regulation of dopamine synthesis and predisposition to Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:A Nurr1 point mutant, implicated in Parkinson's disease, uncouples ERK1/2-dependent regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase transcription. 1789 97
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) has been shown to be neuroprotective in animal models of the dopamine deficiency in Parkinson's disease. To examine the role of the extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 (
ERK1
/2) in this process, we infused a single dose of GDNF into the striatum of mice and analyzed the effect on
ERK1
/2 by immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis. GDNF caused an increase in the phosphorylation of
ERK1
/2 both in the striatum and in
tyrosine hydroxylase
-positive neurons in the substantia nigra. In the striatum, the increase in
ERK1
/2 phosphorylation was evident by 3 hr and persisted for at least 7 days, whereas, in the substantia nigra, an increase in phosphorylated
ERK1
/2 was first evident at 24 hr and persisted for at least 7 days. The increase in phosphorylated
ERK1
/2 was maximal at 0.45 microg GDNF at the time points examined. GDNF also protected dopamine terminals against the loss of
tyrosine hydroxylase
immunoreactivity normally associated with the intrastriatal administration of 6-hydroxydopamine (0.5 microg/0.5 microl). However, this was observed only at a much higher dose of GDNF, 4.5 microg. Thus, our results suggest that the ability of GDNF to protect dopamine neurons cannot be explained solely in terms of its influence on
ERK1
/2 and that the role of other signaling pathways should be explored.
...
PMID:Activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 by glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor and its relation to neuroprotection in a mouse model of Parkinson's disease. 1843 11
We report here the effects of estrogens and phytoestrogens on catecholamine signaling in cultured bovine adrenal medullary cells used as a model of catecholaminergic neurons in the brain. Treatment of the cells for 20 min with 17beta-estradiol (E(2)) (0.3-100 nM) or phytoestrogens such as daidzein (0.01-1.0 microM), a soy isoflavone, and resveratrol (0.1-1.0 microM), a grape polyphenol, stimulated (14)C-catecholamine synthesis from [(14)C]tyrosine, which was associated with the activation of
tyrosine hydroxylase
. The stimulatory effect of E(2) and phytoestrogens was not inhibited by ICI182,780, a nuclear estrogen receptor inhibitor, but abolished by U0126, an inhibitor of extracellular signal-regulated kinase1/2 (
ERK1
/2) kinase. E(2) enhanced the phosphorylation of
ERK1
/2. The plasma membrane isolated from the adrenal medulla showed two classes of specific binding sites of [(3)H]E(2). Resveratrol and daidzein at high concentrations (> or =1.0 microM) inhibited catecholamine secretion induced by various secretagogues. The present findings suggest that estrogens and phytoestrogens most likely stimulate catecholamine synthesis via estrogen receptors in the plasma membrane, but in high concentrations phytoestrogens inhibit catecholamine secretion induced by secretagogues in adrenal medullary cells, and probably in brain neurons.
...
PMID:Insights into the pharmacological potential of estrogens and phytoestrogens on catecholamine signaling. 1859 72
ATP and neuropeptide Y (NPY) are examples of agents co-secreted with catecholamines from neuronal and neuroendocrine cells which may regulate the function of the cells from which they are released. For example, ATP and NPY could influence chromaffin cell activity in an autocrine or paracrine manner. The primary recognized function of chromaffin cells is the synthesis and secretion of catecholamines; therefore, we hypothesize that ATP and NPY can regulate catecholamine synthesis in chromaffin cells. ATP increases phosphorylation of
tyrosine hydroxylase
(TH), the rate-limiting enzyme in catecholamine synthesis, at Ser31 with a potency similar to that for
ERK1
/2 phosphorylation, the kinase responsible for TH phosphorylation at this site. Moreover, NPY co-stimulation increases the potency of ATP for both
ERK1
/2 and TH phosphorylation, while having no effect on these parameters alone. ATP and NPY had no effect on TH phosphorylation at Ser40, the primary site responsible for acute activation of the enzyme. Correspondingly, ATP and NPY did not increase TH activity. Additionally, ATP or ATP and NPY had no effect on TH expression. TH phosphorylation at Ser31 may be responsible for stabilization of the enzyme or may increase the rate and extent of phosphorylation of Ser40. We propose that ATP and NPY may serve to enhance the stimulatory effects of other agents on TH activity.
...
PMID:Tyrosine hydroxylase phosphorylation increases in response to ATP and neuropeptide Y co-stimulation of ERK2 phosphorylation. 1863 36
Agonists acting at the CB1 cannabinoid receptor in N1E-115 neuroblastoma cells were found to activate MAPK family members with reciprocal efficacies. Thus, HU 210 robustly increased phosphorylation of
ERK1
/2 whereas CP 55,940 was more effective in activating JNK. The use of selected kinase inhibitors confirmed that distinct signalling cascades were involved in these responses. This reciprocal control of MAPK activity was correlated with the observation that HU 210- and CP 55,940-mediated regulations of
tyrosine hydroxylase
gene expression were respectively impaired by MEK and JNK inhibitors. These data indicate that complex interactions of the CB1 receptor with intracellular signalling partners controlling MAPK activities may explain the apparent disparities in cellular responses to functional selective agonists.
...
PMID:Reciprocal influences of CB1 cannabinoid receptor agonists on ERK and JNK signalling in N1E-115 cells. 1895 Jun 29
The satiating potency of CCK has been well characterized, including its mediation by capsaicin-sensitive vagal primary afferents. We have previously shown that peripherally administered CCK activates the MAPK-signaling cascade in a population of nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) neurons and that preventing
ERK1
/2 phosphorylation partly attenuates CCK's satiating potency. The aim of this study was to identify the neurochemical phenotypes of the NTS neurons that exhibit CCK-induced activation of
ERK1
/2. Using confocal microscopy, we demonstrate that intraperitoneal CCK administration increases the number of neurons that express phosphorylated
ERK1
/2 (pERK1/2) in the medial and commissural subnuclei of the NTS and that CCK-induced expression of
ERK1
/2 is increased in
tyrosine hydroxylase
-immunoreactive neurons. Using Western blot analysis, we show that the robust increase in
tyrosine hydroxylase
phosphorylation obtained with intraperitoneal CCK is significantly attenuated in rats pretreated with the ERK-pathway blocker U0126 injected into the 4th ventricle. In addition, CCK injections increased pERK1/2 expression in POMC neurons in the NTS. In contrast, only the rare GAD67, neuronal nitric oxide synthase, and leptin-responsive neuron exhibited CCK-induced pERK immunoreactivity. We conclude that activation of POMC-immunoreactive neurons and
tyrosine hydroxylase
activity via the ERK-signaling pathway in the NTS likely contributes to CCK's satiating effects.
...
PMID:Phenotype of neurons in the nucleus of the solitary tract that express CCK-induced activation of the ERK signaling pathway. 1917 91
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