Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) is phosphorylated at four sites in situ and in vivo, and the protein kinases that phosphorylate three of these sites (Ser8,Ser19,Ser40) have been identified. In intact cells, the phosphorylation of the fourth site (Ser31) is increased in response to phorbol esters or nerve growth factor (NGF). Here, we show that Ser31 is phosphorylated by
ERK1
and ERK2, two myelin basic protein and microtubule-associated protein kinases. Extracts of NGF- or bradykinin-treated PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cells were fractionated on Mono Q columns. Protein kinase activity toward Ser31 in TH was present in two peaks corresponding to myelin basic protein kinase activities previously identified as
ERK1
and ERK2. Phosphorylation of purified TH in vitro by both kinases was selective for Ser31 up to at least 0.6 mol of phosphate per mol of TH subunit. Treatment of intact PC12 cells with bradykinin or NGF increased both the phosphorylation of TH-Ser31 in situ and the catalytic activity of ERKs (measured subsequently in vitro with myelin basic protein as substrate). Pretreatment of the cells with genistein (a protein-tyrosine kinase inhibitor) decreased the bradykinin- but not the NGF-induced changes in both TH-Ser31 phosphorylation and
ERK
activity. Genistein also inhibited the increases in Ser31 phosphorylation produced by phorbol dibutyrate, muscarine, and Ba2+. The data indicate that
ERK
activity is responsible for phosphorylating TH at Ser31 in intact cells and suggest that TH-Ser31 phosphorylation may be regulated by multiple signaling pathways that converge at or prior to the activation of the ERKs.
...
PMID:ERK1 and ERK2, two microtubule-associated protein 2 kinases, mediate the phosphorylation of tyrosine hydroxylase at serine-31 in situ. 134 49
Expression of oncogenic ras in PC12 cells causes neuronal differentiation and sustained protein tyrosine phosphorylation and activity of extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs), p42erk2 and
p44erk1
. Oncogenic N-ras-induced neuronal differentiation is inhibited by compounds that block ERK protein tyrosine phosphorylation or ERK activity, indicating that ERKs are not only activated by p21ras but serve as the primary downstream effectors of p21ras. Treatment of PC12 cells with nerve growth factor or fibroblast growth factor results in neuronal differentiation and in a sustained elevation of p21ras activity, of ERK activity, and of ERK tyrosine phosphorylation. Epidermal growth factor, which does not cause neuronal differentiation, stimulates only transient (< 1 hr) activation of p21ras and ERKs. These data indicate that transient activation of p21ras and, consequently, ERKs is not sufficient for induction of neuronal differentiation. Prolonged ERK activity is required: a consequence of sustained activation of p21ras by the growth factor
receptor protein tyrosine kinase
.
...
PMID:PC12 cell neuronal differentiation is associated with prolonged p21ras activity and consequent prolonged ERK activity. 138 73
As detected by coimmunoprecipitation from PC12 cells, NGF induces rapid association between
ERK1
(a growth factor-activated serine/threonine protein kinase) and gp140prototrk NGF receptors. In contrast, no such association is found with the closely related ERK2. Anti-trk immunocomplexes generated from NGF-treated cells also contain protein kinase activity that shares many properties with soluble
ERK1
. The association of both
ERK1
protein and
ERK
-like kinase activity with gp140prototrk is maximal by 5 min of NGF treatment, persists for approximately 1 hr, and subsequently declines by 18 hr. Treatment with either basic fibroblast growth factor, epidermal growth factor, or orthovanadate also leads to association of
ERK1
with gp140prototrk without tyrosine phosphorylation of the latter. The interaction between
ERK1
and gp140prototrk may prove relevant to the NGF mechanism.
...
PMID:NGF and other growth factors induce an association between ERK1 and the NGF receptor, gp140prototrk. 146 7
The small GTP-binding protein Ras appears to be required for transformation and differentiation induced by tyrosine kinases. The Ras requirement may be limited to a few tyrosine kinase-regulated signaling pathways or may be universal for all tyrosine kinase actions. Because both Ras and the microtubule-associated protein 2 kinases
ERK1
and ERK2 have been implicated in events that lead to neurite outgrowth, we explored the possibility that Ras and ERKs may lie on the same signaling pathway. Utilizing PC-12 rat adrenal pheochromocytoma cell lines that contain a dominant inhibitory Ras mutant (S17N-Ras(H)), we found that Ras was required for stimulation of the
ERK
cascade by nerve growth factor but apparently not by the heterotrimeric G protein activator AlF4-. Within this cascade, Ras appears to be upstream of an
ERK
activator, raising the intriguing possibility that Ras may directly regulate a serine/threonine protein kinase.
...
PMID:Evidence for a Ras-dependent extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK) cascade. 149 81
Growth hormone (GH) influences a number of tissue-specific biological activities in diverse cell types. However, little is known about the biochemical pathway by which the signal initiated by GH binding to its cell-surface receptor is transduced. The GH receptor has been reported to be phosphorylated on tyrosine in 3T3-F442A cells, a cell line in which GH promotes differentiation and inhibits mitogen-stimulated growth; however, it is not known whether tyrosine phosphorylation plays a role in GH signal transduction. We report that GH treatment of 3T3-F442A cells resulted in the rapid tyrosine phosphorylation of at least four proteins. These included 42- (pp42) and 45-kDa (pp45) proteins immunologically related to
ERK1
(extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1), a member of a family of serine/threonine protein kinases that are phosphorylated on tyrosine in response to mitogens. Prolonged phorbol ester pretreatment attenuated the tyrosine phosphorylation of pp42 and pp45 in platelet-derived growth factor-treated cells, but not in GH-treated cells. Maximal GH-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of pp42 and pp45 coincided with peak levels of a 42-kDa renaturable MBP kinase activity in lysates of GH-treated cells resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The observation that multiple cellular proteins are rapidly phosphorylated on tyrosine in response to physiological concentrations of GH suggests that tyrosine phosphorylation plays a role in GH signal transduction. Moreover, the stimulation of tyrosine phosphorylation of
ERK
-related proteins by GH suggests that mitogens and nonmitogens may employ common phosphotyrosyl proteins in the activation of ultimately distinct cellular programs.
...
PMID:Growth hormone stimulates the tyrosine phosphorylation of 42- and 45-kDa ERK-related proteins. 153 56
A consensus cyclic AMP response element (CRE) in the murine prostaglandin synthase-2 (PGS2) promoter is essential for pgs2 gene expression induced by pp60v-src, the v-src oncogene product. In this study, we investigate (i) the transcription factors active at the PGS2 "CRE site" in response to v-src activation and (ii) the signal transduction pathways by which pp60v-src activates these transcription factors. Transient transfection assays with pgs2 promoter/luciferase reporter chimeric genes suggest that c-Jun mediates v-src-induced pgs2 gene expression. Antibody supershift experiments demonstrate that c-Jun can participate in a complex with the pgs2 promoter CRE site. Moreover, in vitro immuno-complex assays demonstrate that pp60v-src expression strongly activates c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK1) enzyme activity. Serines 63 and 73, the sites of c-Jun phosphorylation by JNK, are essential for v-src-induced, pgs2 promoter-mediated luciferase expression. Cotransfection studies with plasmids expressing wild-type JNK, dominant-negative JNK, and dominant-negative MEKK-1 confirm that activation of the Ras/MEKK-1/JNK/c-Jun pathway is required for v-src-induced pgs2 gene expression. Overexpression of either wild-type
ERK-1
or ERK-2 proteins also potentiate v-src-mediated luciferase expression driven by the pgs2 promoter, and expression of dominant-negative mutants of
ERK-1
, ERK-2, or Raf-1 attenuate this response. Thus, in response to v-src expression, a Ras/MEKK-1/JNK signal transduction pathway activating c-Jun and a Ras/Raf-1/
ERK
pathway converge to mediate pgs2 gene expression via the CRE site in the pgs2 promoter.
...
PMID:v-src induces prostaglandin synthase 2 gene expression by activation of the c-Jun N-terminal kinase and the c-Jun transcription factor. 749 26
The signal transduction initiated by the human cytokine interleukin-8 (IL-8), the main chemotactic cytokine for neutrophils, was investigated and found to encompass the stimulation of protein kinases. More specifically, IL-8 caused a transient, dose and time dependent activation of a Ser/Thr kinase activity towards myelin basic protein (MBP) and the MBP-derived peptide APRTPGGRR patterned after the specific concensus sequence in MBP for
ERK
enzymes. The activated MBP kinase was furthermore identified as an extracellular signal regulated kinase (
ERK1
) based on several criteria such as substrate specificity, molecular weight, activation-dependent mobility shift, and recognition by anti-
ERK
antibodies. For comparison, the chemotactic response of neutrophils to a stimulus of bacterial origin (fMet-Leu-Phe or fMLP) was also examined and found to involve the activation of a similar
ERK
enzyme. The present data clearly indicate that in terminally differentiated, non-proliferating human cells, the MBP kinase/
ERK
activity can serve other purposes than mitogenic signaling, and that processes such as chemotaxis, induced by bacterial peptides as well as by human cytokines like IL-8, involve the regulation of
ERK
enzymes.
...
PMID:Interleukin-8 activates microtubule-associated protein 2 kinase (ERK1) in human neutrophils. 752 47
Quantitative blot immunolabeling techniques were used to determine the concentrations of
ERK1
(M(r) 44 kDa) and ERK2 (M(r) 42 kDa), the two major extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases, in different regions of rat brain. The aggregate
ERK
concentrations (
ERK1
and ERK2) were relatively high in each of the brain regions studied, ranging from approximately 0.35 ng/microgram protein in cerebellum to approximately 1.2 ng/microgram protein in nucleus accumbens. However, differences in the regional distributions of
ERK1
and ERK2 resulted in ratios of their relative abundance that differed by close to 10-fold among the regions studied. The ratios of
ERK1
protein to ERK2 protein varied along a rostral-caudal gradient from a low of 0.16 in frontal cortex to a high of 1.5 in pons/medulla. In hypotonic homogenates from regions at either extreme of the gradient,
ERK1
and ERK2 were both found to be predominantly (> 80%) soluble. In subcellular fractions prepared from sucrose homogenates of frontal cortex and pons/medulla, both
ERK1
and ERK2 were enriched in the synaptosomal and cytosolic fractions, whereas ERK2 was also enriched in the microsomal fraction. By contrast, in subfractions containing purified nuclei, levels of
ERK1
and ERK2 were about one-third of those seen in homogenates and, in subfractions enriched in mitochondria, both
ERK1
and ERK2 were barely detectable. The catalytic activity of the ERKs paralleled their protein levels in all of the brain regions except the hippocampus, in which the activity and phosphotyrosine content were disproportionately high. As a possible explanation for this apparent disparity, the regional distribution of
ERK
kinase (MEK), which phosphorylates and activates the ERKs, was also investigated. The levels of immunoreactivity of the M(r) 45 kDa
ERK
kinase band differed by about threefold among the brain regions, with the highest levels being present in nucleus accumbens, hippocampus, substantia nigra, and caudate/putamen. Therefore, a higher concentration of
ERK
kinase immunoreactivity did not appear to account for the disproportionate levels of
ERK
activity and phosphotyrosine content in the hippocampus. Potential regulation of
ERK
and
ERK
kinase levels was also investigated in rats subjected to chronic morphine treatment.
ERK1
and ERK2 levels were increased selectively in locus coeruleus and caudate/putamen after chronic morphine treatment, whereas
ERK
kinase immunoreactivity remained unchanged in all of the brain regions analyzed. In summary, the regional differences in
ERK
and
ERK
kinase expression and the region-specific regulation of
ERK
expression suggest that
ERK
-related signaling may play an important role in CNS function and its adaptive responses.
...
PMID:Extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases (ERKs) and ERK kinase (MEK) in brain: regional distribution and regulation by chronic morphine. 753 1
Although signaling by the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor is thought to be dependent on receptor tyrosine kinase activity, it is clear that mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase can be activated by receptors lacking kinase activity. Since analysis of the signaling pathways used by kinase-defective receptors could reveal otherwise masked capabilities, we examined in detail the tyrosine phosphorylations and enzymes of the MAP kinase pathway induced by kinase-defective EGF receptors. Following EGF stimulation of B82L cells expressing a kinase-defective EGF receptor mutant (K721M), we found that ERK2 and
ERK1
MAP kinases, as well as MEK1 and MEK2 were all activated, and SHC became prominently tyrosine-phosphorylated. By contrast, kinase-defective receptors failed to induce detectable phosphorylations of GAP (GTPase-activating protein), p62, JAK1, or p91STAT1, all of which were robustly phosphorylated by wild-type receptors. These data demonstrate that kinase-defective receptors induce several protein tyrosine phosphorylations, but that these represent only a subset of those seen with wild-type receptors. This suggests that kinase-defective receptors activate a heterologous tyrosine kinase with a specificity different from the EGF receptor. We found that kinase-defective receptors induced ErbB2/c-
Neu
enzymatic activation and ErbB2/c-
Neu
binding to SHC at a level even greater than that induced by wild-type receptors. Thus, heterodimerization with and activation of endogenous ErbB2/c-
Neu
is a possible mechanism by which kinase-defective receptors stimulate the MAP kinase pathway.
...
PMID:An incomplete program of cellular tyrosine phosphorylations induced by kinase-defective epidermal growth factor receptors. 753 32
We have attempted to dissect signaling pathways involved in transmitting activating signals from the cell surface to the nucleus by reconstituting them in the baculovirus/Sf9 cell system. We have used this system to coexpress different combinations of the critical signaling proteins pp60v-src, p21v-ras, Raf-1 and
ERK-1
and assayed the effects of resulting signaling cascades on the modifications of coexpressed transcription factors c-jun or c-fos. We observe that activation of
ERK-1
via Raf-1 and p21ras dependent signals can result in the hyperphosphorylation of c-jun. In contrast, c-fos appears to be the target of two Raf-1 activated modifying signals: one independent of
ERK-1
and the other dependent on
ERK-1
stimulation. Thus, coexpression of c-fos with pp60v-src, p21v-ras or constitutively active forms of Raf-1 results in a dramatic reduction of its electrophoretic mobility in the absence of coexpressed
ERK-1
. Activation of this
ERK-1
-independent pathway together with the
ERK-1
dependent pathway that modifies c-jun results in additional modification of c-fos. Our observation of a Raf-1 activated,
ERK
-independent signaling pathway is consistent with previous reports that constitutively active Raf-1 can, in some cell types, result in transformation or differentiation without activation of ERKs. Our data indicate the presence of multiple Raf-1 activated pathways that lead to modification of transcription factors.
...
PMID:Reconstitution of signal transduction from the membrane to the nucleus in a baculovirus expression system: activation of Raf-1 leads to hypermodification of c-jun and c-fos via multiple pathways. 754 94
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>