Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (ERK)
95,504 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs), also called stress-activated protein kinases (SAPKs), belong to the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) gene super-family. Like all the MAPKs, JNKs are activated through dual phosphorylation of a theronine residue and a tyrosine residue by a dual specificity kinase such as JNKK1/MKK4/SEK1. Here, we report the molecular cloning and characterization of hJNKK2 alpha, a human homolog of the recently reported murine MKK7 alpha. hJNKK2 alpha belongs to the MAPK kinase gene family and is expressed in many adult tissues. It is nearly identical to a recently reported human JNKK2 at the kinase domain but with major differences in both amino- and carboxyl-terminal sequences, suggesting that hJNKK2 alpha may be an alternative spliced form of this kinase. Expression of hJNKK2 alpha, but not its related kinases JNKK1/MKK4/SEK1, MEK1, MKK3, or MKK6, leads to strong activation of JNK in several cell lines. No activation of ERK or p38 kinases was observed with this kinase. An in-vitro kinase assay demonstrated that JNK1 activation by hJNKK2 alpha requires phosphorylation of the theronine and tyrosine residues at positions 183 and 185 in JNK1. Furthermore, hJNKK2 alpha activated the JNK-dependent signal transduction pathway in vivo by induction of c-Jun- and ATF2-mediated gene transcription. In conclusion, we have cloned the human homolog of murine MKK7 alpha, which may be an alternative spliced form of human JNKK2 involved in transducing specific upstream signals to regulate JNK activity in vivo.
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PMID:Molecular cloning and characterization of a human protein kinase that specifically activates c-Jun N-terminal kinase. 966 68

Curcumin, a dietary pigment in curry, suppresses tumor initiation and tumor promotion. Curcumin is also a potent inhibitor for AP-1 and NF-kappaB activation. In this report, we show that curcumin inhibits JNK activation by various agonists including PMA plus ionomycin, anisomycin, UV-C, gamma radiation, TNF-alpha, and sodium orthovanadate. Although both JNK and ERK activation by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) plus ionomycin were suppressed by curcumin, the JNK pathway was more sensitive. The IC50 (50% inhibition concentration) of curcumin was between 5-10 microM for JNK activation and was 20 microM for ERK activation. In transfection assays, curcumin moderately suppressed MEKK1-induced JNK activation; however, it effectively blocked JNK activation caused by co-transfection of TAK1, GCK, or HPK1. Curcumin did not directly inhibit JNK, SEK1, MEKK1 or HPK1 activity. Although curcumin suppressed TAK1 and GCK activities at high concentrations, this inhibition cannot fully account for the JNK inhibition by curcumin in vivo. Our data suggest that curcumin may affect the JNK pathway by interfering with the signaling molecule(s) at the same level or proximally upstream of the MAPKKK level. Taken together, the inhibition of the MEKK1-JNK pathway reveals a possible mechanism of suppression of AP-1 and NF-kappaB signaling by curcumin, and may explain the potent anti-inflammatory and anti-carcinogenic effects of this chemical.
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PMID:Inhibition of the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) signaling pathway by curcumin. 967 1

The two MAP kinases JNK and ERK direct distinct cellular activities even though they share a number of common substrates, including several transcription factors. Here we have compared JNK and ERK signalling during PC12 cell differentiation and investigated how activation of c-Jun by the MAPKs contributes to this cellular response. Exposure to nerve growth factor, or expression of constitutively active MEK1-two treatments which cause differentiation of PC12 cells into a neuronal phenotype-result in activation of ERK-type MAP kinases and phosphorylation of c-Jun on several sites including Ser63 and Ser73. Constitutively activated c-Jun, which mimics the MAPK-phosphorylated form of the protein, can induce neuronal differentiation of PC12 cells independently of upstream signals. Conversely, expression of dominant-negative c-JunbZIP prevents neurite outgrowth induced by activated MEK1. Activation of MEKK1, which stimulates the JNK pathway, is not sufficient for PC12 cell differentiation but can induce apoptosis. However, neurite outgrowth is triggered when c-Jun is co-expressed with activated MEKK1 or SEK1. Consistently, MEK-induced ERK activation in PC12 cells induces c-Jun expression, while JNK signalling does not. Therefore, dual input of expression and phosphorylation of c-Jun provided by the ERK pathway is required to direct neuronal differentiation in PC12 cells.
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PMID:Differential regulation of c-Jun by ERK and JNK during PC12 cell differentiation. 968 8

Cell survival, death, and stress signals are transduced from the cell surface to the cytoplasm and nucleus via a cascade of phosphorylation events involving the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) family. We compared the distribution of p42 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p42MAPK) and its activator MAPK or ERK kinase (MEK1; involved in transduction of growth and differentiation signals), with c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK1) and its activator MEK4 (involved in transduction of stress and death signals) in the adult rat central nervous system. All four kinases were present in the cytoplasm, dendrites, and axons of neurons. The presence of p42MAPK and JNK1 in dendrites and axons, as well as in cell bodies, suggests a role for these kinases in phosphorylation and regulation of cytoplasmic targets. A high degree of correspondence was found between the regional distribution of MEK1 and p42MAPK. Immunostaining for MEK1 and p42MAPK was intense in olfactory structures, neocortex, hippocampus, striatum, midline, and interlaminar thalamic nuclei, hypothalamus, brainstem, Purkinje cells, and spinal cord. In addition to neurons, p42MAPK was also present in oligodendrocytes. Whereas MEK4 was ubiquitously distributed, JNK1 was more selective. Immunostaining for MEK4 and JNK1 was intense in the olfactory bulb, lower cortical layers, the cholinergic basal forebrain, most nuclei of the thalamus, medial habenula, and cranial motor nuclei. The distribution of MEK1 and p42MAPK proteins only partially overlapped with that of MEK4 and JNK1. This suggests that the growth/differentiation and death/stress pathways affected by these kinases may not necessarily act to counterbalance each other in response to extracellular stimuli. The differential distribution of these kinases may control the specificity of neuronal function to extracellular signals.
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PMID:Immunolocalization of the mitogen-activated protein kinases p42MAPK and JNK1, and their regulatory kinases MEK1 and MEK4, in adult rat central nervous system. 971 50

The peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPARgamma) transcription factor plays a pivotal role in adipocyte differentiation and metabolic regulation. The transcriptional activity of PPARgamma is positively modulated by ligand binding and negatively regulated by phosphorylation mediated by the MEK/ERK signaling pathway. The phosphorylation of mouse PPARgamma1 at Ser82 by ERK causes a decrease in both basal and ligand-dependent transcriptional activity. In this report we examined the ability of other mitogen-activated protein kinase family members to phosphorylate PPARgamma1. We demonstrate that in vitro, PPARgamma1 is efficiently phosphorylated by JNK/SAPK (c-Jun N-terminal kinase or stress-activated protein kinase) but only weakly phosphorylated by p38. In transfected 293T cells, PPARgamma1 is phosphorylated at Ser82 in response to known JNK activators such as UV irradiation and anisomycin treatment. This phosphorylation is not blocked by either the specific MEK inhibitor PD98059 or the p38 inhibitor SB203580, indicating that it is independent of the MEK/ERK and p38 signaling pathways. Finally, in transient transfection reporter assays, activation of JNK by anisomycin or by overexpression of MKK4 (the upstream JNK kinase) decreased ligand-dependent PPARgamma1 transcriptional activity. These results suggest that the activation of the JNK/SAPK pathway by extracellular signals, perhaps by inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha, would result in a reduction of PPARgamma transcriptional activity and reduce the effects of PPARgamma ligands.
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PMID:c-Jun N-terminal kinase phosphorylates peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma1 and negatively regulates its transcriptional activity. 988 50

Protein kinase C (PKC) is a multigene family of enzymes consisting of at least 11 isoforms. It has been implicated in the induction of c-fos and other immediate response genes by various mitogens. The serum response element (SRE) in the c-fos promoter is necessary and sufficient for induction of transcription of c-fos by serum, growth factors, and the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA). It forms a complex with the ternary complex factor (TCF) and with a dimer of the serum response factor (SRF). TCF is the target of several signal transduction pathways and SRF is the target of the rhoA pathway. In this study we generated dominant-negative and constitutively active mutants of PKC-alpha, PKC-delta, PKC-epsilon, and PKC-zeta to determine the roles of individual isoforms of PKC in activation of the SRE. Transient-transfection assays with NIH 3T3 cells, using an SRE-driven luciferase reporter plasmid, indicated that PKC-alpha and PKC-epsilon, but not PKC-delta or PKC-zeta, mediate SRE activation. TPA-induced activation of the SRE was partially inhibited by dominant negative c-Raf, ERK1, or ERK2, and constitutively active mutants of PKC-alpha and PKC-epsilon activated the transactivation domain of Elk-1. TPA-induced activation of the SRE was also partially inhibited by a dominant-negative MEKK1. Furthermore, TPA treatment of serum-starved NIH 3T3 cells led to phosphorylation of SEK1, and constitutively active mutants of PKC-alpha and PKC-epsilon activated the transactivation domain of c-Jun, a major substrate of JNK. Constitutively active mutants of PKC-alpha and PKC-epsilon could also induce a mutant c-fos promoter which lacks the TCF binding site, and they also induce transactivation activity of the SRF. Furthermore, rhoA-mediated SRE activation was blocked by dominant negative mutants of PKC-alpha or PKC-epsilon. Taken together, these findings indicate that PKC-alpha and PKC-epsilon can enhance the activities of at least three signaling pathways that converge on the SRE: c-Raf-MEK1-ERK-TCF, MEKK1-SEK1-JNK-TCF, and rhoA-SRF. Thus, specific isoforms of PKC may play a role in integrating networks of signal transduction pathways that control gene expression.
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PMID:Novel roles of specific isoforms of protein kinase C in activation of the c-fos serum response element. 989 Oct 65

The stress-activated p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38 MAPK), a member of the subgroup of mammalian kinases, appears to play an important role in regulating inflammatory responses, including cytokine secretion and apoptosis. The upstream mediators that link extracellular signals with the p38 MAPK signaling pathway are currently unknown. Here we demonstrate that pp125 focal adhesion kinase-related tyrosine kinase RAFTK (also known as PYK2, CADTK) is activated specifically by methylmethane sulfonate (MMS) and hyperosmolarity but not by ultraviolet radiation, ionizing radiation, or cis-platinum. Overexpression of RAFTK leads to the activation of p38 MAPK. Furthermore, overexpression of a dominant-negative mutant of RAFTK (RAFTK K-M) inhibits MMS-induced p38 MAPK activation. MKK3 and MKK6 are known potential constituents of p38 MAPK signaling pathway, whereas SEK1 and MEK1 are upstream activators of SAPK/JNK and ERK pathways, respectively. We observe that the dominant-negative mutant of MKK3 but not of MKK6, SEK1, or MEK1 inhibits RAFTK-induced p38 MAPK activity. Furthermore, the results demonstrate that treatment of cells with 1, 2-bis(2-aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, tetra(acetoxymethyl)-ester, a membrane-permeable calcium chelator, inhibits MMS-induced activation of RAFTK and p38 MAPK. Taken together, these findings indicate that RAFTK represents a stress-sensitive mediator of the p38 MAPK signaling pathway in response to certain cytotoxic agents.
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PMID:Activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase by PYK2/related adhesion focal tyrosine kinase-dependent mechanism. 1018 97

The TEL/PDGFR beta (T/P) fusion protein isolated from patients bearing a t(5;12) translocation is transforming when expressed in haematopoietic cells. To examine the signal transduction events activated by this protein, we measured the effect of T/P on activation of the c-Jun N-terminal kinase/stress-activated protein kinase (JNK/SAPK) in mouse bone marrow-derived Ba/F3 cells. Significant increase in the activity of JNK/SAPK1 was observed in transient transfection as well as in Ba/F3 cells stably expressing T/P. This activation was abrogated when the T/P-expressing cells were treated with a specific inhibitor of the PDGFR beta tyrosine kinase, indicating that the activity of the PDGFR beta part of the fusion protein was involved in JNK/SAPK activation. Expression of a dominant negative mutant of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 4 (MKK4), a direct activator of JNK/SAPK, prevented T/P-induced JNK/SAPK activation. In addition, inhibition of phosphoinositide-3 OH kinase (PI-3 kinase), a promoting survival factor, potentiated the effect of T/P on JNK/SAPK activation. Interestingly, expression of T/P was shown to initiate an apoptotic response that was enhanced by treatment of cells with the PI-3 kinase inhibitor LY294002, suggesting that T/P mediated cell death through activation of JNK/SAPK signalling pathway. Consistent with this hypothesis, expression of the dominant negative mutant of MKK4 decreased T/P-mediated apoptosis, while a dominant-negative mutant of PI-3 kinase enhances cell death. These findings indicate that activation of JNK/SAPK by T/P is related to apoptosis rather than cell proliferation and transformation.
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PMID:The oncogenic TEL/PDGFR beta fusion protein induces cell death through JNK/SAPK pathway. 1044 51

Two collagen receptors, integrins alpha1beta1 and alpha2beta1, can regulate distinct functions in cells. Ligation of alpha1beta1, unlike alpha2beta1, has been shown to result in recruitment of Shc and activation of the Ras/ERK pathway. To identify the downstream signaling molecules activated by alpha2beta1 integrin, we have overexpressed wild-type alpha2, or chimeric alpha2 subunit with alpha1 integrin cytoplasmic domain in human osteosarcoma cells (Saos-2) lacking endogenous alpha2beta1. The chimeric alpha2/alpha1 chain formed a functional heterodimer with beta1. In contrast to alpha2/alpha1 chimera, forced expression of alpha2 integrin resulted in upregulation of alpha1 (I) collagen gene transcription in response to three-dimensional collagen, indicating that the cytoplasmic domain of alpha2 integrin was required for signaling. Furthermore, signals mediated by alpha2beta1 integrin specifically activated the p38alpha isoform, and selective p38 inhibitors blocked upregulation of collagen gene transcription. Dominant negative mutants of Cdc42, MKK3, and MKK4 prevented alpha2beta1 integrin-mediated activation of p38alpha. RhoA had also some inhibitory effect, whereas dominant negative Rac was not effective. Our findings show the isoform-specific activation of p38 by alpha2beta1 integrin ligation and identify Cdc42, MKK3, and MKK4 as possible downstream effectors. These observations reveal a novel signaling mechanism of alpha2beta1 integrin that is distinct from ones previously described for other integrins.
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PMID:Integrin alpha2beta1 mediates isoform-specific activation of p38 and upregulation of collagen gene transcription by a mechanism involving the alpha2 cytoplasmic tail. 1052 44

The c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) can be activated in T-cells either by the combination of TCR and CD28 costimulation or by a variety of stress-related stimuli including UV light, H(2)O(2), and hyperosmolar sorbitol solutions. In T-lymphocytes, TCR/CD28 stimulation of JNK leads to induction of new gene expression via c-Jun, ATF-2, and Elk-1. Phosphorylation of c-Jun in CD4(+) T-cells stimulated by CD3/CD4/CD28 cross-linking declines with age, due to diminished activation of JNK. Here we show that the age-related decline in TCR/CD28 activation of JNK reflects two effects of age: the accumulation of memory cells (in which JNK stimulation is poor regardless of donor age) and age-dependent declines in JNK activation within the naive subset. Cyclosporin A inhibits induction of JNK function by TCR/CD28, PMA/ionomycin, ceramide, or H(2)O(2), but not induction by UV light or hyperosmolar sorbitol. Although aging impairs JNK induction by UV light, it has no effect on JNK activation by ceramide, H(2)O(2), or sorbitol. The data as a whole indicate that there are at least four pathways that activate JNK in CD4(+) T-cells, of which two are age-sensitive and two others unaffected by aging. Two of the pathways (UV and hyperosmolar sorbitol) are insensitive to cyclosporin inhibition. Finally, we show that the alterations in JNK function are not due to changes in the expression of MKK4, an upstream activator of JNK, and that another JNK kinase, MKK7, is not expressed in splenic T-cells.
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PMID:Age-sensitive and -insensitive pathways leading to JNK activation in mouse CD4(+) T-cells. 1060 25


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