Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (focal adhesion kinase)
44,029 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Neuregulin-1, a growth factor that potentiates myogenesis induces glucose transport through translocation of glucose transporters, in an additive manner to insulin, in muscle cells. In this study, we examined the signaling pathway required for a recombinant active neuregulin-1 isoform (rhHeregulin-beta(1), 177-244, HRG) to stimulate glucose uptake in L6E9 myotubes. The stimulatory effect of HRG required binding to ErbB3 in L6E9 myotubes. PI3K activity is required for HRG action in both muscle cells and tissue. In L6E9 myotubes, HRG stimulated PKBalpha, PKBgamma, and PKCzeta activities. TPCK, an inhibitor of PDK1, abolished both HRG- and insulin-induced glucose transport. To assess whether PKB was necessary for the effects of HRG on glucose uptake, cells were infected with adenoviruses encoding dominant negative mutants of PKBalpha. Dominant negative PKB reduced PKB activity and insulin-stimulated glucose transport but not HRG-induced glucose transport. In contrast, transduction of L6E9 myotubes with adenoviruses encoding a dominant negative kinase-inactive PKCzeta abolished both HRG- and insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. In soleus muscle, HRG induced PKCzeta, but not PKB phosphorylation. HRG also stimulated the activity of p70S6K, p38MAPK, and p42/p44MAPK and inhibition of p42/p44MAPK partially repressed HRG action on glucose uptake. HRG did not affect AMPKalpha(1) or AMPKalpha(2) activities. In all, HRG stimulated glucose transport in muscle cells by activation of a pathway that requires PI3K, PDK1, and PKCzeta, but not PKB, and that shows cross-talk with the MAPK pathway. The PI3K, PDK1, and PKCzeta pathway can be considered as an alternative mechanism, independent of insulin, to induce glucose uptake.
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PMID:Neuregulin signaling on glucose transport in muscle cells. 1471 29

Keratinocyte growth factor (KGF or FGF-7) stimulates alveolar type II cell proliferation, but little is known about the signaling pathways involved. We investigated the role of the ERK (p42/44 mitogen activated protein [MAP] kinase) and phosphatidylinositol 3-OH kinase (PI3 kinase) pathways on alveolar type II cell proliferation and differentiation. Rat type II cells were cultured on tissue culture plastic and Matrigel in the presence or absence of KGF and specific chemical inhibitors PD98059, LY294002, and rapamycin at various concentrations. Proliferation was measured by thymidine incorporation and DNA quantitation, and differentiation was measured by expression of surfactant protein A and alkaline phosphatase. We demonstrate that KGF activates distal effectors of the PI3 kinase pathway, PKB/Akt, and p70S6 kinase, as well as p42/44 MAP kinase proteins. Inhibition of these pathways with PD98059, LY294002, or rapamycin inhibited type II cell proliferation but had no significant effect on differentiation. KGF did not activate the c-Jun kinase or p38 MAP kinase pathways. We conclude that the p42/44 MAP kinase and PI3 kinase pathways are important in regulating alveolar type II cell proliferation in response to KGF.
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PMID:Keratinocyte growth factor stimulates alveolar type II cell proliferation through the extracellular signal-regulated kinase and phosphatidylinositol 3-OH kinase pathways. 1474 97

Recently, we demonstrated that the cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitor celecoxib acts to significantly suppress the growth of rat C611B cholangiocarcinoma (ChC) cells in vitro. To establish a molecular mechanism for this growth suppression, we investigated the effects of celecoxib on apoptotic signaling pathways in cultured rat C611B ChC cells. Celecoxib and another COX-2 inhibitor, rofecoxib, at 5 microM were almost equally effective in inhibiting prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2)) production by these cells, but at this low concentration, neither inhibitor suppressed growth or induced apoptosis. Celecoxib at 50 microM induced prominent apoptosis in these cells, whereas rofecoxib at 50 microM was without effect in either suppressing growth or inducing apoptosis. Celecoxib (50 microM) did not alter Bcl-2, Bcl-x(L), or COX-2 protein levels, nor did it inhibit p42/44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) phosphorylation; however, it significantly suppressed serine/threonine kinase Akt/PKB (Akt) phosphorylation and kinase activity in cultured C611B cells. This effect, in turn, directly correlated with Bax translocation to mitochondria, cytochrome c release into cytosol, activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3, and cleavage of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). Addition of 25 microM PGE(2) to C611B cell cultures blocked the apoptotic actions of celecoxib. Rofecoxib (50 microM) was without effect in suppressing Akt phosphorylation and caspase-3 activation. In vivo, celecoxib partially suppressed tumorigenic growth of C611B ChC cells. In conclusion, our results indicate that celecoxib preferentially acts in vitro to induce apoptosis in ChC cells through a mechanism involving Akt inactivation, Bax translocation, and cytochrome c release. Our in vivo results further suggest celecoxib might have potential therapeutic or chemopreventive value against ChC.
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PMID:Celecoxib-induced apoptosis in rat cholangiocarcinoma cells mediated by Akt inactivation and Bax translocation. 1505 7

Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) results from malignant transformation of a primitive hematopoietic cell by the BCR/ABL oncogene. The breakpoint cluster region/ABL (BCR/ABL) tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib mesylate (imatinib) is highly effective in inducing remissions in CML. However, the effects of imatinib on intracellular signaling in primary progenitor cells are not well described. We show that imatinib exposure resulted in a significant dose-responsive reduction in BCR/ABL kinase activity in CML CD34+ cells. However, imatinib treatment resulted in an increase in activity of p42/44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), an important downstream effector of BCR/ABL. Increased MAPK activity was growth factor dependent. Pharmacologic inhibition of MAPK using MAPK/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase-1/2 (MEK-1/2) inhibitors significantly reduced CML progenitor proliferation. Combined treatment with a MEK-1/2 inhibitor and imatinib significantly increased suppression of CML progenitors compared with either inhibitor alone. In contrast, imatinib treatment resulted in a small reduction in AKT activity. Combined treatment with a phosphatidylinositol-3 (PI-3) kinase inhibitor and imatinib significantly increased suppression of CML progenitor growth compared with either inhibitor alone. We conclude that inhibition of BCR/ABL kinase activity in CML progenitors by imatinib results in a growth factor-dependent compensatory increase in MAPK activity and in only partial inhibition of PI-3 kinase activity. These mechanisms may contribute to incomplete elimination of CML progenitors by imatinib.
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PMID:BCR/ABL kinase inhibition by imatinib mesylate enhances MAP kinase activity in chronic myelogenous leukemia CD34+ cells. 1507 Jun 99

Various hormones and growth factors have been implicated in progression of prostate cancer, but their role and the underlying molecular mechanism(s) involved remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the role of human growth hormone (GH) and its receptor (GHR) in human prostate cancer. We first demonstrated mRNA expression of GHR and of its exon 9-truncated isoform (GHR(tr)) in benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH) and prostate adenocarcinoma patient tissues, as well as in LNCaP, PC3 and DU145 human prostate cancer cell lines. GHR mRNA levels were 80% higher and GHR(tr) only 25% higher, in the carcinoma tissues than in BPH. Both isoforms were also expressed in LNCaP and PC3 cell lines and somewhat less so in DU145 cells. The LNCaP cell GHR protein was further characterized, on the basis of its M(r) of 120kDa, its binding to two different GHR monoclonal antibodies, its high affinity and purely somatogenic binding to (125)I-hGH and its ability to secrete GH binding protein, all characteristic of a functional GHR. Furthermore, GH induced rapid, time- and dose-dependent signaling events in LNCaP cells, including phosphorylation of JAK2 tyrosine kinase, of GHR itself and of STAT5A (JAK2-STAT5A pathway), of p42/p44 MAPK and of Akt/PKB. No effect of GH (72h) could be shown on basal or androgen-induced LNCaP cell proliferation nor on PSA secretion. Interestingly, however, GH caused a rapid (2-12h) though transient striking increase in immunoreactive androgen receptor (AR) levels (< or =5-fold), followed by a slower (24-48h) reduction (< or = 80%), with only modest parallel changes in serine-phosphorylated AR. In conclusion, the GH-induced activation of signaling pathways, its effects on AR protein in LNCaP cells and the isoform-specific regulation of GHR in prostate cancer patient tissues, suggest that GH, most likely in concert with other hormones and growth factors, may play an important role in progression of human prostate cancer.
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PMID:Growth hormone (GH) receptors in prostate cancer: gene expression in human tissues and cell lines and characterization, GH signaling and androgen receptor regulation in LNCaP cells. 1519 5

HHV-8-GPCR is a chemokine-like receptor encoded by KSHV, the etiologic agent of KS. HHV-8-GPCR is constitutively active. Although it is homologous to mammalian CXCR2, it binds CXC and CC chemokines. Structure-function analysis showed that chemokines bind primarily to the amino terminus whereas signaling occurs in the absence of: the amino terminus, which is, therefore, not a tethered agonist. In in vitro systems, HHV-8-GPCR signals via multiple transduction pathways including, activation of phospholipase C and PKC, inhibition of adenylyl cyclase, activation of nuclear factor-kappaB; activation PI 3-kinase, p42/44 MAPK and Akt/PKB, and activation of JNK/SAPK, p38 MAPK and RAFTK. HHV-8-GPCR is important in the HHV-8 life cycle because HHV-8-GPCR-deficient viruses do not replicate in response to chemokines and exhibit, less efficient reactivation from latency. Although the role of HHV-8-GPCR in the pathogenesis of KS has not been defined, expression of HHV-8-GPCR resulted in the development of angioproliferative, KS-like tumors in transgenic mice. As endothelial cells may be targets of HHV-8 infection, HHV-8-GPCR has been studied in endothelial cells in vitro in which it affects cell adhesion and migration, increases cell survival, and stimulates secretion of proinflammatory cytokines and proangiogenic factors. Based on these findings and the observation that HHV-8-GPCR is expressed in only a few endothelial- like "spindle cells" within KS lesions, we propose that HHV-8-GPCR is involved in KS pathogenesis by stimulating secretion of proinflammatory/proangiogenic factors that act in a paracrine fashion to cause tumorigenesis.
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PMID:Insights into the viral G protein-coupled receptor encoded by human herpesvirus type 8 (HHV-8). 1520 3

Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk), a nonreceptor protein kinase initially found to be expressed only in hemopoietic cells, has now been shown to be expressed in nonhemopoietic cells and to mediate signaling of various cytokines. Whether Syk plays any role in TNF signaling was investigated. Treatment of Jurkat T cells with TNF activated Syk kinase but not ZAP70, another member of Syk kinase family, and the optimum activation occurred at 10 s and with 1 nM TNF. TNF also activated Syk in myeloid and epithelial cells. TNF-induced Syk activation was abolished by piceatannol (Syk-selective inhibitor), which led to the suppression of TNF-induced activation of c- JNK, p38 MAPK, and p44/p42 MAPK. Jurkat cells that did not express Syk (JCaM1, JCaM1/lck) showed lack of TNF-induced Syk, JNK, p38 MAPK, and p44/p42 MAPK activation, as well as TNF-induced IkappaBalpha phosphorylation, IkappaBalpha degradation, and NF-kappaB activation. TNF-induced NF-kappaB activation was enhanced by overexpression of Syk by Syk-cDNA and suppressed when Syk expression was down-regulated by expression of Syk-small interfering RNA (siRNA-Syk). The apoptotic effects of TNF were reduced by up-regulation of NF-kappaB by Syk-cDNA, and enhanced by down-regulation of NF-kappaB by siRNA-Syk. Immunoprecipitation of cells with Syk Abs showed TNF-dependent association of Syk with both TNFR1 and TNFR2; this association was enhanced by up-regulation of Syk expression with Syk-cDNA and suppressed by down-regulation of Syk using siRNA-Syk. Overall, our results demonstrate that Syk activation plays an essential role in TNF-induced activation of JNK, p38 MAPK, p44/p42 MAPK, NF-kappaB, and apoptosis.
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PMID:TNF activates Syk protein tyrosine kinase leading to TNF-induced MAPK activation, NF-kappaB activation, and apoptosis. 1524 Jun 95

Transfection of sense cDNA of N-acetylglucosamyltransferase V (GnTV-S) into human H7721 hepatocarcinoma cells resulted in an increase in the N-acetylglucosaminebeta1,6mannosealpha1,3- branch (GnT-V product) on the N-glycans of epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGFR), and promotion of its EGF binding and tyrosine autophosphorylation, but showed little effect on the expression of EGFR protein. The phosphorylation at T308, S473 and tyrosine residue(s) and the activity of protein kinase B (Akt/PKB) as well as the phosphorylation of p42/44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and MAPK kinase (MEK) before and after EGF stimulation were concomitantly increased. Conversely, in the antisense GnT-V (GnTV-AS)-transfected H7721 cells, all the results were the reverse of those with GnTV-S-transfected cells. After the cells were treated with 1-deoxymannojirimycin, an inhibitor of N-glycan processing at high mannose, or antibody against the extracellular glycan domain of EGFR, the differences in PKB activity, p42/44 MAPK and MEK phosphorylation among GnTV-S-, GnTV-AS- and mock-transfected cells were significantly attenuated. These findings indicate that the altered expression of GnT-V will change the glycan structure and function of EGFR, which may modify downstream signal transduction.
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PMID:N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase V modifies the signaling pathway of epidermal growth factor receptor. 1524 55

Rat neonatal ventricular myocytes exposed to simulated ischaemia and reperfusion (SI/R) were used as an in vitro model to delineate the role(s) of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), p38 and c-Jun NH(2)-terminal protein kinase (JNK), as well as PKB in apoptosis. Exposure of the myocytes to SI (simulated ischaemia - energy depletion induced by KCN and 2-deoxy- D-glucose) reduced cell viability, as measured by the 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay, and stimulated apoptosis as evidenced by caspase-3 activation and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) cleavage. However, morphological evidence of increased apoptosis, detected by staining with Hoechst 33342, was only seen in response to reperfusion. This suggests that although ischaemic conditions are sufficient to induce cellular markers of apoptosis (PARP cleavage and caspase-3 activation), reperfusion is required to complete the apoptotic pathway in these cells. Furthermore, SI resulted in a rapid, strong, biphasic activation of p38 concomitant with a weak and transient activation of the two ERK isoenzymes, p42/p44-MAPK. Reperfusion for 5 minutes resulted in a strong phosphorylation of p42/p44-MAPK, while no additional p38 activation was seen at this stage. On the other hand, p46/p54-MAPK (JNK) was phosphorylated in response to 5 minutes of reperfusion only and not during SI alone. A peak of PKB/Akt (Ser(473)) activity was seen within 5 minutes of exposure to SI, whereas PKB/Akt (Thr(308)) phosphorylation remained at the baseline level. Both PKB/Akt phosphorylation sites (Ser(473) and Thr(308)) were phosphorylated after 5 minutes of reperfusion. Inhibition of PI-3-kinase activity, using wortmannin, decreased phosphorylation on both sites during SI. However, only SI/R-induced PKB/Akt phosphorylation on Thr(308) was reduced by wortmannin. Myocytes pre-treated with SB203580, a p38-inhibitor, displayed a significant increase in cell viability [63.67 +/- 1.85 to 84.33 +/- 4.8% (p < 0.05)] and attenuation of the apoptotic index during SI/R [22.6 +/- 2.94% to 9 +/- 0.43% (p < 0.001)], while SP600125, a specific JNK inhibitor, caused a significant increase in caspase-3 activation [1.66 +/- 0.03 fold to 2.56 +/- 0.27 fold (p < 0.001)] and apoptotic index [22.6 +/- 2.94% to 32.75 +/- 6.13% (p < 0.05)]. However, PD98059, an ERK inhibitor, failed to affect apoptosis during SI/R. Inhibition of PI-3-kinase prevented the increase in mitochondrial viability usually observed during reperfusion. Interestingly, wortmannin caused a significant increase in PARP cleavage during reperfusion, but had no effect on caspase-3 activation or the apoptotic index. Our results suggest that p38 has a pro-apoptotic role while JNK phosphorylation is protective in our cell model and that these kinases act via caspase-3 to prevent or promote cell survival in response to SI/R-induced injury.
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PMID:p38 and JNK have distinct regulatory functions on the development of apoptosis during simulated ischaemia and reperfusion in neonatal cardiomyocytes. 1530 13

A key feature in the molecular pathogenesis of liver fibrosis requires maintenance of the activated hepatic stellate cell (HSC) phenotype by both proliferation and inhibition of apoptosis. We provide evidence that leptin is a potent HSC mitogen and dramatically inhibits stellate cell apoptosis. Leptin proved to be as potent an HSC mitogen as platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) as assessed by bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation in isolated primary HSCs; data using fluorescent propidium iodide (PI) uptake revealed that leptin, like PDGF, increased HSC populations in the S- and G2/M-phases of the cell cycle. Leptin resulted in a robust increase in cyclin D1 expression. Using the chemical inhibitor of Janus kinase 2 (Jak2) activity, AG 490, and overexpression of the suppressor of cytokine signaling 3 (SOCS-3), we show that blockade of leptin receptor (Ob-Rb) phosphorylation blocks leptin-induced HSC proliferation. Leptin-associated phosphorylation of both extracellular regulated kinase (p44/p42, Erk) and Akt is also prohibited. Further, the PI-3 kinase inhibitor LY294002 and MAPK inhibitor PD98059 were found to significantly reduce leptin-induced HSC proliferation, thereby indicating that leptin induced HSC proliferation is Akt- and Erk-dependent. Akt was also protective against HSC apoptosis. Leptin abolished both cycloheximide-induced and tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-induced apoptosis, demonstrated by reduced caspase-3 activity, HSC-TUNEL staining, and DNA fragmentation. We conclude that leptin acts as a direct hepatic stellate cell survival agonist. Importantly, we have demonstrated that leptin-induced HSC proliferation and survival by Ob-Rb phosphorylation are both Erk- and Akt-dependent.
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PMID:Leptin as a novel profibrogenic cytokine in hepatic stellate cells: mitogenesis and inhibition of apoptosis mediated by extracellular regulated kinase (Erk) and Akt phosphorylation. 1531 73


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