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)

Although it is known that high levels of cigarette smoke lead to cell death, little is known about the effects of low-to-moderate levels of smoke components that are found in vivo, such as those experienced by cells in tissues. Clinical studies and experimental data show that smokers heal poorly and are more prone to develop fibrotic diseases. Here we show the effects of first-hand cigarette smoke on fibroblasts, cells that are critically involved in these processes. Using doses of smoke found in the tissues of smokers and a variety of cell and molecular approaches, we show that these doses of cigarette smoke do not cause cell death but rather stimulate fibroblasts to produce stress response and survival proteins such as interleukin-8, PKB/Akt, p53, and p21 that in turn contribute to an increase in cell survival. In addition, smoke-treated cells show a decrease in cell migration, which can be explained by the increased cell adhesion and alterations in cytoskeletal elements. We also show that these levels of smoke cause changes in mitochondrial morphology with a minimum loss of function and these changes are the result of exposure to reactive oxygen species. We conclude that the increase in cell survival may lead to a build-up of connective tissue in the area of a wound, potentially leading to delayed healing and/or fibrosis and that the alterations in the cytoskeleton and in cell adhesion result in inhibition of cell migration, a process that could lead to nonclosure of the wound for lack of proper fibroblast migration to form the healing tissue.
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PMID:Firsthand cigarette smoke alters fibroblast migration and survival: implications for impaired healing. 1526 Aug 13

Rho GTPases are major regulators of cytoskeletal dynamics, but they also affect cell proliferation, transformation, and oncogenesis. RhoE, a member of the Rnd subfamily that does not detectably hydrolyze GTP, inhibits RhoA/ROCK signaling to promote actin stress fiber and focal adhesion disassembly. We have generated fibroblasts with inducible RhoE expression to investigate the role of RhoE in cell proliferation. RhoE expression induced a loss of stress fibers and cell rounding, but these effects were only transient. RhoE induction inhibited cell proliferation and serum-induced S-phase entry. Neither ROCK nor RhoA inhibition accounted for this response. Consistent with its inhibitory effect on cell cycle progression, RhoE expression was induced by cisplatin, a DNA damage-inducing agent. RhoE-expressing cells failed to accumulate cyclin D1 or p21(cip1) protein or to activate E2F-regulated genes in response to serum, although ERK, PI3-K/Akt, FAK, Rac, and cyclin D1 transcription was activated normally. The expression of proteins that bypass the retinoblastoma (pRb) family cell cycle checkpoint, including human papillomavirus E7, adenovirus E1A, and cyclin E, rescued cell cycle progression in RhoE-expressing cells. RhoE also inhibited Ras- and Raf-induced fibroblast transformation. These results indicate that RhoE inhibits cell cycle progression upstream of the pRb checkpoint.
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PMID:RhoE inhibits cell cycle progression and Ras-induced transformation. 1534 47

Integrin-mediated adhesion of epithelial cells to extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins induces prolonged tyrosine phosphorylation and partial activation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) in an integrin-dependent and EGFR ligand-independent manner. Integrin-mediated activation of EGFR in epithelial cells is required for multiple signal transduction events previously shown to be induced by cell adhesion to matrix proteins, including tyrosine phosphorylation of Shc, Cbl, and phospholipase Cgamma, and activation of the Ras/Erk and phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase/Akt signaling pathways. In contrast, activation of focal adhesion kinase, Src, and protein kinase C, adhesion to matrix proteins, cell spreading, migration, and actin cytoskeletal rearrangements are induced independently of EGFR kinase activity. The ability of integrins to induce the activation of EGFR and its subsequent regulation of Erk and Akt activation permitted adhesion-dependent induction of cyclin D1 and p21, Rb phosphorylation, and activation of cdk4 in epithelial cells in the absence of exogenous growth factors. Adhesion of epithelial cells to the ECM failed to efficiently induce degradation of p27, to induce cdk2 activity, or to induce Myc and cyclin A synthesis; subsequently, cells did not progress into S phase. Treatment of ECM-adherent cells with EGF, or overexpression of EGFR or Myc, resulted in restoration of late-G(1) cell cycle events and progression into S phase. These results indicate that partial activation of EGFR by integrin receptors plays an important role in mediating events triggered by epithelial cell attachment to ECM; EGFR is necessary for activation of multiple integrin-induced signaling enzymes and sufficient for early events in G(1) cell cycle progression. Furthermore, these findings suggest that EGFR or Myc overexpression may provoke ligand-independent proliferation in matrix-attached cells in vivo and could contribute to carcinoma development.
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PMID:Epidermal growth factor receptor-dependent regulation of integrin-mediated signaling and cell cycle entry in epithelial cells. 1536 78

Tumors expressing the ABL oncoproteins (BCR/ABL, TEL/ABL, v-ABL) can avoid apoptosis triggered by DNA damaging agents. The tumor suppressor protein p53 is an important activator of apoptosis in normal cells; conversely its functional loss may cause drug resistance. The ABL oncoprotein-p53 paradigm represents the relationship between an oncogenic tyrosine kinase and a tumor suppressor gene. Here we show that BCR/ABL oncoproteins employ p53 to induce resistance to DNA damage in myeloid leukemia cells. Cells transformed by the ABL oncoproteins displayed accumulation of p53 upon DNA damage. In contrast, only a modest increase of p53 expression followed by activation of caspase-3 were detected in normal cells expressing endogenous c-ABL. Phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase-like protein kinases (ATR and also ATM) -dependent phosphorylation of p53-Ser15 residue was associated with the accumulation of p53, and stimulation of p21(Waf-1) and GADD45, resulting in G(2)/M delay in BCR/ABL cells after genotoxic treatment. Inhibition of p53 by siRNA or by the temperature-sensitive mutation reduced G(2)/M accumulation and drug resistance of BCR/ABL cells. In conclusion, accumulation of the p53 protein contributed to prolonged G(2)/M checkpoint activation and drug resistance in myeloid cells expressing the BCR/ABL oncoproteins.
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PMID:BCR/ABL recruits p53 tumor suppressor protein to induce drug resistance. 1549 10

We have reported previously that the expression of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is elevated in glioblastomas and that expression of FAK promotes the proliferation of glioblastoma cells propagated in either soft agar or in the C.B.17 severe combined immunodeficiency (scid) mouse brain. We therefore determined the effect of FAK on cell cycle progression in these cells. We found that overexpression of wild-type FAK promoted exit from G(1) in monolayer cultures of glioblastoma cells, enhanced the expression of cyclins D1 and E while reducing the expression of p27(Kip1) and p21(Waf1), and enhanced the kinase activity of the cyclin D1-cyclin-dependent kinase-4 (cdk4) complex. Transfection of the monolayers with a FAK molecule in which the autophosphorylation site is mutated (FAK397F) inhibited exit from G(1) and reduced the expression of cyclins D1 and E while enhancing the expression of p27(Kip1) and p21(Waf1). Small interfering RNA (siRNA)-mediated down-regulation of cyclin D1 inhibited the enhancement of cell cycle progression observed on expression of wild-type FAK, whereas siRNA-mediated down-regulation of cyclin E had no effect. siRNA-mediated down-regulation of p27(Kip1) overcame the inhibition of cell cycle progression observed on expression of FAK397F, whereas down-regulation of p21(Waf1) had no effect. These results were confirmed in vivo in the scid mouse brain xenograft model in which propagation of glioblastoma cells expressing FAK397F resulted in a 50% inhibition of tumor growth and inhibited exit from G(1). Taken together, our results indicate that FAK promotes proliferation of glioblastoma cells by enhancing exit from G(1) through a mechanism that involves cyclin D1 and p27(Kip1).
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PMID:p27Kip1 and cyclin D1 are necessary for focal adhesion kinase regulation of cell cycle progression in glioblastoma cells propagated in vitro and in vivo in the scid mouse brain. 1555 80

Neurotrophins exert many of their biological effects via the Trk receptor tyrosine kinases and require the regulated activation of distinct transcriptional and post-translational cellular events. Here we provide evidence for a novel signaling cascade from activated Trks to the transcription factor STAT5. Utilizing the STAT5 responsive element derived from the p21(WAF1/Cip1) promoter to modulate luciferase expression, neurotrophin-dependent activation of Trk A, B, and C was found to induce STAT5-mediated transcriptional response. Structure-function analysis using Trk A mutants in heterologous cells further revealed that the kinase activity and an intact phospholipase C-gamma binding site are required for STAT5 activation. In most cytokine responsive cell systems, STAT5 function is modulated by JAK2-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation. However, reconstitution studies using a JAK2 deficient cell line indicate that neurotrophin-induced STAT5 activation does not require the cognate upstream kinase JAK2. In contrast, the Src kinase inhibitor PP1 significantly abolishes STAT5-dependent transcription in Trk A expressing 293T cells and in BDNF-treated primary cortical neurons. Together these results suggest that neurotrophins may regulate neuronal gene expression via STAT5 in a JAK2 independent manner.
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PMID:Activation of STAT5-dependent transcription by the neurotrophin receptor Trk. 1570 76

The LIM protein Hic-5 is a focal adhesion protein shuttling in and out of the nucleus through the redox-sensitive nuclear export signal, and unlike other focal adhesion proteins including paxillin, the protein most homologous to Hic-5, it accumulates in the nucleus under oxidative conditions and participates in the transcription of c-fos and p21(Cip1) genes. Here, we examined the roles of the interacting partners of Hic-5, focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and protein tyrosine phosphatase PEST (PTP-PEST), in the nuclear translocation of Hic-5 and found that they were inhibitory. Interestingly, the interaction of Hic-5 with FAK was regulated by specific cysteines near the binding site and decreased in cells under oxidative conditions. Its interaction with PTP-PEST was also sensitive to the oxidant. These results suggest that the nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling of Hic-5 is regulated by its interacting partners at focal adhesions or in the cytoplasm in a redox-sensitive manner, coordinating its role at focal adhesions with that in the nucleus, depending on the redox state of cells. Cytochalasin D or a phorbol ester also induced nuclear accumulation of Hic-5, which was inhibited by scavengers of reactive oxygen species (ROS), suggesting that besides oxidants, endogenously produced ROS induced the nuclear accumulation of Hic-5.
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PMID:Involvement of FAK and PTP-PEST in the regulation of redox-sensitive nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling of a LIM protein, Hic-5. 1570 82

When Sertoli and germ cells were co-cultured in vitro in serum-free chemically defined medium, functional anchoring junctions such as cell-cell intermediate filament-based desmosome-like junctions and cell-cell actin-based adherens junctions (e.g. ectoplasmic specialization (ES)) were formed within 1-2 days. This event was marked by the induction of several protein kinases such as phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K), phosphorylated protein kinase B (PKB; also known as Akt), p21-activated kinase-2 (PAK-2), and their downstream effector (ERK) as well as an increase in PKB intrinsic activity. PI3K, phospho (p)-PKB, and PAK were co-localized to the site of apical ES in the seminiferous epithelium of the rat testis in immunohistochemistry studies. Furthermore, PI3K also co-localized with p-PKB to the same site in the epithelium as determined by fluorescence microscopy, consistent with their localization at the ES. These kinases were shown to associate with ES-associated proteins such as beta1-integrin, phosphorylated focal adhesion kinase, and c-Src by co-immunoprecipitation, suggesting that the integrin.laminin protein complex at the apical ES likely utilizes these protein kinases as regulatory proteins to modulate Sertoli-germ cell adherens junction dynamics via the ERK signaling pathway. To validate this hypothesis further, an in vivo model using AF-2364 (1-(2,4-dichlorobenzyl)-1H-indazole-3-carbohydrazide) to perturb Sertoli-germ cell anchoring junction function, inducing germ cell loss from the epithelium in adult rats, was used in conjunction with specific inhibitors. Interestingly, the event of germ cell loss induced by AF-2364 in vivo was also associated with induction of PI3K, p-PKB, PAK-2, and p-ERK as well as a surge in intrinsic PKB activity. Perhaps the most important of all, pretreatment of rats with wortmannin (a PI3K inhibitor) or anti-beta1-integrin antibody via intratesticular injection indeed delayed AF-2364-induced spermatid loss from the epithelium. In summary, these results illustrate that Sertoli-germ cell anchoring junction dynamics in the testis are regulated, at least in part, via the beta1-integrin/PI3K/PKB/ERK signaling pathway.
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PMID:Sertoli-germ cell anchoring junction dynamics in the testis are regulated by an interplay of lipid and protein kinases. 1587 75

Integrin-extracellular matrix interactions play important roles in the coordinated integration of external and internal cues that are essential for proper development. To study the role of beta1 integrin in the mammary gland, Itgbeta1(flox/flox) mice were crossed with WAPiCre transgenic mice, which led to specific ablation of beta1 integrin in luminal alveolar epithelial cells. In the beta1 integrin mutant mammary gland, individual alveoli were disorganized resulting from alterations in cell-basement membrane associations. Activity of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) was also decreased in mutant mammary glands. Luminal cell proliferation was strongly inhibited in beta1 integrin mutant glands, which correlated with a specific increase of p21 Cip1 expression. In a p21 Cip1 null background, there was a partial rescue of BrdU incorporation, providing in vivo evidence linking p21 Cip1 to the proliferative defect observed in beta1 integrin mutant glands. A connection between p21 Cip1 and beta1 integrin as well as FAK was also established in primary mammary cells. These results point to the essential role of beta1 integrin signaling in mammary epithelial cell proliferation.
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PMID:Beta1 integrins regulate mammary gland proliferation and maintain the integrity of mammary alveoli. 1588 43

Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) mediates diverse biological responses, including cell migration, through the activation of G-protein-coupled receptors. Recently, we have shown that LPA stimulates p21-activated kinase (PAK) that is critical for focal adhesion kinase (FAK) phosphorylation and cell motility. Here, we provide the direct evidence that p85 beta-PIX is required for cell motility of NIH-3T3 cells by LPA through FAK and p38 MAP kinase phosphorylations. LPA induced p85 beta-PIX binding to FAK in NIH-3T3 cells that was inhibited by pretreatment of the cells with phosphoinositide 3-kinase inhibitor, LY294002. Furthermore, the similar inhibition of the complex formation was also observed, when the cells were transfected with either p85 beta-PIX mutant that cannot bind GIT or dominant negative mutants of Rac1 (N17Rac1) and PAK (PAK-PID). Transfection of the cells with specific p85 beta-PIX siRNA led to drastic inhibition of LPA-induced FAK phosphorylation, peripheral redistribution of p85 beta-PIX with FAK and GIT1, and cell motility. p85 beta-PIX was also required for p38 MAP kinase phosphorylation induced by LPA. Finally, dominant negative mutant of Rho (N19Rho)-transfected cells did not affect PAK activation, while the cells stably transfected with p85 beta-PIX siRNA or N17Rac1 showed the reduction of LPA-induced PAK activation. Taken together, the present data suggest that p85 beta-PIX, located downstream of Rac1, is a key regulator for the activations of FAK or p38 MAP kinase and plays a pivotal role in focal complex formation and cell motility induced by LPA.
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PMID:p85 beta-PIX is required for cell motility through phosphorylations of focal adhesion kinase and p38 MAP kinase. 3099 6


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