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Disease
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Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:2.7.11.1 (
protein kinase
)
81,284
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have previously reported that rehabilitative reaching training initiated 4 days following an incomplete cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) in adult rats promotes plasticity and task-specific recovery. This training, however, also resulted in impairments in an untrained task. Here we examined whether delaying the rehabilitative training following cervical SCI is still effective in promoting task-specific recovery, but circumvents impairments in an untrained task, comparable to what has been reported in
stroke
models. Therefore, reaching training for a period of 6 weeks was initiated at Day 12 following a cervical dorso-lateral quadrant lesion. Thereupon the rats' ability to reach and to walk on a horizontal ladder (i.e. the untrained task) was assessed, and 8 weeks post-injury cortical map changes were investigated through microstimulation. Further, we examined changes in phospho
protein kinase A
(pPKA) levels following an immediate and a delayed onset of reaching training in rats with cervical SCI. We found that delayed rehabilitative training was comparably effective as immediate training in promoting task-specific recovery and sprouting of injured axons. Importantly, delayed training did not impair the performance on horizontal ladder walking. Strikingly, only delayed reaching training restored cortical
PKA
levels that had dropped significantly over 2 weeks post-injury. Additionally, delayed training did not influence cortical map changes following injury, but decreased white matter damage. In conclusion, our results show that a short delay in the onset of training in a forelimb task significantly alters our outcome measures, which should be considered in future rehabilitative approaches.
...
PMID:Advantages of delaying the onset of rehabilitative reaching training in rats with incomplete spinal cord injury. 1922 62
The Frank-Starling relationship of the heart yields increased
stroke
volume with greater end-diastolic volume, and this relationship is steeper after beta-adrenergic stimulation. The underlying basis for the Frank-Starling mechanism involves length-dependent changes in both Ca(2+) sensitivity of myofibrillar force and power output. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that
PKA
-induced phosphorylation of myofibrillar proteins would increase the length dependence of myofibrillar power output, which would provide a myofibrillar basis to, in part, explain the steeper Frank-Starling relations after beta-adrenergic stimulation. For these experiments, adult rat left ventricles were mechanically disrupted, permeabilized cardiac myocyte preparations were attached between a force transducer and position motor, and the length dependence of loaded shortening and power output were measured before and after treatment with
PKA
.
PKA
increased the phosphorylation of myosin binding protein C and cardiac troponin I, as assessed by autoradiography. In terms of myocyte mechanics,
PKA
decreased the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force and increased loaded shortening and power output at all relative loads when the myocyte preparations were at long sarcomere length ( approximately 2.30 mum).
PKA
had less of an effect on loaded shortening and power output at short sarcomere length ( approximately 2.0 mum). These changes resulted in a greater length dependence of myocyte power output after
PKA
treatment; peak normalized power output increased approximately 20% with length before
PKA
and approximately 40% after
PKA
. These results suggest that
PKA
-induced phosphorylation of myofibrillar proteins explains, in part, the steeper ventricular function curves (i.e., Frank-Starling relationship) after beta-adrenergic stimulation of the left ventricle.
...
PMID:Sarcomere length dependence of power output is increased after PKA treatment in rat cardiac myocytes. 1925 95
Obesity and age are important risk factors for cardiovascular disease. However, the signaling mechanism linking obesity with age-related vascular senescence is unknown. Here we show that mice fed a high-fat diet show increased vascular senescence and vascular dysfunction compared to mice fed standard chow and are more prone to peripheral and cerebral ischemia. All of these changes involve long-term activation of the
protein kinase
Akt. In contrast, mice with diet-induced obesity that lack Akt1 are resistant to vascular senescence. Rapamycin treatment of diet-induced obese mice or of transgenic mice with long-term activation of endothelial Akt inhibits activation of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)-rictor complex 2 and Akt, prevents vascular senescence without altering body weight, and reduces the severity of limb necrosis and ischemic
stroke
. These findings indicate that long-term activation of Akt-mTOR signaling links diet-induced obesity with vascular senescence and cardiovascular disease.
...
PMID:Obesity increases vascular senescence and susceptibility to ischemic injury through chronic activation of Akt and mTOR. 1929 29
Adenosine monophosphate-activated
protein kinase
(AMPK) senses metabolic stress and integrates diverse physiological signals to restore energy balance. Multiple functions are indicated for AMPK in the CNS. While all neurons sense their own energy status, some integrate neuro-humoral signals to assess organismal energy balance. A variety of disease states may involve AMPK, so determining the underlying mechanisms is important. We review the impact of altered AMPK activity under physiological (hunger, satiety) and pathophysiological (
stroke
) conditions, as well as therapeutic manipulations of AMPK that may improve energy balance.
...
PMID:AMPK in the brain: its roles in energy balance and neuroprotection. 1939 4
Previous studies have shown that KA receptor subunit GluR6 mediated c-Jun N-terminal
protein kinase
(JNK) signaling is involved in global ischemia injury. Our present study indicates that focal ischemic brain insult on rat middle cerebral artery occlusion (MACo) model enhances the assembly of the GluR6-PSD95-MLK3 module and facilitates the phosphorylation of JNK. Most importantly, a peptide containing the TAT protein transduction sequence, Tat-GluR6-9c, can perturb the assembly of the GluR6-PSD95-MLK3 signaling module and suppress the activation of MLK3, MKK7/4 and JNK. As result, the inhibition of JNK activation caused by Tat-GluR6-9c diminishes the phosphorylation of the transcription factor c-Jun, down-regulates FasL expression and attenuates bax translocation, release of cytochrome c and the activation of caspase-3. Furthermore, MCAo induced infract volume is reduced by intracerebroventricular injection of Tat-Glur6-9c. Oxygen-glucose-deprivation (OGD) cultured cortical neuronal cell also shows an improved cell viability by application of Tat-GluR6-9c. Taken together, our findings strongly suggest that GluR6-PSD95-MLK3 signaling module mediated activation of nuclear and non-nuclear pathways of JNK activation are involved in focal ischemia injury and OGD. Tat-GluR6-9c, the peptide we constructed, gives a new insight into the therapy for ischemic
stroke
.
...
PMID:Neuroprotection against transient focal cerebral ischemia and oxygen-glucose deprivation by interference with GluR6-PSD95 protein interaction. 1944 6
Despite considerable research attention focused on mechanisms underlying neural spreading depression (SD), because of its association with important human CNS pathologies, such as
stroke
and migraine, little attention has been given to explaining its occurrence and regulation in invertebrates. In the locust metathoracic ganglion (MTG), an SD-like event occurs during heat and anoxia stress, which results in cessation of neuronal output for the duration of the applied stress. SD-like events were characterized by an abrupt rise in extracellular potassium ion concentration ([K(+)](o)) from a baseline concentration of approximately 8 to >30 mm, which returned to near baseline concentrations after removal of the applied stress. After return to baseline [K(+)](o), neuronal output (ventilatory motor pattern activity) from the MTG recovered. Unlike mammalian neurons, which depolarize almost completely during SD, locust neurons only partially depolarized. SD-like events in the locust CNS were suppressed by pharmacological inhibition of the nitric oxide/cyclic guanosine monophosphate/
protein kinase
G (NO/cGMP/PKG) pathway and were exacerbated by its activation. Also, environmental stressors such as heat and anoxia increased production of nitric oxide in the locust CNS. Finally, for the intact animal, manipulation of the pathway affected the speed of recovery from suffocation by immersion under water. We propose that SD-like events in locusts provide an adaptive mechanism for surviving extreme environmental conditions. The highly conserved nature of the NO/cGMP/PKG signaling pathway suggests that it may be involved in modulating SD in other organisms, including mammals.
...
PMID:Suppression of spreading depression-like events in locusts by inhibition of the NO/cGMP/PKG pathway. 1955 62
It is becoming increasingly apparent that spatial regulation of cell signalling processes is critical to normal cellular function. In this regard, cAMP signalling regulates many pivotal cellular processes and has provided the paradigm for signal compartmentalization. Recent advances show that isoforms of the cAMP-degrading phosphodiesterase-4 (PDE4) family are targeted to discrete signalling complexes. There they sculpt local cAMP gradients that can be detected by genetically encoded cAMP sensors, and gate the activation of spatially localized signalling through sequestered
PKA
and EPAC sub-populations. Genes for these important regulatory enzymes are linked to schizophrenia,
stroke
and asthma, thus indicating the therapeutic potential that selective inhibitors could have as anti-inflammatory, anti-depressant and cognitive enhancer agents.
...
PMID:Underpinning compartmentalised cAMP signalling through targeted cAMP breakdown. 1986 44
The
cGMP-dependent protein kinase
type I (PKG I) is an essential regulator of cellular function in blood vessels throughout the body. DT-2, a peptidic inhibitor of PKG, has played a central role in determining the molecular mechanisms of vascular control involving PKG and its signaling partners. Here, we report the development of (d)-amino acid DT-2 derivatives, namely the retro-inverso ri-(d)-DT-2 and the all (d)-amino acid analog, (d)-DT-2. Both peptide analogs were potent PKG Ialpha inhibitors with K(i) values of 5.5 nM (ri-(d)-DT-2) and 0.8 nM ((d)-DT-2) as determined using a hyperbolic mixed-type inhibition model. Also, both analogs were proteolytically stable in vivo, showed elevated selectivity, and displayed enhanced membrane translocation properties. Studies on isolated arteries from the resistance vasculature demonstrated that intraluminally perfused (d)-DT-2 significantly inhibited vasodilation induced by 8-Br-cGMP. Furthermore, in vivo application of (d)-DT-2 established a uniform translocation pattern in the resistance vasculature, with exception of the brain. Thus, (d)-DT-2 caused significant increases in mean arterial blood pressure in unrestrained, awake mice. Further, mesenteric arteries isolated from (d)-DT-2 treated animals showed a markedly reduced dilator response to 8-Br-cGMP in vitro. Our results clearly demonstrate that (d)-DT-2 is a superior inhibitor of PKG Ialpha and its application in vivo leads to sustained inhibition of PKG in vascular smooth muscle cells. The discovery of (d)-DT-2 may help our understanding of how blood vessels constrict and dilate and may also aid the development of new strategies and therapeutic agents targeted to the prevention and treatment of vascular disorders such as hypertension,
stroke
and coronary artery disease.
...
PMID:(D)-Amino acid analogues of DT-2 as highly selective and superior inhibitors of cGMP-dependent protein kinase Ialpha. 2001 59
Death-associated
protein kinase
(DAPK) is a key player in multiple cell death signaling pathways. We report that DAPK is regulated by DANGER, a partial MAB-21 domain-containing protein. DANGER binds directly to DAPK and inhibits DAPK catalytic activity. DANGER-deficient mouse embryonic fibroblasts and neurons exhibit greater DAPK activity and increased sensitivity to cell death stimuli than do wild-type control cells. In addition, DANGER-deficient mice manifest more severe brain damage after acute excitotoxicity and transient cerebral ischemia than do control mice. Accordingly, DANGER may physiologically regulate the viability of neurons and represent a potential therapeutic target for
stroke
and neurodegenerative diseases.
...
PMID:Death-associated protein kinase-mediated cell death modulated by interaction with DANGER. 2005 91
Neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and Huntington's disease and conditions such as ischemic
stroke
affect millions of individuals annually and exert an enormous financial burden on society. A hallmark of these conditions is the abnormal loss of neurons. Currently, there are no effective strategies to prevent neuronal death in these pathologies. We report that several 2-arylidine and 2-hetarylidin derivatives of the 1,4-benzoxazines class of compounds are highly protective in tissue culture models of neurodegeneration. Results obtained using pharmcalogical inhibitors indicate that neuroprotection by these compounds does not involve the Raf-MEK-ERK or PI-3 kinase-Akt signaling pathways nor other survival-promoting molecules such as
protein kinase A
(
PKA
), calcium calmodulin kinase A (CaMK), and histone deacetylases (HDACs). We tested one of these compounds, (Z)-6-amino-2-(3',5'-dibromo-4'-hydroxybenzylidene)-2H-benzo[b][1,4]oxazin-3(4H)-one, designated as HSB-13, in the 3-nitropropionic acid (3-NP)-induced mouse model of Huntington's disease. HSB-13 reduced striatal degeneration and improved behavioral performance in mice administered with 3-NP. Furthermore, HSB-13 was protective in a Drosophila model of amyloid precursor protein (APP) toxicity. To understand how HSB-13 and other 1,4-benzoxazines protect neurons, we performed kinase profiling analyses. These analyses showed that HSB-13 inhibits GSK3, p38 MAPK, and cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). In comparison, another compound, called ASK-2a, that protects cerebellar granule neurons against low-potassium-induced death inhibits GSK3 and p38 MAPK but not CDKs. Despite its structural similarity to HSB-13, however, ASK-2a is incapable of protecting cortical neurons and HT22 cells against homocysteic acid (HCA)-induced or Abeta toxicity, suggesting that protection against HCA and Abeta depends on
CDK
inhibition. Compounds described in this study represent a novel therapeutic tool in the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases.
...
PMID:Identification of novel 1,4-benzoxazine compounds that are protective in tissue culture and in vivo models of neurodegeneration. 2014 21
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