Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 examined the phosphorylation and protein kinase activity of p44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p44mapk) in growth factor-stimulated hamster fibroblasts using a specific antiserum. The activity of p44mapk was stimulated both by receptor tyrosine kinases and G protein-coupled receptors. Detailed kinetics revealed that alpha-thrombin induces a biphasic activation of p44mapk in CCL39 cells: a rapid phase appearing at 5-10 min was followed by a late and sustained phase still elevated after 4 h. Inactivation of alpha-thrombin with hirudin after 30 sec, which prevented DNA synthesis, did not alter the early p44mapk response but completely abolished the late phase. Pretreatment of the cells with pertussis toxin, which inhibits by more than 95% alpha-thrombin-induced mitogenicity, resulted in the complete loss of late phase activity, while the early peak was partially attenuated. Treatment of CCL39 cells with basic fibroblast growth factor also induced a strong activation of p44mapk. Serotonin, which is not a mitogen by its own, had no effect on late phase p44mapk activity, but synergized with basic fibroblast growth factor to induce late kinase response and DNA synthesis. Both early and late phase activation of p44mapk were accompanied by tyrosine phosphorylation of the enzyme. Together, the results indicate that there is a very close correlation between the ability of a growth factor to induce late and sustained p44mapk activation and its mitogenic potential. Therefore, we propose that sustained p44mapk activation is an obligatory event for growth factor-induced cell cycle progression.
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PMID:Biphasic and synergistic activation of p44mapk (ERK1) by growth factors: correlation between late phase activation and mitogenicity. 160 90

To investigate mechanisms of mononuclear phagocyte cell signaling, the effects of bacterial LPS on protein kinase activities in normal human peripheral blood monocytes were examined. Incubation of intact monocytes with LPS brought about time- and concentration-dependent increases in myelin basic protein (MBP) phosphotransferase activity in high speed supernatants of cell lysates. Anion-exchange chromatography on Mono Q demonstrated that LPS treatment resulted in two principal peaks of stimulated MBP kinase activity. Evidence was obtained to indicate that the first eluted peak of MBP kinase activity is accounted for by p42 and p44 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases. Thus, 1) MBP kinase activity within peak 1 was quantitatively precipitated by anti-MAP kinase Abs, 2) the enzyme effectively phosphorylated a specific peptide substrate, 3) peak 1 contained proteins of subunit size M(r) 42,000 and M(r) 44,000 that reacted specifically with anti-MAP kinase Abs, and that 4) were recognized by anti-phosphotyrosine Abs only after stimulation of cells with LPS. Studies of the second peak of LPS-stimulated MBP kinase activity indicate that it is an isoform of protein kinase C (PKC) because: 1) enzyme activity was quantitatively immunoprecipitated by anti-PKC Abs, 2) the activity of the enzyme was potently and selectively inhibited by a specific peptide modeled on the autoinhibitory domain of PKC, and 3) the presence of a protein of subunit size M(r) 80,000 recognized by anti-PKC Abs. Because the second peak of MBP kinase activity (like the first) was active in the absence of added calcium and in the presence of 2 mM EGTA, it appears to be a type II, calcium-independent isoform of PKC. Abs to CD14 completely abrogated LPS-induced activation of both Mono Q peaks of MBP phosphotransferase activity. These results indicate that LPS coordinately activates both an apparently calcium-independent PKC and MAP kinase in mononuclear phagocytes and these responses appear to be initiated by signaling through the cell surface receptor, CD14.
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PMID:CD14-dependent activation of protein kinase C and mitogen-activated protein kinases (p42 and p44) in human monocytes treated with bacterial lipopolysaccharide. 752 66

The protein kinase domains of mouse A-Raf and B-Raf were expressed as fusion proteins with the hormone binding domain of the human estrogen receptor in mammalian cells. In the absence of estradiol, 3T3 and rat1a cells expressing delta A-Raf:ER and delta B-Raf:ER were nontransformed, but upon the addition of estradiol the cells became oncogenically transformed. Morphological oncogenic transformation was more rapid and distinctive in cells expressing delta B-Raf:ER compared with cells expressing delta A-Raf:ER. Biochemical analysis of cells transformed by delta A-Raf:ER and delta B-Raf:ER revealed several interesting differences. The activation of delta B-Raf:ER consistently led to the rapid and robust activation of both MEK and p42/p44 MAP kinases. By contrast, the activation of delta A-Raf:ER led to a weak activation of MEK and the p42/p44 MAP kinases. The extent of activation of MEK in cells correlated with the ability of the different Raf kinases to phosphorylate and activate MEK1 in vitro. delta B-Raf:ER phosphorylated MEK1 approximately 10 times more efficiently than delta Raf-1:ER and at least 500 times more efficiently than delta A-Raf:ER under the conditions of the immune-complex kinase assays. These results were confirmed with epitope-tagged versions of the Raf kinase domains expressed in insect cells. The activation of all three delta Raf:ER proteins in 3T3 cells led to the hyperphosphorylation of the resident p74raf-1 and mSOS1 proteins, suggesting the possibility of "cross-talk" between the different Raf kinases and feedback regulation of intracellular signaling pathways. The activation of either delta B-Raf:ER or delta Raf-1:ER in quiescent 3T3 cells was insufficient to promote the entry of the cells into DNA synthesis. By contrast, the activation of delta A-Raf:ER in quiescent 3T3 cells was sufficient to promote the entry of the cells into S phase after prolonged exposure to beta-estradiol. The delta Raf:ER system has allowed us to reveal significant differences between the biological and biochemical properties of oncogenic forms of the Raf family of protein kinases. We anticipate that cells expressing these proteins and other estradiol-regulated protein kinases will be useful tools in future attempts to unravel the complex web of interactions involved in intracellular signal transduction pathways.
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PMID:Conditionally oncogenic forms of the A-Raf and B-Raf protein kinases display different biological and biochemical properties in NIH 3T3 cells. 756 95

Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) or extracellular signal-regulated kinase are ubiquitous kinases conserved from fungi to mammals. Their activity is regulated by phosphorylation on both threonine and tyrosine, and they play a crucial role in the regulation of proliferation and differentiation. We report here the cloning of the murine p44 MAP kinase (extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1) gene, the determination of its intron/exon boundaries, and the characterization of its promoter. The gene spans approximately eight kilobases (kb) and can be divided into nine exons and eight introns, each coding region exon containing from one to three of the highly conserved protein kinase domains. Primer extension analysis reveals the existence of two major start sites of transcription located at -183 and -186 base pairs (bp) as well as four discrete start sites for transcription located at -178, -192, -273, and -292 bp of the initiation of translation. However, the start site region lacks TATA-like sequences but does contain initiator-like sequences proximal to the major start sites obtained by primer extension. 1 kb of the promoter region has been sequenced. It contains three putative TATA boxes far upstream of the main start sites region, one AP-1 box, one AP-2 box, one Malt box, one GAGA box, one half serum-responsive element, and putative binding sites for Sp1 (five), GC-rich binding factor (five), CTF-NF1 (one), Myb (one), p53 (two), Ets-1 (one), NF-IL6 (two), MyoD (two), Zeste (one), and hepatocyte nuclear factor-5 (one). To determine the sites critical for the function of the p44 MAPK promoter, we constructed a series of chimeric genes containing variable regions of the 5'-flanking sequence of p44 MAPK gene and the coding region for luciferase. Activity of the promoter, measured by its capacity to direct expression of a luciferase reporter gene, is strong, being comparable with the activity of the Rous sarcoma virus promoter. Progressive deletions of the approximately 1 kb (-1200/-78) promoter region allowed us to define a minimal region of 186 bp (-284/-78) that has maximal promoter activity. Within this context, deletion of the AP-2 binding site reduces by 30-40% the activity of the promoter. Further deletion of this minimal promoter that removes the major start sites (-167/-78) surprisingly preserves promoter activity. This result implicates a major role of this region that contains the Sp1 sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The mouse p44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1) gene. Genomic organization and structure of the 5'-flanking regulatory region. 759 46

The ability of the receptor for the hematopoietic cytokine granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) to function in non-hematopoietic cells is unknown. NIH3T3 fibroblasts were transfected with cDNAs encoding the alpha and beta subunit of the human GM-CSF receptor and a series of stable transformants were isolated that bound GM-CSF with either low (KD = 860 - > 1000 pM) or high affinity (KD = 20-80 pM). Low affinity receptors were not functional. However, the reconstituted high affinity receptors were found to be capable of activating a number of signal transduction pathways, including tyrosine kinase activity, phosphorylation of Raf-1, and the transient induction of c-fos and c-myc mRNAs. The activation of protein tyrosine phosphorylation by GM-CSF in NIH3T3 cells was rapid (< 1 min) and transient (peaking at 5-20 min) and resulted in the phosphorylation of proteins of estimated molecular weights of 42, 44, 52/53 and 58-60 kDa. Some of these proteins co-migrated with proteins from myeloid cells that were phosphorylated on tyrosine residues in response to GM-CSF. In particular, p42 and p44 were identified as mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAP kinases), and the phosphorylation on tyrosine residues of p42 and p44 MAP kinases occurred at the same time as the phosphorylation of Raf-1. However, despite evidence for activation of many mitogenic signal transduction molecules, GM-CSF did not induce significant proliferation of transfected NIH3T3 cells. These results suggest that murine fibroblasts contain signal transducing molecules that can effectively interact with the human GM-CSF receptor, and that are sufficient to activate at least some of the same signal transduction pathways this receptor activates in myeloid cells, including activation of one or more tyrosine kinase(s). However, the level of activation of signal transduction is either below a threshold of necessary activity or at least one mitogenic signal necessary for proliferation is missing.
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PMID:The human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor is capable of initiating signal transduction in NIH3T3 cells. 768 77

The present study was undertaken to determine the identities and characteristics of proteins with molecular masses between 40 and 44 kDa whose tyrosine phosphorylation increases in human neutrophils following stimulation of these cells with tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). Immunoblotting results demonstrate that addition of GM-CSF to human neutrophils increases the tyrosine phosphorylation of two proteins with molecular masses of 42 and 44 kDa. However, the addition of TNF-alpha to neutrophils induces a time- and dose-dependent increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of a 40 kDa protein. Immunoprecipitation using specific mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) isoform antibodies and an antibody which recognizes phosphotyrosine-containing proteins demonstrated that the 42 and 44 kDa proteins are isoforms of MAPKs. Utilizing an in situ gel kinase activity assay, GM-CSF increases the kinase activity of the 42 and 44 kDa proteins. Moreover, using immunoprecipitated p42 and p44 MAPK isoforms in this gel assay revealed activity associated with the p42 and p44 MAPK isoforms. Using the same in situ assay, TNF-alpha induces an increase in kinase activity of a 40-42 kDa protein. However, the 40 kDa protein whose phosphorylation on tyrosine residues increased in human neutrophils following stimulation with TNF-alpha is not a member of the known MAPK family, demonstrating the divergences in pathways utilized by GM-CSF and TNF-alpha. This 40 kDa protein may be related to the recently identified protein that becomes phosphorylated on tyrosine residues upon stimulation of the human epidermal carcinoma cell line KB by interleukin-1. In these cells the p40 protein is part of a protein kinase cascade which results in the phosphorylation of the small heat shock protein, hsp27.
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PMID:Effects of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and tumour necrosis factor-alpha on tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases in human neutrophils. 771 91

MAP kinase (mitogen activated protein kinase) represents a ubiquitously expressed family of kinases whose long term activation via phosphorylation is essential for the mitogenic response in fibroblasts. Two family members, p42 and p44 MAP kinase are cytosolic proteins in quiescent cells, but become nuclear following mitogenic stimulation. Inactivation of MAP kinases occurs via a specific phosphatase, MKP-1. Hence, we examined the localisation of this phosphatase, to determine the cellular site of MAP kinase inactivation. Transient transfection of CCL39 fibroblasts with epitope-tagged MKP-1 showed the protein to be entirely nuclear in both quiescent and mitogen stimulated cells, whereas a catalytically inactive mutant in which the essential cysteine was mutated to serine (MKP-1CS) was predominately cytoplasmic and again serum stimulation failed to alter the protein's localisation. Expression of either wild type or inactive MKP-1 did not alter the cytosolic localisation of p44 MAP kinase in quiescent cells nor the ability of MAP kinase to translocate to the nucleus following mitogen stimulation. Expression of wild type MKP-1 inhibited serum stimulated early (c-fos promoter) and late (dhfr promoter) transcriptional events as well as entry into S-phase. This inhibition was reversed by the co-expression of an active MAP kinase. We conclude that in the continual expression of MKP-1, the cellular localisation of MAP kinase is unaffected and that inactivation of MAP kinase by MKP-1 is a nuclear process leading to the inhibition of cell division.
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PMID:Constitutive MAP kinase phosphatase (MKP-1) expression blocks G1 specific gene transcription and S-phase entry in fibroblasts. 776 Oct 91

Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a highly conserved component of the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria, stimulates macrophages to release various cytokine and eicosanoid mediators of the immune response. The mechanism by which LPS stimulates these cells is poorly characterized. One of the most rapid LPS-stimulated events is the phosphorylation and activation of the p42 and p44 isoforms of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase. We wished to examine the role of MAP kinase in LPS-induced signaling in murine macrophages by activating MAP kinase independently of LPS. An expression vector encoding a Raf-1:estrogen receptor (ER) chimeric protein was transfected into the murine macrophage cell line RAW 264.7. Activation of this chimeric protein (delta Raf-1:ER) by estradiol resulted in rapid and prolonged activation of MAP kinase, as expected from previous results implicating Raf-1 as an upstream activator of this signaling cascade. LPS stimulation induced accumulation of MAP kinase phosphatase 1 messenger RNA, whereas delta Raf-1:ER activation did not, perhaps accounting for the more prolonged activation of MAP kinase seen in response to delta Raf-1:ER activation. Similarly, activation of DNA binding by the transcription factor, nuclear factor (NF) kappa B, as assessed by electrophoretic mobility shift assay, occurred in response to LPS stimulation but not in response to delta Raf-1:ER activation or phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) stimulation. Using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for murine tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), we found that LPS and PMA stimulation and delta Raf-1:ER activation induced secretion of TNF-alpha, although the amount of TNF-alpha secreted in response to delta Raf-1:ER activation and PMA stimulation was approximately 20-fold less than that secreted in response to LPS. Correspondingly, accumulation of TNF-alpha messenger RNA was weakly induced by delta Raf-1:ER activation or PMA stimulation, whereas strong induction was noted in response to LPS. These results suggest that Raf-1 or PMA activation of MAP kinase in murine macrophages is sufficient for a small amount of TNF-alpha production and secretion in the absence of NF-kappa B activation, but LPS stimulation involves additional signaling events, such as NF-kappa B activation, that augment the response seen with activation of MAP kinase alone.
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PMID:Activation of Raf-1 and mitogen-activated protein kinase in murine macrophages partially mimics lipopolysaccharide-induced signaling events. 779 Aug 14

The translocation of protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms PKC-alpha, PKC-delta, PKC-epsilon, and PKC-zeta from soluble to particulate fractions was studied in ventricular cardiomyocytes cultured from neonatal rats. Endothelin-1 (ET-1) caused a rapid ETA receptor-mediated translocation of PKC-delta and PKC-epsilon (complete in 0.5-1 min). By 3-5 min, both isoforms were returning to the soluble fraction, but a greater proportion of PKC-epsilon remained associated with the particulate fraction. The EC50 of translocation for PKC-delta was 11-15 nM ET-1 whereas that for PKC-epsilon was 1.4-1.7 nM. Phenylephrine caused a rapid translocation of PKC-epsilon (EC50 = 0.9 microM) but the proportion lost from the soluble fraction was less than with ET-1. Translocation of PKC-delta was barely detectable with phenylephrine. Neither agonist caused any consistent translocation of PKC-alpha or PKC-zeta. Activation of p42 and p44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) by ET-1 or phenylephrine followed more slowly (complete in 3-5 min). Phosphorylation of p42-MAPK occurred simultaneously with its activation. The proportion of the total p42-MAPK pool phosphorylated in response to ET-1 (50%) was greater than with phenylephrine (20%). In addition to activation of MAPK, an unidentified p85 protein kinase was activated by ET-1 in the soluble fraction whereas an unidentified p58 protein kinase was activated in the particulate fraction.
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PMID:Differential activation of protein kinase C isoforms by endothelin-1 and phenylephrine and subsequent stimulation of p42 and p44 mitogen-activated protein kinases in ventricular myocytes cultured from neonatal rat hearts. 780 10

Angiotensin-II (AII), which stimulates steroidogenesis in bovine adrenocortical (BAC) cells through the phosphoinositides pathway, activates p42-p44 mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) after 5 min of treatment (EC50 = 0.1 nM). This activation is 1) completely inhibited by the AII receptor AT1 subtype antagonist Dup 753 (10 microM), but unaffected by the AT2 antagonist PD 123177; 2) not reproduced by the AT2 agonist CGP 42112A; 3) insensitive to pretreatment with pertussis toxin; and 4) abolished by a 48-h preexposure of the cells to the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA; 1 microM), which down-regulates protein kinase-C activity. Fibroblast growth factor-2, a potent mitogen for BAC cells, which acts through its tyrosine kinase receptor, also activates MAPK (EC50 = 0.3 in a TPA-insensitive manner, while exhibiting no detectable effect on BAC cell steroidogenesis. In contrast, ACTH, which stimulates steroidogenesis via cAMP and inhibits BAC cell proliferation, does not stimulate MAPK. Indeed, ACTH completely blocks (IC50 = 0.01 nM) the stimulation of MAPK by AII, fibroblast growth factor-2, or TPA. Therefore, bovine adrenocortical cells provide an example of positive and negative hormonal regulation of MAPK activity through a cross-talk between the inositide-, cAMP-, and growth factor-activated tyrosine kinase pathways.
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PMID:Hormonal regulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase activity in bovine adrenocortical cells: cross-talk between phosphoinositides, adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate, and tyrosine kinase receptor pathways. 786 5


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