Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.1 (protein kinase)
81,284 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Detachment or apoptosis of podocytes leads to proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis. There are no current interventions for diabetic or non-diabetic glomerular diseases specifically preventing podocyte apoptosis. Binding of erythropoiesis stimulating proteins (ESPs) to receptors on non-hematopoietic cells has been shown to have anti-apoptotic effects in vitro, in vivo, and in preliminary human studies. Recently, erythropoietin receptors were identified on podocytes; therefore, we tested effects of darbepoetin alfa in preventing podocyte apoptosis. Cultured immortalized mouse podocytes were treated with low-dose ultraviolet-C (uv-C) irradiation to induce apoptosis in the absence or presence of darbepoetin alfa. Apoptosis was quantified by Hoechst staining and by caspase 3 cleavage assessed by Western blots. Pretreatment with darbepoetin alfa significantly reduced podocyte apoptosis with this effect involving intact Janus family protein kinase-2 (JAK2) and AKT signaling pathways. Additionally, darbepoetin alfa was found protective against transforming growth factor-beta1 but not puromycin aminonucleoside induced apoptosis. Mice with anti-glomerular antibody induced glomerulonephritis had significantly less proteinuria, glomerulosclerosis, and podocyte apoptosis when treated with darbepoetin alfa. Our studies show that treatment of progressive renal diseases characterized by podocyte apoptosis with ESPs may be beneficial in slowing progression of chronic kidney disease.
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PMID:Darbepoetin alfa protects podocytes from apoptosis in vitro and in vivo. 1755 57

Impacting a significant portion of the world's population with increasing incidence in minorities, the young, and the physically active, diabetes mellitus (DM) and its complications affect approximately 20 million individuals in the United States and over 100 million individuals worldwide. In particular, vascular disease from DM may lead to some of the most serious complications that can extend into both the cardiac and nervous systems. Unique strategies that can prevent endothelial cell (EC) demise and elucidate novel cellular mechanisms for vascular cytoprotection become vital for the prevention and treatment of vascular DM complications. Here, we demonstrate that erythropoietin (EPO), an agent that has recently been shown to extend cell viability in a number of systems extending beyond hematopoietic cells, prevents EC injury and apoptotic nuclear DNA degradation during elevated glucose exposure. More importantly, EPO employs Wnt1, a cysteine-rich glycosylated protein involved in gene expression, cell differentiation, and cell apoptosis, to confer EC cytoprotection and maintains the integrity of Wnt1 expression during elevated glucose exposure. In addition, application of anti-Wnt1 neutralizing antibody abrogates the protective capacity of both EPO and Wnt1, illustrating that Wnt1 is an important component in the cytoprotection of ECs during elevated glucose exposure. Intimately linked to this cytoprotection is the downstream Wnt1 pathway of glycogen synthase kinase (GSK-3beta) that requires phosphorylation of GSK-3beta and inhibition of its activity by EPO. Interestingly, inhibition of GSK-3beta activity during elevated glucose leads to enhanced EC survival, but does not synergistically improve protection by EPO or Wnt1, suggesting that EPO and Wnt1 are closely tied to the blockade of GSK-3beta activity. Our work exemplifies an exciting potential application for EPO in regards to the treatment of DM vascular disease complications and highlights a previously unrecognized role for Wnt1 and the modulation of the downstream pathway of GSK-3beta to promote vascular cell viability during DM.
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PMID:Vascular injury during elevated glucose can be mitigated by erythropoietin and Wnt signaling. 1769 73

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in industrial societies, with myocardial infarction as the primary assassin. Pharmacologic agents, including the myocardial cell membrane receptor agonists adenosine, bradykinin/angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, opioids and erythropoietin or the mixed cell membrane and intracellular agonists, glucose insulin potassium, and volatile anesthetics, either clinically or experimentally reduce the extent of myocardial injury when administered just prior to reperfusion. Agents that specifically target proteins, transcription factors or ion channels, including PKC agonists/antagonists, PPAR, Phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors, 3-Hydroxy-3-methyl glutaryl coenzyme A reductase and the ATP-dependent potassium channel are also promising. However, no agent has been specifically approved to reduce reperfusion injury clinically. In this review, we will discuss the advantages and limitations of agents to combat reperfusion injury, their market development status and findings reported in both clinical and preclinical studies. The molecular pathways activated by these agents that preserve myocardium from reperfusion injury, which appear to commonly involve glycogen synthase kinase 3beta and mitochondrial permeability transition pore inhibition, are also described.
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PMID:Pharmacologic therapeutics for cardiac reperfusion injury. 1787 67

Clinical use of doxorubicin (Adriamycin), an antitumor agent, is limited by its oxyradical-mediated cardiotoxicity. We tested the hypothesis that moderate diet restriction protects against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity by decreasing oxidative stress and inducing cardioprotective mechanisms. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (250-275 g) were maintained on diet restriction [35% less food than ad libitum]. Cardiotoxicity was estimated by measuring biomarkers of cardiotoxicity, cardiac function, lipid peroxidation, and histopathology. A LD(100) dose of doxorubicin (12 mg/kg, ip) administered on day 43 led to 100% mortality in ad libitum rats between 7 and 13 days due to higher cardiotoxicity and cardiac dysfunction, whereas all the diet restricted rats exhibited normal cardiac function and survived. Toxicokinetic analysis revealed equal accumulation of doxorubicin and doxorubicinol (toxic metabolite) in the ad libitum and diet restricted hearts. Mechanistic studies revealed that diet restricted rats were protected due to (1) lower oxyradical stress from increased cardiac antioxidants leading to downregulation of uncoupling proteins 2 and 3, (2) induction of cardiac peroxisome proliferators activated receptor-alpha and plasma adiponectin increased cardiac fatty acid oxidation (666.9+/-14.0 nmol/min/g heart in ad libitum versus 1035.6+/-32.3 nmol/min/g heart in diet restriction) and mitochondrial AMPalpha2 protein kinase. The changes led to 51% higher cardiac ATP levels (17.7+/-2.1 micromol/g heart in ad libitum versus 26.7+/-1.9 micromol/g heart in diet restriction), higher ATP/ADP ratio, and (3) increased cardiac erythropoietin and decreased suppressor of cytokine signaling 3, which upregulates cardioprotective JAK/STAT3 pathway. These findings collectively show that moderate diet restriction renders resiliency against doxorubicin cardiotoxicity by lowering oxidative stress, enhancing ATP synthesis, and inducing the JAK/STAT3 pathway.
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PMID:Mechanism of protection of moderately diet restricted rats against doxorubicin-induced acute cardiotoxicity. 1790 2

In patients with primary as well as secondary chronic kidney disease (CKD), anemia has been identified as an independent risk factor for progression. In these patients anemia is thought to be a surrogate parameter for tissue hypoxia that perpetuates preexisting renal tissue injury, and treatment of anemia with recombinant human erythropoietin (rHuEPO) was therefore expected to retard progression. However, results of recently published large trials in patients with CKD did not fulfill these expectations. The reason for the discrepant findings may be distinct molecular pathways and/or EPO tissue receptor affinities that mediate the effect of EPO on erythropoiesis and tissue protection by EPO. A pivotal intracellular pathway is the activation of Akt (i.e., serine/threonine protein kinase B), but further potential pathways have been identified that may play an important role in tissue protection. In this study, we review data on the non-hematological effects of rHuEPO in different experimental settings of acute and chronic kidney injury, and discuss clinical renoprotective strategies with rHuEPO or analogue substances that are not related to anemia correction.
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PMID:Erythropoietin and progression of CKD. 1794 40

Hypoxic preconditioning can play a significant neuroprotective role. However, it has not been employed clinically because of safety concerns. To find a safer preconditioning stimulus that is both practical and effective, we investigated whether ginkgolides are capable of preconditioning as hypoxia to protect C6 cells against ischemic injury. We demonstrated that both ginkgolides (37.5microg/mL) and hypoxia (1% O(2) for 16h) can significantly increase cell viabilities and expression of phosphorylated glycogen synthase kinase (p-GSK), phosphorylated extracellular signal-regulated kinase (p-ERK), hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF-1alpha) and erythropoietin (EPO) in ischemic cells. The inhibitors of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) or phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase (PI3K) significantly but not completely reduced the enhanced expression of these proteins and cell viabilities induced by ginkgolides and hypoxic preconditioning. These indicated that ginkgolides could mimic hypoxic preconditioning by increasing expression of HIF-1alpha as well as its target protein EPO and that the ginkgolides and hypoxic preconditioning role might be partly mediated by the activation of the p42/p44-mitogen-activated protein kinase and phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase/AKT/glycogen synthase kinase 3beta pathways. The similar tendency in the changes of protein expression, cell viabilities and responses to MAPK or PI3K inhibitors of the cells treated with ginkgolides and hypoxia suggests that ginkgolides and hypoxic preconditioning might operate by similar mechanisms. The findings also imply that ginkgolides might have the potential for clinical use to prevent injury in high-risk conditions.
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PMID:Ginkgolides mimic the effects of hypoxic preconditioning to protect C6 cells against ischemic injury by up-regulation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha and erythropoietin. 1805 69

1. The aim of the present study was to determine the critical timing of Akt activation and its interaction with the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) in the mechanism of infarct size limitation by erythropoietin (Epo). 2. In an isolated, buffer-perfused preparation, rabbit hearts were subjected to 30 min ischaemia/2 h reperfusion. Infusion of Epo (1 unit/mL) before ischaemia reduced infarct size from 36.6 +/- 2.6% of the risk area to 15.4 +/- 3.2%, whereas a 10-fold higher dose of Epo infused for 65 min commencing 5 min before reperfusion failed to afford significant cardioprotection. The protection afforded by Epo pretreatment was abolished by coinfusion of 5 micromol/L LY294002, a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) inhibitor. Infusion of Epo induced phosphorylation of Akt, extracellular signal-regulated kinase, glycogen synthase kinase 3beta and p70s6 kinase before ischaemia and tended to enhance reperfusion-induced phosphorylation of these protein kinases. Erythropoietin increased phospho-Akt in the mitochondria and induced complex formation of Akt with adenine nucleotide translocase (ANT), a major subunit of mPTP, upon reperfusion. 3. In another series of experiments, cardiomyocytes were isolated from rat hearts and loaded with Rhod-2 to determine mitochondrial Ca(2+) levels. Increases in mitochondrial Ca(2+) levels following exposure to 1 mmol/L ouabain for 30 min were similar in untreated and Epo-pretreated cells. However, ouabain-induced hypercontracture was significantly suppressed from 45.1 +/- 1.6 to 39.2 +/- 1.9% by Epo. 4. In conclusion, activation of PI3-K-Akt signalling before ischaemia is crucial for Epo-induced myocardial protection and this protection may be achieved by complex formation of activated Akt with mPTP components upon reperfusion, leading to elevation of the threshold for opening of mPTP.
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PMID:Limitation of infarct size by erythropoietin is associated with translocation of Akt to the mitochondria after reperfusion. 1834 68

To explore the functional significance of cGMP-dependent protein kinase type I (cGKI) in the regulation of erythrocyte survival, gene-targeted mice lacking cGKI were compared with their control littermates. By the age of 10 weeks, cGKI-deficient mice exhibited pronounced anemia and splenomegaly. Compared with control mice, the cGKI mutants had significantly lower red blood cell count, packed cell volume, and hemoglobin concentration. Anemia was associated with a higher reticulocyte number and an increase of plasma erythropoietin concentration. The spleens of cGKI mutant mice were massively enlarged and contained a higher fraction of Ter119(+) erythroid cells, whereas the relative proportion of leukocyte subpopulations was not changed. The Ter119(+) cGKI-deficient splenocytes showed a marked increase in annexin V binding, pointing to phosphatidylserine (PS) exposure at the outer membrane leaflet, a hallmark of suicidal erythrocyte death or eryptosis. Compared with control erythrocytes, cGKI-deficient erythrocytes exhibited in vitro a higher cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration, a known trigger of eryptosis, and showed increased PS exposure, which was paralleled by a faster clearance in vivo. Together, these results identify a role of cGKI as mediator of erythrocyte survival and extend the emerging concept that cGMP/cGKI signaling has an antiapoptotic/prosurvival function in a number of cell types in vivo.
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PMID:Anemia and splenomegaly in cGKI-deficient mice. 1844 97

Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) is an essential cofactor required for enzymatic activity of endothelial NO synthase. Recently, it has been shown that vascular protective effects of erythropoietin (EPO) are dependent on activation of endothelial NO synthase. Therefore, our objective was to characterize the effect of EPO on the biosynthesis of BH(4) in the vascular wall. Incubation of isolated C57BL/6J mouse aortas for 18 hours with recombinant human EPO (1 to 50 U/mL) caused a concentration-dependent increase in intracellular BH(4) levels and activity of GTP-cyclohydrolase I. Maximal biosynthesis of BH(4) was detected at therapeutic concentrations of 5 U/mL. Removal of the endothelium abolished EPO-induced biosynthesis of BH(4) demonstrating that the vascular endothelium is a major source of BH(4). Treatment with a selective phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin significantly reduced BH(4) biosynthesis stimulated by EPO. The stimulatory effect of EPO on vascular GTP-cyclohydrolase I activity, BH(4) production, and phosphorylation of endothelial NO synthase was also detected in vivo in mice treated with recombinant human EPO. These effects of EPO were abolished in protein kinase Balpha/Akt1-deficient mice. In addition, EPO significantly increased systolic blood pressure and the number of circulating platelets in Akt1-deficient mice. Our results demonstrate that EPO stimulates biosynthesis of BH(4) in vascular endothelium and that the increase in BH(4) levels is caused by de novo biosynthesis of BH(4) via the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt1 pathway. This effect is most likely designed to provide optimal intracellular concentration of the cofactor necessary for EPO-induced elevation of endothelial NO synthase activity.
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PMID:Erythropoietin increases endothelial biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin by activation of protein kinase B alpha/Akt1. 1851 42

Often, chemotherapy by doxorubicin (Adriamycin) is limited due to life threatening cardiotoxicity in patients during and posttherapy. Recently, we have shown that moderate diet restriction remarkably protects against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity. This cardioprotection is accompanied by decreased cardiac oxidative stress and triglycerides and increased cardiac fatty-acid oxidation, ATP synthesis, and upregulated JAK/STAT3 pathway. In the current study, we investigated whether a physiological intervention by feeding 40% high fat diet (HFD), which induces obesity in male Sprague-Dawley rats (250-275 g), sensitizes to doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity. A LD(10) dose (8 mg doxorubicin/kg, ip) administered on day 43 of the HFD feeding regimen led to higher cardiotoxicity, cardiac dysfunction, lipid peroxidation, and 80% mortality in the obese (OB) rats in the absence of any significant renal or hepatic toxicity. Doxorubicin toxicokinetics studies revealed no change in accumulation of doxorubicin and doxorubicinol (toxic metabolite) in the normal diet-fed (ND) and OB hearts. Mechanistic studies revealed that OB rats are sensitized due to: (1) higher oxyradical stress leading to upregulation of uncoupling proteins 2 and 3, (2) downregulation of cardiac peroxisome proliferators activated receptor-alpha, (3) decreased plasma adiponectin levels, (4) decreased cardiac fatty-acid oxidation (666.9+/-14.0 nmol/min/g heart in ND versus 400.2+/-11.8 nmol/min/g heart in OB), (5) decreased mitochondrial AMP-alpha2 protein kinase, and (6) 86% drop in cardiac ATP levels accompanied by decreased ATP/ADP ratio after doxorubicin administration. Decreased cardiac erythropoietin and increased SOCS3 further downregulated the cardioprotective JAK/STAT3 pathway. In conclusion, HFD-induced obese rats are highly sensitized to doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity by substantially downregulating cardiac mitochondrial ATP generation, increasing oxidative stress and downregulating the JAK/STAT3 pathway.
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PMID:High fat diet-fed obese rats are highly sensitive to doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity. 1867 90


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