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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)
Fibroblasts of the pulmonary interstitium are intimately involved in the response of the lung to inflammation as well as in repair of injured tissues. The response of fibroblasts within an inflammatory site appears to be directed, in part, by peptide mediators. Neutral endopeptidase (NEP), a metallopeptidase on the surface membrane of fibroblasts, can inactivate various vasoactive peptides, including kinins and tachykinins. Because lung fibroblasts both secrete cytokines and respond to mediators within the immediate environment, NEP might be regulated by locally generated cytokines. We found that several cytokines, including interleukin-1 alpha (IL-1), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), transforming growth factor, interleukin-6, and granulocyte
macrophage colony-stimulating factor
, enhanced activity of NEP on the surface of intact fibroblasts. In contrast, cultured pleural mesothelial cells had much lower levels of NEP than fibroblasts, and the enzyme was not enhanced by either IL-1 or TNF-alpha. Further studies with IL-1 showed that the effect required at least 6 h of exposure to the cytokine and depended upon final cytokine concentration. Combinations of IL-1 with other cytokines increased NEP activity beyond that in cells treated with individual cytokines, but combinations had less than additive effects. Selected pharmacologic agents indicated that the mechanism involves second messenger pathways. The cytokine effect on NEP was attenuated by indomethacin, an inhibitor of cyclooxygenase, by N-[2-(methylamino) ethyl]-5-isoquinolinesulfonamide dihydrochloride, an inhibitor of
protein kinase
, and by adenosine 3',5' cyclic monophosphothionate, an analog of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) that competitively inhibits the cAMP signal pathway. It was mimicked by dibutyryl cAMP and by forskolin, an activator of adenyl cyclase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cytokines increase neutral endopeptidase activity in lung fibroblasts. 838 Feb 49
Nyk/Mer is a recently identified receptor tyrosine kinase with neural cell adhesion molecule-like structure (two immunoglobulin G-like domains and two fibronectin III-like domains) in its extracellular region and belongs to the Ufo/Axl family of receptors. The ligand for Nyk/Mer is presently unknown, as are the signal transduction pathways mediated by this receptor. We constructed and expressed a chimeric receptor (Fms-Nyk) composed of the extracellular domain of the human
colony-stimulating factor 1
receptor (Fms) and the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of human Nyk/Mer in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts in order to investigate the mitogenic signaling and biochemical properties of Nyk/Mer. Colony-stimulating factor 1 stimulation of the Fms-Nyk chimeric receptor in transfected NIH 3T3 fibroblasts leads to a transformed phenotype and generates a proliferative response in the absence of other growth factors. We show that phospholipase C gamma, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/p70 S6 kinase, Shc, Grb2,
Raf-1
, and mitogen-activated protein kinase are downstream components of the Nyk/Mer signal transduction pathways. In addition, Nyk/Mer weakly activates p90rsk, while stress-activated protein kinase, Ras GTPase-activating protein (GAP), and GAP-associated p62 and p190 proteins are not activated or tyrosine phosphorylated by Nyk/Mer. An analysis comparing the Nyk/Mer signal cascade with that of the epidermal growth factor receptor indicates substrate preferences by these two receptors. Our results provide a detailed description of the Nyk/Mer signaling pathways. Given the structural similarity between the Ufo/Axl family receptors, some of the information may also be applied to other members of this receptor tyrosine kinase family.
...
PMID:Mitogenic signals and transforming potential of Nyk, a newly identified neural cell adhesion molecule-related receptor tyrosine kinase. 852 23
Bone-resorbing osteoclasts are of hemopoietic cell origin, probably of the CFU-M-derived monocyte-macrophage family. Bone marrow-derived osteoblastic stromal cells play an important role in modulating the differentiation of osteoclast progenitors in two different ways: one is the production of soluble factors, and the other is cell-to-cell recognition between osteoclast progenitors and osteoblastic stromal cells.
M-CSF
is probably the most important soluble factor, which appears to be necessary for not only proliferation of osteoclast progenitors, but also differentiation into mature osteoclasts and their survival. A number of local factors as well as systemic hormones induce osteoclast differentiation. They are classified into three categories in terms of the signal transduction: vitamin D receptor-mediated signals [1 alpha,25(OH)2D3];
protein kinase A
-mediated signals (PTH, PTHrP, PGE2, and IL-1); and gp130-mediated signals (IL-6, IL-11, oncostatin M, and leukemia inhibitory factor). All of these osteoclast-inducing factors appear to act on osteoblastic cells to commonly induce osteoclast differentiation factor (ODF), which recognizes osteoclast progenitors and prepares them to differentiate into mature osteoclasts. This line of approach will undoubtedly produce new ways to treat several metabolic bone diseases caused by abnormal osteoclast recruitment such as osteoporosis, osteopetrosis, Paget's disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and periodontal disease.
...
PMID:Modulation of osteoclast differentiation by local factors. 857 4
While it is well established that
Raf-1
kinase is activated by phosphorylation in growth factor-dependent hematopoietic cell lines stimulated with a variety of hematopoietic growth factors, little is known about the biological effects of
Raf-1
activation on normal hematopoietic cells. Therefore, we examined the requirement for
Raf-1
in growth factor-regulated proliferation and differentiation of hematopoietic cells using c-faf antisense oligonucleotide.
Raf-1
required for the proliferation of growth factor dependent cell lines stimulated by IL-2, IL-3, G-CSF, GM-CSF and EPO that bind to the hematopoietin class of receptors.
Raf-1
is also required for the proliferation of cell lines stimulated by growth factors that use the tyrosine kinase containing receptor class, including SLF and
CSF-1
. In addition,
Raf-1
is also required for IL-6, LIF- and OSM-induced proliferation whose receptors share the gp 130 subunit. In contrast to previous results which demonstrated that IL-4 could not activate
Raf-1
kinase, c-raf antisense oligonucleotides also inhibited IL-4-induced proliferation of T cell and myeloid cell lines. Using normal hematopoietic cells, c-raf antisense oligonucleotides completely suppressed the colony formation of murine hematopoietic progenitors in response to single growth factors, such as IL-3,
CSF-1
or GM-CSF. Further, c-raf antisense oligonucleotides inhibited the growth of murine progenitors stimulated with synergistic combinations of growth factors (required for primitive progenitor growth) including two, three and four factor combinations. In comparison to murine hematopoietic cells, c-raf antisense oligonucleotides also inhibited both IL-3 and GM-CSF-induced colony formation of CD 34+ purified human progenitors. In addition,
Raf-1
is required for the synergistic response of CD 34+ human bone marrow progenitors to multiple cytokines; however, this effect was only observed when additional antisense oligonucleotides were added to the cultures at day 7 of a 14 day assay. Finally,
Raf-1
is required for the synergistic response of human Mo-7e cells and of normal human fetal liver cells to five factor combinations. Thus,
Raf-1
is required to transduce growth factor-induced proliferative signals in factor-dependent progenitor cells lines for all known classes of hematopoietic growth factor receptors, and is required for the growth of normal murine and human bone marrow-derived progenitors.
...
PMID:The effect of c-raf antisense oligonucleotides on growth factor-induced proliferation of hematopoietic cells. 858 63
There is currently much interest in the mechanisms of action of antiproliferative agents and their effects on cell cycle machinery. In the present study we examined the mechanisms of action of four unrelated agents known to inhibit proliferation of
CSF-1
-stimulated bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMM). We report that 8-bromo-cAMP (8Br-cAMP) and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) potently reduced
CSF-1
-stimulated cyclin D1 protein, and
cyclin-dependent kinase
(cdk) 4 mRNA and protein levels, while the inhibitory effects of the Na+/ H+ antiport inhibitor 5-(N',N'-dimethyl) amiloride (DMA) and interferon gamma (IFN gamma ) were only weak. All agents repressed
CSF-1
-stimulated retinoblastoma protein phosphorylation. Furthermore, 8Br-cAMP and to a lesser extent IFN gamma, also reduced
CSF-1
-stimulated levels of E2F DNA binding activity in a macrophage cell line, BAC1.2F5. An explanation for the different effects of the agents is that 8Br-cAMP and LPS were found to arrest BMM in early/mid-G1, while IFN gamma and DMA arrested cells in late G1 or early S phase. These data indicate that (1) different antiproliferative agents can arrest the same cell type at distinct checkpoints in G1 and (2) effects of antiproliferative agents on cell cycle machinery is linked to the position at which they arrest cells in G1.
...
PMID:Differential regulation of cell cycle machinery by various antiproliferative agents is linked to macrophage arrest at distinct G1 checkpoints. 876 Mar 1
Ubiquitously expressed SH2-containing tyrosine phosphatases interact physically with tyrosine kinase receptors or their substrates and relay positive mitogenic signals via the activation of the Ras-mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. Conversely, the structurally related phosphatase SHP-1 is predominantly expressed in hemopoietic cells and becomes tyrosine phosphorylated upon
colony-stimulating factor 1
treatment of macrophages without associating with the
colony-stimulating factor 1
receptor tyrosine kinase. Mice lacking functional SHP-1 (me/me and me(v)/me(v)) develop systemic autoimmune disease with accumulation of macrophages, suggesting that SHP-1 may be a negative regulator of hemopoietic cell growth. By using macrophages expressing dominant negative Ras and the me(v)/me(v) mouse mutant, we show that SHP-1 is activated in the course of mitogenic signal transduction in a Ras-dependent manner and that its activity is necessary for the Ras-dependent activation of the MAPK pathway but not of the
Raf-1
kinase. Consistent with a role for SHP-1 as an intermediate between Ras and the MEK-MAPK pathway, Ras-independent activation of the latter kinases by bacterial lipopolysaccharide occurred normally in me(v)/me(v) cells. Our results sharply accentuate the diversity of signal transduction in mammalian cells, in which the same signaling intermediates can be rearranged to form different pathways.
...
PMID:Involvement of the protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP-1 in Ras-mediated activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. 888 25
To determine the relevance of mitogen-activated protein kinase activity to macrophage proliferation, we measured the stimulation of myelin basic protein (MBP) kinase and extracellular signal-related
protein kinase
(ERK) activity in a macrophage cell line (BAC1.2F5), bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMM) and resident peritoneal macrophages (RPM). By using an 'ingel' MBP kinase assay the activities of renaturable MBP kinases were detected, including several with molecular masses similar to those of ERK-1 and ERK-2. These represented a minor fraction of total activity and were not activated to an appreciable extent by
colony-stimulating factor 1
(
CSF-1
). By using a sensitive and specific immune-complex kinase assay, activation of ERK-1 by
CSF-1
and lipopolysaccharide (LPS) was demonstrated. Two kinetically distinct pathways of ERK-1 activation by
CSF-1
were resolved, with peak activations occurring at 5 and 15 min. The kinetics and degree of activation were similar in BMM, BAC1.2F5 cells and RPM. LPS activated ERK-1 with a single peak at 10-15 min, corresponding to the later peak of activation by
CSF-1
. Thus there was no strict correlation between ERK activation and macrophage proliferation.
...
PMID:Differences in the kinetics of activation of protein kinases and extracellular signal-related protein kinase 1 in colony-stimulating factor 1-stimulated and lipopolysaccharide-stimulated macrophages. 900 93
Recent data have indicated that resident mouse peritoneal macrophages (PMo) transcribed the interleukin 6 (Il6) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (Csfgm) genes in response to stimulation with the monocyte-
macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(
CSF-1
) but only Il6 mRNA was translated into secreted protein. In this paper, we extend these observations. It is shown that resident PMo incubated with
protein kinase
(PK)C inhibitors, staurosporine (SP) and its derivative GF109203-X, showed a several fold increase in the levels of Il6 mRNA in control and
CSF-1
-primed PMo and a parallel release of large amounts of protein. In contrast, SP was shown to have no effect on the release of GM-CSF from control or
CSF-1
-primed PMo, although it increased by approximately twofold the amount of Csfgm mRNA in
CSF-1
-primed Mo. When SP was added 4 h after
CSF-1
priming to block
CSF-1
-induced
protein kinase
pathways, an increased amount of IL-6 release was again seen but without any increase in Il6 mRNA levels. Under these conditions, Csfgm gene expression was relatively unaffected. Activation of PKC by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) also resulted in increased Il6 gene expression by control and
CSF-1
-primed PMo. PMA had no apparent effect on Csfgm transcription but appeared to influence translation at a low level, as measured by the release of small amounts of GM-CSF protein. The addition of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to
CSF-1
-primed PMo resulted in a synergistic increase in the expression of both genes at the levels of transcription and protein release. The addition of SP to
CSF-1
-primed Mo before LPS, however, further enhanced IL-6 release but not GM-CSF release from the cells. The data indicate that
CSF-1
-priming drives a number of pathways involved in the regulation of expression of both genes and renders PMo highly susceptible to appropriate secondary stimulatory agents that transform the PMo into secretory inflammatory cells.
...
PMID:Priming of mouse macrophages with the macrophage colony-stimulating factor (CSF-1) induces a variety of pathways that regulate expression of the interleukin 6 (Il6) and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (Csfgm) genes. 928 58
Activation of the respiratory burst imposes acute metabolic demands on phagocytic cells. These are met by mobilizing internal energy stores and by increasing the utilization of exogenous energy, including glucose in the circulation. To determine whether the increased glucose uptake that is known to be associated with the respiratory burst involves the regulation of glucose transporter molecules, the intrinsic transport properties of glucose transporters on the macrophage cell line RAW 264.7 were determined after activation with PMA, N-formyl-methionine-leucine-phenylalanine (fMLP) and the cytokines granulocyte/
macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(GM-CSF) and interleukin 3 (IL-3). Treatment with PMA resulted in a 2-fold increase in respiratory burst activity within 10 min; this was associated with a 30-50% increase in 2-deoxyglucose uptake and a 4-fold increase in transporter affinity for glucose. Similarly, fMLP, GM-CSF and IL-3 treatments stimulated 2-deoxyglucose uptake that was associated with a 3-4-fold increase in transporter affinity for glucose. To determine whether the changes observed in 2-deoxyglucose uptake in response to PMA, fMLP and growth factors were influenced by phosphorylation of the sugar, 3-O-methylglucose, which is not phosphorylated, was used. Increased 3-O-methylglucose uptake and increased transporter affinity for glucose were also observed after PMA, fMLP and GM-CSF treatments. Whereas both fMLP and GM-CSF stimulated superoxide production, IL-3 failed to activate respiratory burst activity. The
protein kinase
inhibitors genistein and staurosporine inhibited the increase in 2-deoxyglucose uptake observed with fMLP and GM-CSF, and partly reversed the affinity increase towards that of untreated control cells. In contrast, the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin had little effect on 2-deoxyglucose uptake in response to these activators. Western blotting with subtype-specific antisera showed that Glut-3 was the predominant transporter on RAW 264.7 cells. These studies demonstrate that acute regulation of glucose transporters occurs in response to activators that promote respiratory burst activity, and show that this regulation involves both tyrosine kinases and protein kinase C activity.
...
PMID:Acute regulation of glucose transport in a monocyte-macrophage cell line: Glut-3 affinity for glucose is enhanced during the respiratory burst. 935 3
RAFTK, a novel nonreceptor
protein kinase
, has been shown to be involved in focal adhesion signal transduction pathways in neuronal PC12 cells, megakaryocytes, platelets, and T cells. Because focal adhesions may modulate cytoskeletal functions and thereby alter phagocytosis, cell migration, and adhesion in monocyte-macrophages, we investigated the role of RAFTK signaling in these cells. RAFTK was abundantly expressed in THP1 monocytic cells as well as in primary alveolar and peripheral blood-derived macrophages. Colony-stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1)/
macrophage colony-stimulating factor
(
M-CSF
) stimulation of THP1 cells increased the tyrosine phosphorylation of RAFTK; similar increases in phosphorylation were also detected after lipopolysaccharide stimulation. RAFTK was phosphorylated with similar kinetics in THP1 cells and peripheral blood-derived macrophages. Immunoprecipitation analysis showed associations between RAFTK and the signaling molecule phosphatidylinositol-3 (PI-3) kinase. PI-3 kinase enzyme activity also coprecipitated with the RAFTK antibody, further confirming this association. The CSF-1/
M-CSF
receptor c-fms and RAFTK appeared to associate in response to CSF-1/
M-CSF
treatment of THP1 cells. Inhibition of RAFTK by a dominant-negative kinase mutant reduced CSF-1/
M-CSF
-induced MAPK activity. These data indicate that RAFTK participates in signal transduction pathways mediated by CSF-1/
M-CSF
, a cytokine that regulates monocyte-macrophage growth and function.
...
PMID:The related adhesion focal tyrosine kinase (RAFTK) is tyrosine phosphorylated and participates in colony-stimulating factor-1/macrophage colony-stimulating factor signaling in monocyte-macrophages. 957 36
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