Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.11 (AMPK)
12,425 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three different C-terminal regions of human endothelial actin-binding protein-280 (ABP-280 or ABP; nonmuscle filamin) were subcloned and efficiently expressed in the Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) system as indicated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. As predicted by the aminoacid sequence one of the fragments, a 109-kDa peptide (residues 1671-2647), contained a calpain cleavage site and two potential cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) phosphorylation sites (serine 2152 and threonine 2336). A second fragment, a 74-kDa peptide (residues 1671-2331), contained a calpain cleavage site and one of the three presumptive PKA phosphorylation sites (serine 2152). The third fragment, a 48-kDa peptide (residues 2223-2647), contained only one of the PKA sites (threonine 2336). Phosphorylation of these truncated peptides indicated that only the fragments containing serine 2152 incorporated phosphate after PKA treatment. Site-directed mutagenesis analysis confirmed that serine 2152 is the unique substrate for PKA in the C-terminal region of ABP. The functional significance of phosphorylation of this residue, which belongs to a serine-proline motif, is discussed.
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PMID:Determination of a cAMP-dependent protein kinase phosphorylation site in the C-terminal region of human endothelial actin-binding protein. 1077 44

Much attention has been paid to proteases involved in long-term potentiation (LTP). Calpains, Ca-dependent cysteine proteases, have first been demonstrated to be the mediator of LTP by the proteolytic cleavage of fodrin, which allows glutamate receptors located deep in the postsynaptic membrane to move to the surface. It is now generally considered that calpain activation is necessary for LTP formation in the cleavage of substrates such as protein kinase Czeta, NMDA receptors, and the glutamate receptor-interacting protein. Recent studies have shown that serine proteases such as tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA), thrombin, and neuropsin are involved in LTP. tPA contributes to LTP by both receptor-mediated activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and the cleavage of NMDA receptors. Thrombin induces a proteolytic activation of PAR-1, resulting in activation of protein kinase C, which reduces the voltage-dependent Mg2+ blockade of NMDA receptor-channels. On the other hand, neuropsin may act as a regulatory molecule in LTP via its proteolytic degradation of extracellular matrix protein such as fibronectin. In addition to such neuronal proteases, proteases secreted from microglia such as tPA may also contribute to LTP. The enzymatic activity of each protease is strictly regulated by endogenous inhibitors and other factors in the brain. Once activated, proteases can irreversibly cleave peptide bonds. After cleavage, some substrates are inactivated and others are activated to gain new functions. Therefore, the issue to identify substrates for each protease is very important to understand the molecular basis of LTP.
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PMID:Proteases involved in long-term potentiation. 1246 76

The plasma membrane Ca2+ ATPase isoform 1(PMCA1) is ubiquitously distributed in tissues and cells, but only scarce information is available on its properties. The isoform was overexpressed in Sf9 cells, purified on calmodulin columns, and characterized functionally. The level of expression was very low, but sufficient amounts of the protein could be isolated for biochemical characterization. The affinity of PMCA1 for calmodulin was similar to that of PMCA4, the other ubiquitous PMCA isoform. The affinity of PMCA1 for ATP, evaluated by the formation of the phosphorylated intermediate, was higher than that of the PMCA4 pump. The recombinant PMCA1 pump was a much better substrate for the cAMP-dependent protein kinase than the PMCA2 and PMCA4 isoforms. Pulse and chase experiments on Sf9 cells overexpressing the PMCA pumps showed that PMCA1 was much less stable than the PMCA4 and PMCA2 isoforms, i.e. PMCA1 had a much higher sensitivity to degradation by calpain. The effect of calpain was not the result of a general higher susceptibility of the PMCA1 to proteolytic degradation, because the pattern of degradation by trypsin was the same in the three isoforms.
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PMID:Expression, purification, and characterization of isoform 1 of the plasma membrane Ca2+ pump: focus on calpain sensitivity. 1285 6

Ezrin is localized to the apical membrane of parietal cells and couples the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) activation cascade to the regulated HCl secretion in gastric parietal cells. Our recent studies demonstrate the functional relevance of PKA-mediated phosphorylation of ezrin in parietal cell secretion [R. Zhou, X. Cao, C. Watson, Y. Miao, Z. Guo, J.G. Forte, X. Yao, Characterization of protein kinase A-mediated phosphorylation of ezrin in gastric parietal cell activation, J. Biol. Chem. 278 (2003) 35651]. Here we show that activation of PKA protects ezrin from calpain I-mediated proteolysis without alteration of calpain I activation and fodrin breakdown. To determine whether phosphorylation of Ser66 by PKA affects the insensitivity to the calpain I-mediated cleavage, recombinant proteins of ezrin, both wild type and S66A/D mutants, were incubated with the purified calpain I. Indeed, phosphorylation-like S66D mutant ezrin is resistant to calpain I-mediated proteolysis while wild type and S66A mutant were sensitive. In fact, expression of phosphorylation-like S66D, but not S66A, mutant in parietal cells confers its resistance to calpain I-mediated proteolysis. Taken together, these results indicate that phosphorylation of ezrin by PKA modulates its sensitivity to calpain I cleavage.
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PMID:PKA-mediated protein phosphorylation protects ezrin from calpain I cleavage. 1595 Sep 39

It was previously found that transgenic mice that overexpress the calpain inhibitor calpastatin (CsTg) have an approximately 3-fold increase in GLUT4 protein in their skeletal muscles. Despite the increase in GLUT4, which appears to be due to inhibition of its proteolysis by calpain, insulin-stimulated glucose transport is not increased in CsTg muscles. PKB (Akt) protein level is reduced approximately 60% in CsTg muscles, suggesting a possible mechanism for the relative insulin resistance. Muscle contractions stimulate glucose transport by a mechanism that is independent of insulin signaling. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that the threefold increase in GLUT4 in CsTg would result in a large increase in contraction-stimulated glucose transport. CAMKII and AMPK mediate steps in the contraction-stimulated pathway. The protein levels of AMPK and CAMKII were increased three- to fourfold in CsTg muscles, suggesting that these proteins are also calpain substrates. Despite the large increases in GLUT4, AMPK, and CAMKII, contraction-stimulated GLUT4 translocation and glucose transport were not increased above wild-type values. These findings suggest that inhibition of calpain results in impairment of a step in the GLUT4 translocation process downstream of the insulin- and contraction-signaling pathways. They also provide evidence that CAMKII and AMPK are calpain substrates.
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PMID:Inhibition of calpain results in impaired contraction-stimulated GLUT4 translocation in skeletal muscle. 1670 56

In 1992 little was known about the specific protein kinases that phosphorylate tau and the proteases that regulate tau turnover. Although we had already demonstrated that tau was a substrate of the calcium-activated protease calpain (Johnson et al. (1989), Biochem Biophys Res Commun 163, 1505-1511), our publication entitled, "Phosphorylation by cAMP-dependent protein kinase inhibits the degradation of tau by calpain" (Litersky and Johnson (1992), J Biol Chem 267, 1563-1568) was the first demonstration that phosphorylation by a specific kinase could inhibit the proteolysis of tau by calpain. At the time these findings suggested that the abnormal phosphorylation of tau in Alzheimer's disease brain could result in impaired tau turnover and thus result in an abnormal accumulation of the protein that could contribute to the formation of pathological lesions. Since this initial finding, much has been learned about the proteolysis of tau, not only by calpain, but by other proteases as well. However, much remains unknown about how phosphorylation regulates tau turnover in vivo and the specific proteases involved. In this article we give a brief history of our initial findings and then discuss subsequent studies from our laboratory, as well as others, on tau proteolysis and modulation by phosphorylation and how these findings contribute to our understanding of the posttranslational processing of tau in Alzheimer's disease.
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PMID:Tau phosphorylation and proteolysis: insights and perspectives. 1691 62

Impaired cognition and memory may be associated with down-regulation of cAMP-response element-binding protein (CREB) in the brain in patients with Alzheimer disease, but the molecular mechanism leading to the down-regulation is not understood. In this study, we found a selective reduction in the levels of the regulatory subunits (RIIalpha and RIIbeta) and the catalytic subunit (Cbeta) as well as the enzymatic activity of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), which is the major positive regulator of CREB. We also observed that PKA subunits were proteolyzed by calpain and the levels of PKA subunits correlated negatively with calpain activation in the human brain. These findings led us to propose that in the brain in patients with Alzheimer disease, over-activation of calpain because of calcium dysregulation causes increased degradation and thus decreased activity of PKA, which, in turn, contributes to down-regulation of CREB and impaired cognition and memory.
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PMID:Down-regulation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase by over-activated calpain in Alzheimer disease brain. 1790 36

Dihydropyrimidinase-like 3 (DPYSL3) is believed to play a role in neuronal differentiation, axonal outgrowth and neuronal regeneration, as well as cytoskeleton organization. Recently we have shown that glutamate excitotoxicity and oxidative stress result in calpain-dependent cleavage of DPYSL3, and that NOS plays a role in this process [R. Kowara, Q. Chen, M. Milliken, B. Chakravarthy, Calpain-mediated truncation of dihydropyrimidinase-like 3 protein (DPYSL3) in response to NMDA and H2O2 toxicity, J. Neurochem. 95 (2005) 466-474; R. Kowara, K.L. Moraleja, B. Chakravarthy, Involvement of nitric oxide synthase and ROS-mediated activation of L-type voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels in NMDA-induced DPYSL3 degradation, Brain Res. 1119 (2006) 40-49]. The present study investigates the involvement of PLA(2) signaling in NMDA-induced DPYSL3 degradation. Exposure of rat primary cortical neurons (PCN) to PLA(2) and COX-2 inhibitors significantly prevented NMDA-induced DPYSL3 degradation. Since the metabolic product of PLA(2) signaling, PGE(2), which augments toxic effect of NMDA, is known to stimulate cAMP, the effect of adenyl cyclase activator (forskolin plus IBMX) and inhibitor (MDL12,300) on NMDA-induced DPYSL3 degradation was tested. Our data indicate that the activation of adenyl cyclase contributes to NMDA-induced DPYSL3 degradation. Furthermore, cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) inhibitor PKI (14-22) provided additional evidence of PKA involvement in NMDA-induced DPYSL3 degradation. In summary, the obtained data show the contribution of PLA(2) signaling to NMDA-induced calpain activation and subsequent degradation of synaptic protein DPYSL3.
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PMID:PLA(2) signaling is involved in calpain-mediated degradation of synaptic dihydropyrimidinase-like 3 protein in response to NMDA excitotoxicity. 1805 48

We investigated cardiac hypertrophy elicited by rosiglitazone treatment at the level of protein synthesis/degradation, mTOR, MAPK and AMPK signalling pathways, cardiac function and aspects of carbohydrate/lipid metabolism. Hearts of rats treated or not with rosiglitazone (15 mg/kg day) for 21 days were evaluated for gene expression, protein synthesis, proteasome and calpain activities, signalling pathways, and function by echocardiography. Rosiglitazone induced eccentric heart hypertrophy associated with increased expression of ANP, BNP, collagen I and III and fibronectin, reduced heart rate and increased stroke volume. Rosiglitazone robustly increased heart glycogen content ( approximately 400%), an effect associated with increases in glycogenin and UDPG-PPL mRNA levels and glucose uptake, and a reduction in glycogen phosphorylase expression and activity. Cardiac triglyceride content, lipoprotein lipase activity and mRNA levels of enzymes involved in fatty acid oxidation were also reduced by the agonist. Rosiglitazone-induced cardiac hypertrophy was associated with an increase in myofibrillar protein content and turnover (increased synthesis and an enhancement of calpain-mediated myofibrillar degradation). In contrast, 26S beta5 chymotryptic proteasome activity and mRNA levels of 20S beta2 and beta5 and 19S RPN 2 proteasome subunits along with the ubiquitin ligases atrogin and CHIP were all reduced by rosiglitazone. These morphological and biochemical changes were associated with marked activation of the key growth-promoting mTOR signalling pathway, whose pharmacological inhibition with rapamycin completely blocked cardiac hypertrophy induced by rosiglitazone. The study demonstrates that both arms of protein balance are involved in rosiglitazone-induced cardiac hypertrophy, and establishes the mTOR pathway as a novel important mediator therein.
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PMID:Rosiglitazone-induced heart remodelling is associated with enhanced turnover of myofibrillar protein and mTOR activation. 1939 13

The mitochondrial cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) is activatable in a cAMP-independent fashion. The regulatory (R) subunits of the PKA holoenzyme (R(2)C(2)), but not the catalytic (C) subunits, suffer proteolysis upon exposure of bovine heart mitochondria to digitonin, Ca(2+), and a myriad of electron transport inhibitors. Selective loss of both the RI- and RII-type subunits was demonstrated via Western blot analysis, and activation of the C subunit was revealed by phosphorylation of a validated PKA peptide substrate. Selective proteolysis transpires in a calpain-dependent fashion as demonstrated by exposure of the R and C subunits of PKA to calpain and by attenuation of R and C subunit proteolysis in the presence of calpain inhibitor I. By contrast, exposure of mitochondria to cAMP fails to promote R subunit degradation, although it does result in enhanced C subunit catalytic activity. Treatment of mitochondria with electron transport chain inhibitors rotenone, antimycin A, sodium azide, and oligomycin, as well as an uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation, also elicits enhanced C subunit activity. These results are consistent with the notion that signals, originating from cAMP-independent sources, elicit enhanced mitochondrial PKA activity.
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PMID:Proteolytic regulation of the mitochondrial cAMP-dependent protein kinase. 2238 95


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