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

The glycine-rich loop, one of the most important motifs in the conserved protein kinase catalytic core, embraces the entire nucleotide, is very mobile, and is exquisitely sensitive to what occupies the active site cleft. Of the three conserved glycines [G(50)TG(52)SFG(55) in cAMP-dependent protein kinase (cAPK)], Gly(52) is the most important for catalysis because it allows the backbone amide of Ser(53) at the tip of the loop to hydrogen bond to the gamma-phosphate of ATP [Grant, B. D. et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 7708]. The structural model of the catalytic subunit:ATP:PKI((5)(-)(24)) (heat-stable protein kinase inhibitor) ternary complex in the closed conformation suggests that Ser(53) also might be essential for stabilization of the peptide substrate-enzyme complex via a hydrogen bond between the P-site carbonyl in PKI and the Ser(53) side-chain hydroxyl [Bossemeyer, D. et al. (1993) EMBO J. 12, 849]. To address the importance of the Ser(53) side chain in catalysis, inhibition, and P-site specificity, Ser(53) was replaced with threonine, glycine, and proline. Removal of the side chain (i.e., mutation to glycine) had no effect on the steady-state phosphorylation of a peptide substrate (LRRASLG) or on the interaction with physiological inhibitors, including the type-I and -II regulatory subunits and PKI. However, this mutation did affect the P-site specificity; the glycine mutant can more readily phosphorylate a P-site threonine in a peptide substrate (5-6-fold better than wild-type). The proline mutant is compromised catalytically with altered k(cat) and K(m) for both peptide and ATP and with altered sensitivity to both regulatory subunits and PKI. Steric constraints as well as restricted flexibility could account for these effects. These combined results demonstrate that while the backbone amide of Ser(53) may be required for efficient catalysis, the side chain is not.
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PMID:Serine-53 at the tip of the glycine-rich loop of cAMP-dependent protein kinase: role in catalysis, P-site specificity, and interaction with inhibitors. 1088 42

Cbeta2, a 46 kDa splice variant of the Cbeta isoform, is the largest isoform so far described for catalytic subunits from cAMP-dependent protein kinase in mammals. It differs from Cbeta in the first 15 N-terminal residues which are replaced with a 62-residue domain with no similarity to other known proteins. The Cbeta2 protein was identified in cardiac tissue by MS, microsequencing and C-subunit-isoform-selective antibodies. The Cbeta2 protein has a very low abundance of about 2% of total affinity-purified C subunits from bovine cardiac tissue. This, and the similarity of its biochemical properties to Calpha and Cbeta, are probably some of the reasons why the Cbeta2 protein has escaped detection so far. The abundance of the Cbeta2 protein differs dramatically between tissues, with most protein detected in heart, liver and spleen, and the lowest level in testis. Cbeta2 protein shows kinase activity against synthetic substrates, and is inhibited by the protein kinase inhibitor peptide PKI(5-24). The degree of Cbeta2 removal from tissue extracts by binding to PKI(5-24) depends on the cAMP level, i.e. on the dissociation state of the holoenzyme. Two sites in the protein are phosphorylated: Thr-244 in the activation segment and Ser-385 close to the C-terminus. By affinity purification and immunodetection Cbeta2 was found in cattle, pig, rat, mouse and turkey tissue and in HeLa cells. In the cAMP-insensitive CHO 10260 cell line, which has normal Cbeta but is depleted of Calpha, stable transfection with Cbeta2 restored most of the cAMP-induced morphological changes. Cbeta2 is a ubiquitously expressed protein with characteristic properties of a cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit.
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PMID:The protein kinase A catalytic subunit Cbeta2: molecular characterization and distribution of the splice variant. 1099 54

Increasing evidence shows that stimulation of beta-adrenergic receptor (AR) activates mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), in addition to the classical G(s)-adenylyl cyclase-cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) signaling cascade. In the present study, we demonstrate a novel beta(2)-AR-mediated cross-talk between PKA and p38 MAPK in adult mouse cardiac myocytes expressing beta(2)-AR, with a null background of beta(1)beta(2)-AR double knockout. beta(2)-AR stimulation by isoproterenol increased p38 MAPK activity in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Inhibiting G(i) with pertussis toxin or scavenging Gbetagamma with betaARK-ct overexpression could not prevent beta(2)-AR-induced p38 MAPK activation. In contrast, a specific peptide inhibitor of PKA, PKI (5 microm), completely abolished the stimulatory effect of beta(2)-AR, suggesting that beta(2)-AR-induced p38 MAPK activation is mediated via a PKA-dependent mechanism, rather than by G(i) or Gbetagamma. This conclusion was further supported by the ability of forskolin (10 microm), an adenylyl cyclase activator, to elevate p38 MAPK activity in a PKI-sensitive manner. Furthermore, inhibition of p38 MAPK with SB203580 (10 microm) markedly enhanced the beta(2)-AR-mediated contractile response, without altering base-line contractility. These results provide the first evidence that cardiac beta(2)-AR activates p38 MAPK via a PKA-dependent signaling pathway, rather than by G(i) or Gbetagamma, and reveal a novel role of p38 MAPK in regulating cardiac contractility.
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PMID:beta 2-adrenergic receptor-induced p38 MAPK activation is mediated by protein kinase A rather than by Gi or gbeta gamma in adult mouse cardiomyocytes. 1101 34

The steroidogenic acute regulatory (StAR) protein is indispensable for maximal trophic hormone-stimulated steroidogenesis by the adrenal gland, testis, and ovary. Recently, our laboratory developed an in vitro primary culture system of porcine granulosa-luteal cells that retain responsiveness to LH and show LH and insulin [or insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I)] synergy in stimulating StAR messenger RNA accumulation. Here, we examine the mechanisms subserving this LH-insulin (IGF-I) augmentation. We corroborate LH's amplification of insulin as well as IGF-I-stimulated granulosa-luteal cell progesterone and cAMP accumulation (P < 0.001). Insulin or IGF-I elevated LH receptor transcript accumulation, and LH did not alter this effect. To determine the hormonal responsiveness of StAR promoter, truncated regions of the -1423 to +130 bp upstream sequence of the porcine gene were ligated into a firefly luciferase reporter plasmid. Transient transfection of the StAR plasmid containing the full-length porcine 5'-flanking region of StAR (pStAR1423/luc) showed superadditive stimulation by LH and insulin or IGF-I after 24 h. LH, but not insulin or IGF-I alone, stimulated pStAR1423/luc activity. Deletion of the proximal putative steroidogenic factor-1 (-48 to -41) site abolished hormonally driven StAR promoter activity. A stable cAMP analog, 8-bromo-cAMP (1 mM), and insulin/IGF-I also evoked supraadditive StAR promoter expression. To further explore the role of cAMP in LH-insulin (or IGF-I) actions, we cotransfected a Rous sarcoma virus (RSV)-driven minigene encoding the heat-stable inhibitor of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (RSV/PKI) or a mutant plasmid (RSV/PKImut) along with the pStAR1423/luc promoter construct. Cotransfection of PKI, but not PKImut, with pStAR1423/luc significantly attenuated LH's stimulation of luciferase activity and also reduced the magnitude of the transcriptional amplification exerted by LH and insulin or IGF-I. In corollary analyses of the protein kinase A (PKA) pathway, cotransfection of full-length pStAR1423/luc and a complementary DNA encoding a constitutively activated PKA catalytic subunit elevated basal and insulin (or IGF-I)-stimulated StAR promoter expression. LH and insulin (or IGF-I) also augmented steady state StAR transcript levels, as assessed by homologous RT-PCR, and StAR protein concentrations, as evaluated by Western blotting. Together, these investigations document a significant role for insulin or IGF-I in enhancing LH-stimulated progesterone and cAMP biosynthesis and endogenous StAR message and protein accumulation and in augmenting cAMP-PKA-dependent transcriptional activation of the exogenous StAR promoter.
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PMID:Concerted regulation of steroidogenic acute regulatory gene expression by luteinizing hormone and insulin (or insulin-like growth factor I) in primary cultures of porcine granulosa-luteal cells. 1108 28

In a recent report (Cho et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 97, 835-840, 2000), we showed that cancer cells of various cell types secrete cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) into the conditioned medium and that in the serum of cancer patients this extracellular PKA (ECPKA) is upregulated 10-fold as compared with normal serum. Here, we characterized the enzymatic properties of ECPKA that is present in the conditioned medium of PC3M prostate cancer cells and in the serum of cancer patients, and we compared ECPKA with PKA found in the cell extracts of PC3M cells. ECPKA present in the conditioned medium and human serum was not activated by cAMP addition, but intracellular PKA activity was totally dependent on the addition of cAMP. This indicates that the ECPKA is present in active, free C subunit form, whereas intracellular PKA is present in inactive holoenzyme form. ECPKA activity increased in a substrate concentration- and time-dependent manner, as did intracellular PKA. Both ECPKA and intracellular PKA activities were specifically inhibited by the PKA inhibitor protein, PKI. However, ECPKA activity was more temperature-sensitive than intracellular PKA; after two cycles of freezing/thawing, only 20% of initial ECPKA activity was detected compared with over 40% of intracellular PKA activity. Western blot analysis revealed the presence of a 40 kDa C(alpha) subunit of PKA in both conditioned medium and in the serum of cancer patients. These results suggest that ECPKA, out of the context of cAMP regulation, may function as a growth factor promoting cell growth and transformation; thus, it may serve as a tumor biomarker.
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PMID:Biochemical characterization of extracellular cAMP-dependent protein kinase as a tumor marker. 1109 68

We present evidence of a link between low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor binding and activation of a platelet G-coupled protein. LDL stimulation induced cytosolic [Ca2+]i mobilization, increase in inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (IP3) formation and a rapid cytosol-to-membrane translocation of protein kinase C (PKC) enzymatic activity. Pertussis toxin inhibited all the stimulatory effects, whereas cholera toxin had no effect. Using ligand-binding assays, we demonstrated that exposing platelet LDL receptors to high concentrations of LDL (1.5 g/l) caused a rapid down-regulation and desensitization, as shown by the reduction in the Bmax, intracellular [Ca2+]i mobilization and IP3 formation to 65, 73 and 63%, respectively. The inhibitory effects were reversible and dose and time dependent. Furthermore, VLDL (0.2 g/l) and IDL (0.07 g/l) induced similar desensitization effects. However, HDL3 (up to 1.5 g/l), chylomicrons (up to 0.5 g/l) and cyclohexandione-modified LDL (which does not bind to platelets) had no significant effects. Protein kinase C inhibitors (150 nmol/l staurosporine, 100 micromol/l H-7, and 10 nmol/l bisindolylmaleimide) inhibited desensitization to 71%, on average. Sequestration blocking agents (0.30 g/l, concanavalin A) had no significant effect if phosphorylation was operative. However, there was a complete blockade with the concurrent inhibition of both pathways. In contrast, cAMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitors (PKI, 1 micromol/l) or beta2-adrenergic receptor kinase inhibitors (100 nmol/l, heparin), had no effect. Overall results indicate that LDL binds to a pertussis sensitive G-protein coupled receptor and that high levels of lipoproteins down-regulate the number of receptors and desensitize its mediated response by a mechanism that involves PKC-phosphorylation and sequestration of binding sites. This new regulatory mechanism may have implications for the thrombogenicity in hyperlipidemia and for effects of lipid lowering therapy.
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PMID:Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) binds to a G-protein coupled receptor in human platelets. Evidence that the proaggregatory effect induced by LDL is modulated by down-regulation of binding sites and desensitization of its mediated signaling. 1122 31

Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) gene promoter activity is increased in PC12 cells that are treated with the phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA). Mutagenesis of either the cAMP responsive element (CRE) or the activator protein-1 element (AP1) within the TH gene proximal promoter leads to a dramatic inhibition of the TPA response. The TH CRE and TH AP1 sites are also independently responsive to TPA in minimal promoter constructs. TPA treatment results in phosphorylation of cAMP responsive element binding protein (CREB) and activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) in PC12 cells; hence, we tested whether CREB and/or PKA are essential for the TPA response. In CREB-deficient cells, the response of the full TH gene proximal promoter or the independent response of the TH CRE by itself to TPA is inhibited. The TPA-inducibility of TH mRNA is also blocked in CREB-deficient cells. Expression of the PKA inhibitor protein, PKI, also inhibits the independent response of the TH CRE to TPA. Our results support the hypothesis that TPA stimulates the TH gene promoter via signaling pathways that activate either the TH AP1 or TH CRE sites. Both signaling pathways are dependent on CREB and the TH CRE-mediated pathway is dependent on PKA.
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PMID:The cAMP responsive element and CREB partially mediate the response of the tyrosine hydroxylase gene to phorbol ester. 1123 22

Other studies have shown that caffeine accelerates telencephalic vesicle evagination in early post-implantation mouse embryos. The present study examines the effect of caffeine on gene modulation in post-implantation mouse embryos. Using mRNA differential display, we observed that caffeine increased gene expression of the regulatory subunit (RI alpha) of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). RT--PCR analysis confirmed an increase in expression of this gene in caffeine-exposed embryos when compared with saline-treated controls. Using a fluorescent substrate of PKA, we found that PKA activity in the presence of cAMP was lower in caffeine-treated embryos than in controls. Treatment with H89 and PKI(12-24)amide, two inhibitors of PKA activity, mimicked the effects of caffeine on telencephalic vesicle formation. Together these data suggest that in early post-implantation mouse embryos caffeine modulates gene expression of the RI alpha subunit of PKA and that caffeine-induced inhibition of PKA activity plays a role in early telencephalic evagination.
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PMID:Caffeine-induced telencephalic vesicle evagination in early post-implantation mouse embryos involves cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) inhibition. 1127 97

1. The regulation of the L-type Ca(2+) current (I(Ca)) by intracellular cGMP was investigated in human atrial myocytes using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique. 2. Intracellular application of 0.5 microM cGMP produced a strong stimulation of basal I(Ca) (+64 +/- 5 %, n = 60), whereas a 10-fold higher cGMP concentration induced a 2-fold smaller increase (+36 +/- 8 %, n = 35). 3. The biphasic response of I(Ca) to cGMP was not mimicked by the cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) activator 8-bromoguanosine 3',5' cyclic monophosphate (8-bromo-cGMP, 0.5 or 5 microM), and was not affected by the PKG inhibitor KT 5823 (100 nM). 4. In contrast, cGMP stimulation of I(Ca) was abolished by intracellular perfusion with PKI (10 microM), a selective inhibitor of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). 5. Selective inhibition of the cGMP-inhibited phosphodiesterase (PDE3) by extracellular cilostamide (100 nM) strongly enhanced basal I(Ca) in control conditions (+78 +/- 13 %, n = 7) but had only a marginal effect in the presence of intracellular cGMP (+22 +/- 7 % in addition to 0.5 microM cGMP, n = 11; +20 +/- 22 % in addition to 5 microM cGMP, n = 7). 6. Application of erythro-9-[2-hydroxy-3-nonyl]adenine (EHNA, 30 microM), a selective inhibitor of the cGMP-stimulated phosphodiesterase (PDE2), fully reversed the secondary inhibitory effect of 5 microM cGMP on I(Ca) (+99 +/- 16 % stimulation, n = 7). 7. Altogether, these data indicate that intracellular cGMP regulates basal I(Ca) in human atrial myocytes in a similar manner to NO donors. The effect of cGMP involves modulation of the cAMP level and PKA activity via opposite actions of the nucleotide on PDE2 and PDE3.
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PMID:Cyclic GMP regulation of the L-type Ca(2+) channel current in human atrial myocytes. 1138 95

In the Xenopus oocyte system mitogen treatment triggers the G(2)/M transition by transiently inhibiting the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA); subsequently, other signal transduction pathways are activated, including the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and polo-like kinase pathways. To study the interactions between these pathways, we have utilized a cell-free oocyte extract that carries out the signaling events of oocyte maturation after addition of the heat-stable inhibitor of PKA, PKI. PKI stimulated the synthesis of Mos and activation of both the MAPK pathway and the Plx1/Cdc25C/cyclin B-Cdc2 pathway. Activation of the MAPK pathway alone by glutathione S-transferase (GST)-Mos did not lead to activation of Plx1 or cyclin B-Cdc2. Inhibition of the MAPK pathway in the extract by the MEK1 inhibitor U0126 delayed, but did not prevent, activation of the Plx1 pathway, and inhibition of Mos synthesis by cycloheximide had a similar effect, suggesting that MAPK activation is the only relevant function of Mos. Immunodepletion of Plx1 completely inhibited activation of Cdc25C and cyclin B-Cdc2 by PKI, indicating that Plx1 is necessary for Cdc25C activation. In extracts containing fully activated Plx1 and Cdc25C, inhibition of cyclin B-Cdc2 by p21(Cip1) had no significant effect on either the phosphorylation of Cdc25C or the activity of Plx1. These results demonstrate that maintenance of Plx1 and Cdc25C activity during mitosis does not require cyclin B-Cdc2 activity.
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PMID:The polo-like kinase Plx1 is required for activation of the phosphatase Cdc25C and cyclin B-Cdc2 in Xenopus oocytes. 1140 85


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