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)

Although tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interleukin 1 (IL-1) affect many cell functions, the molecular mechanisms of TNF and IL-1 action are not understood. Our present study shows that exposure of human FS-4 fibroblasts to TNF or IL-1 caused a rapid accumulation of intracellular cAMP and an increase in protein kinase activity. Intracellular cAMP levels peaked 3-5 min after the addition of TNF or IL-1 and returned to basal level by 15 min. Increased phosphorylation of histone HII-B protein was demonstrated with extracts prepared from TNF- or IL-1-treated cells, suggesting an increase in cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity. No evidence was obtained for protein kinase C activation in TNF-treated FS-4 cells. TNF, IL-1, and forskolin all stimulated interleukin 6 (IL-6) mRNA levels in FS-4 cells. The protein kinase inhibitor H-8, inhibiting preferentially cAMP-dependent kinase activity, reduced forskolin-stimulated IL-6 mRNA induction more strongly than TNF- or IL-1-driven IL-6 mRNA induction. These results suggest that activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase by TNF and IL-1 is important in some actions of these cytokines. In addition, our data on IL-6 induction by TNF and IL-1 suggest that other, yet unidentified, signal transduction mechanisms contribute to TNF and IL-1 actions on gene expression in human fibroblasts.
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PMID:Enhancement of cAMP levels and of protein kinase activity by tumor necrosis factor and interleukin 1 in human fibroblasts: role in the induction of interleukin 6. 284 90

We assessed the role of cyclic nucleotides in modulating lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) generation in human peripheral blood monocytes. Exposure of monocytes to LPS (3 ng/ml) evoked a delayed, time-dependent generation of TNF-alpha that reached a maximum level 5-6 hr after LPS challenge and remained constant for up to 24 hr. This effect was concentration dependent and resulted in a 20-40-fold increase in the release of TNF-alpha that was sensitive to actinomycin D and cycloheximide. Treatment of monocytes with agents reputed to activate the cAMP/cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) cascade in general inhibited LPS-induced TNF-alpha generation. Thus, the beta 2-adrenoceptor agonists albuterol and procaterol partially (approximately 40%) suppressed TNF-alpha generation in a propranolol-sensitive manner. Furthermore, 8-bromo-cAMP, cholera toxin, prostaglandin E2, and a number of drugs (i.e., rolipram (ZK 62711), denbufylline (BRL 30892), Ro 20-1724, benafentrine (AH 21-132), that inhibit the phosphodiesterase (PDE) 4 isoenzyme family abolished cytokine generation. In contrast, forskolin, inhibitors of PDE3 and PDE5, and activators of soluble and particulate guanylyl cyclase were essentially inactive. Interestingly, rolipram failed to potentiate the inhibitory effect of albuterol on LPS-induced TNF-alpha biosynthesis but, paradoxically, synergized with albuterol in the generation of cAMP and in the activation of PKA. When PGE2 was used to activate adenylyl cyclase, however, rolipram potentiated cAMP accumulation, PKA activation, and inhibition of TNF-alpha generation. In contrast, forskolin did not increase the cAMP content of monocytes in the absence or presence of rolipram. Collectively, these data suggest that LPS-induced TNF-alpha generation by human peripheral blood monocytes is due to increased transcription and subsequent translation of the TNF-alpha gene and that these effects are suppressed by a range of agents that activate the cAMP/PKA cascade. However, the failure of rolipram to potentiate the inhibitory effect of albuterol and procaterol on TNF-alpha generation suggests that beta 2-adrenoceptor agonists may affect gene expression and/or post-transcriptional regulatory processes by, at least in part, a cAMP-independent mechanism(s).
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PMID:Suppression of lipopolysaccharide-induced tumor necrosis factor-alpha generation from human peripheral blood monocytes by inhibitors of phosphodiesterase 4: interaction with stimulants of adenylyl cyclase. 747 3

For "leaky" epithelia the transepithelial resistance (Rt) is an electrophysiological measure of the paracellular pathway within the epithelial barrier. The Rt across a monolayer of LLC-PK1 porcine renal epithelial cells is specifically an inverse measure of paracellular transepithelial permeability and displays a multiphasic and reversible response to the cytokine tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF). The Rt response to TNF can be inhibited by the nonhydrolyzable adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) analogue, dibutyryl-cAMP. In addition, activation of adenylate cyclase (forskolin) or inhibition of phosphodiesterase (3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine, Ro-20-1724, and pentoxifylline), each of which have been reported to elevate cellular cAMP levels, also inhibited the Rt response to TNF. Incubation of the LLC-PK1 cell sheet with N-[2-(methylamino)ethyl]-5-isoquinolinesulfonamide, an inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), potentiated the Rt response to TNF. The Rt response to TNF was completely prevented by preincubation of the cultures with cholera toxin, whereas pertussis toxin pretreatment had a slight but significant potentiating effect on the response. Pretreatment with cholera toxin was associated with an approximately 18-fold elevation in cAMP levels in both control and TNF-treated cultures. Measurements of cellular cAMP content at selected intervals after TNF administration showed a significant elevation (P < 0.01) of 140% above time-matched controls at 1 h after the administration of TNF to the cell sheet. The level of cAMP then declined to approximate control level within 2.5 h of TNF administration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:cAMP modulates transepithelial resistance response of LLC-PK1 renal epithelia to tumor necrosis factor. 786 72

Signal transduction for tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-1 involves sphingomyelin hydrolysis to ceramide and stimulation of a ceramide-activated serine/threonine protein kinase (Mathias, S., Younes, A., Kan, C., Orlow, I., Joseph, C., and Kolesnick, R. (1993) Science 259, 519-522). Kinase activity is detected by phosphorylation of a 19-amino acid peptide derived from the sequence surrounding Thr669 of the epidermal growth factor receptor. Thr669 is contained within a -Pro-Leu-Thr-Pro- motif, which conforms to a known recognition sequence for the proline-directed class of serine/threonine protein kinases. The present studies used peptides with single-site amino acid substitutions within this sequence to assess substrate recognition by ceramide-activated protein kinase. Substitution of alanine for the C-terminal but not the N-terminal proline reduced kinase activity by 80%. Similarly, substitution of basic residues for the leucine residue reduced kinase activity by 90%. Substitution of acidic residues for leucine, or its removal, also markedly reduced kinase activity. Surprisingly, addition of a leucine residue between threonine and the C-terminal proline enhanced kinase activity 3-4 fold. The Vmax(app) of the enzyme toward the control peptide containing -Pro-Leu-Thr-Pro- (200 +/- 11 pmol of peptide phosphorylated/min/mg of membrane protein) was enhanced 2.3-fold by ceramide. However, ceramide had no effect on the Km (2.0 +/- 0.4 mM). Membranes containing ceramide-activated protein kinase showed minimal activity toward peptides derived from substrates for casein kinase II, S6 kinase, protein kinase C, and cAMP-dependent protein kinase, but possessed substantial activity toward a calmodulin kinase substrate. However, activities toward these substrates were not enhanced by ceramide. These results suggest that ceramide-activated protein kinase may be a member of the proline-directed class of protein kinases and display specificity for -Leu-Thr-Pro- as a minimal substrate recognition motif.
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PMID:Substrate recognition by ceramide-activated protein kinase. Evidence that kinase activity is proline-directed. 837 61

Nitric oxide (NO) increases tumor necrosis factor (TNF) synthesis in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells by a cGMP-independent mechanism. NO has been shown to inhibit adenylate cyclase in cell membranes. Since cAMP down-regulates TNF transcription, we examined the possibility that NO enhances TNF synthesis by decreasing cAMP. U937 cells were induced to differentiate using phorbol myristate acetate (100 nM for 48 h) and then were incubated for 24 h with sodium nitroprusside (SNP) or S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (SNAP). These NO donors increased TNF production (7.0- and 15.6-fold, respectively, at 500 microM) in a dose-dependent manner (p = 0.002). However, SNP and SNAP did not elevate cGMP levels in U937 cell cultures, and the cGMP analog, 8-bromo-cGMP, had no effect on TNF production. In contrast, SNP (p = 0.001) and SNAP (p = 0.009) decreased intracellular cAMP levels by up to 51.5% over 24 h and, in the presence of a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, blunted isoproterenol-stimulated increases in cAMP by 21.8% (p = 0.004) and 27.6% (p = 0.008), respectively. H89, an inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, dose dependently increased TNF production in phorbol myristate acetate-differentiated U937 cells in the absence (6.5-fold at 30 microM; p = 0.035), but not in the presence (p = 0.77) of SNAP. Conversely, the cAMP analog dibutyryl cAMP (Bt2cAMP) blocked SNAP-induced TNF production (p = 0.001). SNP and SNAP (500 microM) increased relative TNF mRNA levels by 57.5% (p = 0.045) and 66.2% (p = 0.001), respectively. This effect was prevented by Bt2cAMP. These results indicate that NO up-regulates TNF production by decreasing intracellular cAMP.
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PMID:Nitric oxide increases tumor necrosis factor production in differentiated U937 cells by decreasing cyclic AMP. 903 16

The role(s) of protein kinases in the regulation of G protein-dependent activation of phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C by tumor necrosis factor-alpha was investigated in the osteoblast cell line MC3T3-E1. We have previously reported the stimulatory effects of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and A1F4-, an activator of G proteins, on this phospholipase pathway documented by a decrease in mass of PI and release of diacylglycerol. In this study, we further explored the mechanism(s) by which the tumor necrosis factor or A1F4(-)-promoted breakdown of phosphatidylinositol and the polyphosphoinositides by phospholipase C is regulated. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha was found to elicit a 4-5-fold increase in the formation of [3H]inositol-1,4-phosphate and [3H]inositol-1,4,5-phosphate; and a 36% increase in [3H]inositol-1-phosphate within 5 min in prelabeled cells. [3H]inositol-4-phosphate, a metabolite of [3H]inositol-1,4-phosphate and [3H]inositol-1,4,5-phosphate, was found to be the predominant phosphoinositol product of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and A1F4(-)-activated phospholipase C hydrolysis after 30 min. In addition, the preincubation of cells with pertussis toxin decreased the tumor necrosis factor-induced release of inositol phosphates by 53%. Inhibitors of protein kinase C, including Et-18-OMe and H-7, dramatically decreased the formation of [3H]inositol phosphates stimulated by either tumor necrosis factor-alpha or A1F4- by 90-100% but did not affect basal formation. The activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, or protein kinase A, by the treatment of cells with forskolin or 8-BrcAMP augmented basal, tumor necrosis factor-alpha and A1F4(-)-induced [3H]inositol phosphate formation. Therefore, we report that protein kinases can regulate tumor necrosis factor-alpha-initiated signalling at the cell surface in osteoblasts through effects on the coupling between receptor, G-protein and phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C.
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PMID:Protein kinases A and C positively regulate G protein-dependent activation of phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C by tumor necrosis factor-alpha in MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts. 913 78

Adrenomedullin (AM) has very recently been demonstrated to be produced and secreted from fibroblasts. The production of AM in the fibroblasts is augmented by inflammation-related substances, and Swiss 3T3 fibroblast cells express AM specific receptors coupled with adenylate cyclase. To assess the functions of AM secreted from fibroblasts, we measured the effect of AM on production in Swiss 3T3 cells of interleukin-6 (IL-6), a typical cytokine involved in the general inflammatory reactions. AM stimulated basal secretion of IL-6 5.5-fold, while other peptides elicited much weaker stimulatory effects. The effect of AM was inhibited with an AM receptor antagonist and a cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) inhibitor. Furthermore, AM remarkably potentiated stimulatory effects of tumor necrosis factor-alpha, IL-1 beta and lipopolysaccharide on IL-6 production. This stimulatory effect of AM was induced through activation of gene transcription, which reached maximum within 30 min. These findings verify that AM is a rapid and extraordinarily potent regulator of IL-6 production in Swiss 3T3 cells acting through the cAMP-PKA pathway. The data thus obtained suggest that AM is a peptidergic regulator of inflammation.
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PMID:Adrenomedullin stimulates interleukin-6 production in Swiss 3T3 cells. 951 21

Ethanol impairs hormone-stimulated cAMP production in a number of cell types, yet the effects of ethanol on downstream responses mediated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) are not understood. Here we have investigated the effects of ethanol feeding on cAMP-mediated inhibition of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) synthesis in rat Kupffer cells. Male Wistar rats were fed liquid diets containing 36% of calories as ethanol for 4 wk or were pair fed a control diet. Stimulation of cAMP production by the adenosine A2 receptor agonist 5'-(N-ethylcarboxamido)-adenosine (NECA), prostaglandin E2, or forskolin was decreased to 25% of control values in Kupffer cells isolated from ethanol-fed rats. This decrease was associated with a reduction in the quantity of immunoreactive Gsalpha protein in ethanol-fed rats, with no changes observed in Gialpha or Gbeta. TNF-alpha production was higher in ethanol-fed rats in response to stimulation with lipopolysaccharide or latex beads. Despite the profound reduction in the ability of hormone to increase cAMP production, NECA and prostaglandin E2 inhibited TNF-alpha production to an equivalent degree in Kupffer cells from ethanol- and pair-fed rats. Total activity and immuoreactive protein quantity of PKA did not differ between groups. Activation of PKA in response to a 15-min treatment with 1 microM NECA was reduced by 50% in ethanol-fed rats compared with control. Despite this reduction in activation, translocation of the catalytic subunit of PKA to the nucleus and phosphorylation of cAMP response element binding protein in response to activation were observed in Kupffer cells from both ethanol- and pair-fed rats. These data demonstrate that there is a dissociation between ethanol-induced desensitization of hormone-stimulated cAMP production in rat Kupffer cells and the downstream inhibition of TNF-alpha production mediated by cAMP.
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PMID:Ethanol dissociates hormone-stimulated cAMP production from inhibition of TNF-alpha production in rat Kupffer cells. 988 84

The tumor necrosis factor (TNF) alpha level is elevated in patients with advanced heart failure, and the phosphorylation of contractile regulatory proteins is reduced in the human heart. We hypothesized that TNFalpha affects the phosphorylation of proteins involved in regulating contraction; phospholamban (PLB), myosin light chain 2 (MLC2) and troponin I (TnI). Spontaneously beating rat neonatal cardiac myocytes, prelabelled with [32P]orthophosphate, were treated with TNFalpha for 30 min, and stimulated with isoproterenol for 5 min. 32P-labelled myofibrillar proteins were isolated by 15% SDS-PAGE. Baseline phosphorylation levels of PLB, TnI and an unknown 23kDa phosphoprotein were decreased by TNFalpha in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, TNFalpha attenuated the phosphorylation levels of PLB and TnI increased by a concentration of 0.01 microM isoproterenol, but not by 1 microM of isoproterenol. Although TNFalpha had no effect on the cAMP content or cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity in the presence or absence of isoproterenol, an inverse relationship was observed between the concentration of TNFalpha and the cGMP content in cardiac myocytes, and treatment with TNFalpha resulted in a concentration-dependent increase in type 2A protein phosphatase activity. The observation that TNFalpha decreases phosphorylation levels of PLB and TnI in cardiac myocytes suggests that the reduction of these protein phosphorylation levels is partially responsible for alterations of intracellular Ca2+-cycling and the force of contraction in TNF alpha-treated cardiac myocytes. Furthermore, TNFalpha reduces myocyte contraction and protein phosphorylation states possibly via cAMP-independent mechanisms, at least in part, by the activation of type 2A protein phosphatase.
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-alpha decreases the phosphorylation levels of phospholamban and troponin I in spontaneously beating rat neonatal cardiac myocytes. 1007 33

The effects of endothelin-1 (ET-1) on the production of plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) and tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) by human brain-derived endothelial cells in culture were studied. At 100 nmol/L, ET-1 increased PAI-1 production by 88+/-6% within 72 hours, and increased PAI-1 mRNA expression within 1 hour of stimulation; there was no significant effect on t-PA production. PAI-1 activity was also examined and found to increase with ET-1 treatment. Suboptimal concentrations of ET-1 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) acted synergistically to increase PAI-1 production. ET-1 activated protein kinase C and cAMP-dependent protein kinase pathways within 3 to 5 minutes of treatment, with the peak at 10 minutes. Activation of protein kinase C by phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA) resulted in increased PAI-1 production, whereas activation of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase by forskolin or dibutyryl cAMP (dBu-cAMP) significantly decreased PAI-1 production. However, simultaneous activation of protein kinase C by PMA and cAMP-dependent protein kinase by dBu-cAMP only slightly attenuated PMA-induced PAI-1 increase. Inhibition of protein kinase C by GF-109213X abolished the effects of ET-1. These results demonstrate that ET-1 and TNF-alpha function synergistically to induce procoagulant activity of brain endothelial cells in a process that involves a protein kinase C-dependent pathway.
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PMID:Endothelin-1 enhances plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 production by human brain endothelial cells via protein kinase C-dependent pathway. 1039 97


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