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Query: EC:2.7.11.13 (
protein kinase C
)
49,245
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The c-kit ligand, KL, and its receptor, the proto-oncogene c-kit are encoded, respectively, at the steel (Sl) and white spotting (W) loci of the mouse. Both Sl and W mutations affect cellular targets in melanogenesis, gametogenesis, and hematopoiesis during development and in adult life. Although identified as a soluble protein, the predicted amino acid sequence of KL indicates that it is an integral
transmembrane protein
. We have investigated the relationship between the soluble and the cell associated forms of KL and the regulation of their expression. We show that the soluble form of KL is generated by efficient proteolytic cleavage from a transmembrane precursor, KL-1. An alternatively spliced version of KL-1, KL-2, in which the major proteolytic cleavage site is removed by splicing, is shown to produce a soluble biologically active form of KL as well, although with somewhat diminished efficiency. The
protein kinase C
inducer phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate and the calcium ionophore A23187 were shown to induce the cleavage of both KL-1 and KL-2 at similar rates, suggesting that this process can be regulated differentially. Furthermore, proteolytic processing of both the KL-1 and KL-2
transmembrane protein
products was shown to occur on the cell surface. The relative abundance of KL-1 and KL-2 is controlled in a tissue-specific manner. Sld, a viable steel allele, is shown to encode a biologically active secreted mutant KL protein. These results indicate an important function for both the soluble and the cell associate form of KL. The respective roles of the soluble and cell associated forms of KL in the proliferative and migratory functions of c-kit are discussed.
...
PMID:Differential expression and processing of two cell associated forms of the kit-ligand: KL-1 and KL-2. 137 27
A synthetic peptide containing env amino acid (aa) sequence 581 to 597 of the
transmembrane protein
gp41 of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) was tested for its effect on
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) and cytoplasmic free Ca2+ [( Ca2+]i) influx-dependent immune functions. We have previously shown that this peptide inhibits
PKC
-mediated phosphorylation and T-cell receptor-mediated [Ca2+]i influx as well as lymphoproliferation. In this study we demonstrate that the HIV-1 gp41 peptide aa581-597 inhibits lymphoproliferation stimulated via the distinct T-cell-activation molecules CD3, CD2, and CD28, as well as direct stimulation mediated by phorbol ester combined with ionomycin. Further, aa581-597 inhibits both
PKC
-dependent interleukin 2 (IL 2) production and the [Ca2+]i influx-dependent but
PKC
-independent induction of IL 2 receptor expression. The HIV-1 gp41 peptide also induces dramatic morphologic changes in lymphocytes, characterized by cytoplasmic ballooning and the acquisition of adherence to plastic, and these changes are dependent on both the length and the temperature of exposure. The results of this study suggest that the HIV-1 gp41 sequence aa581-597 acts at multiple sites to inhibit both
PKC
activity and [Ca2+]i influx, resulting in the abrogation of several distinct immune functions that are critical for an intact immune response and are defective in HIV-1-infected individuals.
...
PMID:A synthetic peptide with sequence identity to the transmembrane protein GP41 of HIV-1 inhibits distinct lymphocyte activation pathways dependent on protein kinase C and intracellular calcium influx. 183 84
The glycoprotein IIb-IIIa complex (GP IIb-IIIa) is a multifunctional
transmembrane protein
on platelets. Its most completely described function is as a fibrinogen receptor that mediates platelet aggregation, but it is also involved in clot retraction, signal transduction, calcium transport, and other events. However, the mechanisms that regulate the functions of GP IIb-IIIa during platelet activation are largely unknown. One possible mechanism is phosphorylation, since several other receptors are regulated by this process. We found that GP IIIa, but not GP IIb, was phosphorylated in 32P-labeled platelets, predominantly on threonine residues. Furthermore, GP IIIa phosphorylation increased four-fold in platelets activated with thrombin or phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, but not at all in platelets treated with prostacyclin, an inhibitor of platelet activation. The thrombin-induced increase in phosphorylation was inhibited by pretreating platelets with prostacyclin or with staurosporin, a specific protein kinase C inhibitor. Thus, there is an increase in the level or turnover of phosphate on GP IIIa during platelet activation, most likely involving
protein kinase C
. This phosphorylation may regulate some aspect(s) of GP IIb-IIIa function.
...
PMID:Glycoprotein IIIa is phosphorylated in intact human platelets. 211 11
We have previously shown that a synthetic peptide containing env residues 581-597 from HIV-1 inhibits lymphoproliferation of human PBMC. We have investigated the molecular mechanism(s) by which this HIV-1-derived peptide inhibits CD3-mediated signal transduction. We show that the peptide containing residues 581-597 from the HIV-1
transmembrane protein
gp41 specifically inhibited the intracellular Ca2+ influx in Jurkat cells stimulated by the mAb OKT3 whereas it had no effect on the production of inositol triphosphate. In addition, the peptide inhibited
protein kinase C
(pkC)-mediated phosphorylation of the CD3 gamma-chain in intact cells and directly inhibited partially purified pkC. The inhibition was noncompetitive with respect to the substrates histone and ATP and independent of the regulatory domain of the enzyme. Furthermore, the peptide required internalization for inhibitory activity because no inhibition of lymphoproliferation was observed when cells were treated with peptide at 4 degrees C. Based on these results obtained with the peptide aa581-597, we postulate that the
transmembrane protein
gp41 of HIV-1 may inhibit pkC activity and thus block pkC-dependent immune function contributing to the immunosuppression of HIV-1-infected individuals.
...
PMID:Inhibition of protein kinase C and anti-CD3-induced Ca2+ influx in Jurkat T cells by a synthetic peptide with sequence identity to HIV-1 gp41. 213 76
A peptide sequence in the
transmembrane protein
of visna virus has been identified that bears a high degree of similarity to a sequence within the
transmembrane protein
gp41 of human immunodeficiency virus that we have previously shown to be immunosuppressive. Also within the Q (vif/sor) open reading frame of the visna virus genome is a sequence that is highly similar to the immunosuppressive sequence from the retroviral
transmembrane protein
p15E. We synthesized peptides containing these visna virus sequences and tested them for immunosuppressive activity, comparing them with their human immunodeficiency virus and leukemia retrovirus counterparts. Both the Q- and transmembrane-derived visna virus peptides inhibited lymphoproliferation stimulated by either interleukin-2 or the T-cell antigen receptor in a dose-dependent and sequence-specific manner. The two visna virus peptides also inhibited the enzymatic activity of
protein kinase C
, thus providing a possible molecular mechanism by which they inhibit immune function.
...
PMID:Inhibition of lymphoproliferation and protein kinase C by synthetic peptides with sequence identity to the transmembrane and Q proteins of visna virus. 215 78
Expression of the pluripotent molecule TNF in a focused and antigen-restricted fashion might provide an advantage to the host organism. Given the central role of T cells in antigen-specific immunity, we examined whether activated T cells express TNF on their cell surface. FACS analysis of highly purified normal human T cells labeled with an anti-TNF mAb revealed that T cells express cell surface TNF when signaled with the synergistic combination of a calcium ionophore, ionomycin, and a
protein kinase C
activator, 12-o-tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate. Cell surface radioiodination studies of stimulated T cells demonstrated the presence of 26-kD
transmembrane protein
, a size predicted by TNF cDNA and different from that of the 17-kD secreted TNF molecule. The induced cell surface expression of TNF could be blocked with cyclosporine and/or methylprednisolone, and Northern analysis for TNF-specific transcripts revealed that this inhibitory effect occurs pretranslationally. Our demonstration for the first time that stimulated normal human T cells display cell surface TNF provides a mechanistic basis for the realization of effects of TNF in an antigen-specific fashion.
...
PMID:A novel addition to the T cell repertory. Cell surface expression of tumor necrosis factor/cachectin by activated normal human T cells. 230 38
We demonstrate here that T cell receptor for antigen (TCR)-triggered exocytosis in cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) is not constitutive and is regulated through crosslinking of the TCR by antigen or monoclonal anti-TCR antibodies. Morphological and biochemical data using three different biochemical markers of granules and Percoll gradient fractionation analysis are presented, suggesting that TCR-triggered exocytosis is accompanied by the loss of granules from CTL and appearance of intragranular proteins and enzymatic activities in the incubation medium. The strict requirement for crosslinking of the TCR in exocytosis triggering could be bypassed by
protein kinase C
activators (phorbol esters or bryostatin I and II) acting in synergy with Ca2+ ionophores. It is shown that external Ca2+ is obligatory for both the TCR-triggered and for the PMA/A23187-triggered exocytosis, since Ca2+ chelators and divalent cations that compete with Ca2+ for A23187 can inhibit exocytosis of granules. These data suggest that Ca2+ from intracellular stores is not sufficient to support exocytosis in CTL. Ca2+ channel blockers and calmodulin antagonists significantly inhibited TCR-triggered exocytosis without affecting the basal level of secretion. The described results are consistent with a model in which exocytosis of granules in CTL is triggered by the crosslinking of TCR,
transmembrane protein
kinase C activation, and external Ca2+ translocation through CTL plasma membrane Ca2+ channels and modulation of activity of Ca2+, calmodulin-dependent enzymes, and cytoskeletal proteins.
...
PMID:Antigen receptor-regulated exocytosis in cytotoxic T lymphocytes. 244 89
The phosphorylation of the anion-transport protein (band 3) is selectively increased in human red cell membrane, following exposure of intact cells to ionophore and micromolar calcium. The phosphorylation is catalyzed by a membrane associated protein kinase distinct from either
protein kinase C
or Ca2+/calmodulin dependent protein kinase. We show that the increase in phosphorylation of band 3 is abolished if red cells had been pre-loaded with an inhibitor of calpain or with an anticalpain monoclonal antibody. Our findings suggest that calpain activity may control, both at a functional and at a structural level, the activity of this important
transmembrane protein
through the modulation of its susceptibility as a substrate of membrane bound protein kinase(s). Based on previous observations indicating the presence in erythrocytes from hypertensive patients of an uncontrolled intracellular calpain-mediated proteolytic system accompanied by an increased phosphorylation of band 3 protein(s), we suggest that our results may shed light on the type of molecular alteration which is associated with the hypertensive state.
...
PMID:The role of calpain in the selective increased phosphorylation of the anion-transport protein in red cell of hypertensive subjects. 283 93
Tissue distribution and expression on mitogen and virally stimulated lymphocytes render the ACT35 molecule a human lymphocyte activation antigen which as yet could not be clustered. Expression cloning of the ACT35 antigen from a pCDM8 library of the HUT-102 cell line revealed strong homology of the cDNA and its encoded protein sequence with the formerly described rat OX40 antigen. The 1.4-kb nucleotide sequence and the deduced 277-amino acid sequence of the single
transmembrane protein
were 65% and 63% identical, in human and in rat, respectively. Conservation included one N-linked glycosylation site and one
protein kinase C
phosphorylation site. When expressed in COS-1 cells, the cDNA presented properties comparable to the native ACT35 antigen and the rat OX40 molecule (relative molecular mass 48,000). Thus, the ACT35 protein corresponds to the hitherto unknown human OX40 antigen and is, therefore, another member of the tumor necrosis factor/nerve growth factor receptor (TNFR/NGFR) family. After applying fluorescence in situ hybridization, the human ACT35/OX40 gene could be mapped to chromosome band 1p36 and is, thus, linked to the genes for TNFR II and CD30.
...
PMID:The human OX40 homolog: cDNA structure, expression and chromosomal assignment of the ACT35 antigen. 751 Feb 40
Hyperproliferation of keratinocytes (KCs) in psoriasis has been found to be associated with excessive activation of a phospholipase C (PLC)/
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) signal transduction system. The molecular species of PLCs which are activated in psoriasis have not been thoroughly investigated. It was envisaged that if glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-specific PLC was activated in the membrane of psoriatic epidermal cells, it would render these cells devoid of those proteins which are anchored to the cell membrane through their GPI moiety. In order to test this possibility, four GPI proteins (CD16, CD55, CD58, and CD59) were determined immunohistochemically in normal and psoriatic skin. In normal skin, CD55 and CD59 were strongly expressed on epithelium and vascular structures, whereas CD16 and CD58 were strongly expressed only on epithelium. The expression of all four GPI proteins was decreased in non-lesional psoriatic skin and virtually abolished in lesional psoriatic skin. A control
transmembrane protein
, CD46, was strongly expressed in normal and non-lesional psoriatic skin, and its expression was not significantly decreased in psoriatic lesions. The absence or reduction of GPI proteins was not seen in the lesions of several other inflammatory and proliferative diseases studied.
...
PMID:Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored membrane proteins are constitutively down-regulated in psoriatic skin. 751 54
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