Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.13 (protein kinase C)
49,245 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Human mesangial cells (HMC) grown in high glucose environments synthesize excessive amounts of extracellular matrix proteins (ECM). The promoter regions of certain ECM genes contain TPA (phorbol ester)-responsive element (TRE) motifs that bind the transcription factor, activator protein-1 (AP-1), a complex of Jun and other phosphoproteins. AP-1 binding to the TRE promoter is regulated by the quantity, composition and post-translational modifications of proteins in the AP-1 complex. We report an increased binding of AP-1 to TRE oligonucleotides in HMC cultured chronically (5 days) in high glucose environments (30 mM d-glucose). This increased binding is not due to differences in the nuclear quantity of AP-1 proteins or in the composition of the AP-1 complex when compared to AP-1 proteins from cells grown in normal glucose (5 mM d-glucose). A 30 mM l-glucose environment also increased AP-1 binding, but to a degree less than d-glucose. The increased AP-1 binding was partly reversed by treatment of HMC with Calphostin C or Bisindolylmaleimide I suggesting a partial role of the protein kinase C (PKC) pathway in mediating AP-1 binding. AP-1 binding was unaffected by treatment of cells with the MEK inhibitor PD 98059. In addition, increased AP-1 binding persisted for at least 48 hours after media glucose concentrations were normalized. The level of Jun-NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) activity and the phosphorylation of the JNK kinase, SEK1, were unchanged by chronic high glucose concentrations. These studies suggest that in HMC cultured in chronic high glucose, post-translational modifications increase the binding of AP-1 to the TRE motif.
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PMID:DNA binding of activator protein-1 is increased in human mesangial cells cultured in high glucose concentrations. 957 31

Cystatin A, a cysteine proteinase inhibitor, is one of the precursor proteins of cornified cell envelope of keratinocytes and is expressed during the late stage of keratinocyte differentiation. We have isolated and characterized the human cystatin A gene. The cystatin A gene consists of three exons and two introns. The first, the second, and the third exons consist of coding sequences that are 66, 102, and 126 base pairs in length, respectively. The first and the second introns consist of 14 and 3.6 kilobase pairs, respectively. The transcription initiation site was located 55 base pairs upstream from the first translation site. The fragment, +77 to -2595 in the 5'-flanking region of the human cystatin A gene, was subcloned into a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter vector. The expression vector, p2672CAT, produced a significant CAT activity in transiently transfected SV40-transformed human keratinocytes (SVHK cells), that were further stimulated by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), a potent protein kinase C activator. Sequence analysis of the gene detected three TPA responsive elements (TRE-1, TRE-2, and TRE-3) and one AP-2 site on the 5' upstream promoter region. Deletion analyses of the p2672CAT vector demonstrated that TRE-2, which was located between -272 and -278, was critical for the regulation by TPA. Gel shift analyses revealed that c-Jun, JunD, and c-Fos bound to the TRE-2 region and that the p2672CAT activity level was elevated by co-transfection with c-Jun and c-Fos or with JunD and c-Fos expression vectors. Furthermore, co-transfection of SVHK cells with the protein kinase C-alpha expression vector and the p2672CAT expression vector also resulted in an increased CAT activity. These results indicate that the 5'-flanking region of the human cystatin A gene confers promoter activity and contains a TRE (TRE-2) that mediates, at least in part, the enhanced expression of this gene by TPA.
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PMID:Structure and transcriptional regulation of the human cystatin A gene. The 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) responsive element-2 site (-272 to -278) on cystatin A gene is critical for TPA-dependent regulation. 965 21

The androgen receptor (AR) protein is an important transacting factor that is necessary for mediating gene expression of androgen-responsive genes. The expression of the AR gene is regulated by androgens and agents that utilize the calcium, protein kinase A, and protein kinase C pathways. Although the role of the calcium and protein kinase A pathways in the regulation of the AR gene has been investigated, the mechanism of regulation of AR through the protein kinase C pathway is not known. We have isolated the 5'-flanking region of the mouse AR gene and identified a consensus TPA (12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate)-response element (TRE). Transient transfection assays indicate that the TRE sequence is sufficient to confer TPA responsiveness to cells treated with TPA. Gel retardation assays and DNA footprint analysis demonstrated specific binding of the TRE and protection of the TRE sequence. Thus, these results describe a TRE in the 5'-flanking region of the AR gene and demonstrate that the TRE is responsive to TPA treatment.
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PMID:Characterization of a TPA-response element in the 5'-flanking region of the androgen receptor gene. 979 20

We have characterized the regulation of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) gene expression by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), serum, and interleukin-1alpha (IL-1alpha) in the human hepatoma cell line HepG2. PMA, serum, and IL-1alpha induced a rapid and transient 28-fold (PMA), 9-fold (serum), and 23-fold (IL-1alpha) increase in PAI-1 mRNA, peaking after approximately 4 hours. These inductions of PAI-1 mRNA accumulation were reduced by pretreatment of the HepG2 cells with the protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor genistein. Conversely, stimulation of tyrosine phosphorylation by sodium orthovanadate, an inhibitor of protein tyrosine phosphatases, caused an increase in PAI-1 mRNA levels. The effects of PMA, serum, and IL-1alpha on PAI-1 mRNA expression have been compared with their ability to modulate the expression of a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter plasmid, which was under control of the -489 to +75 region of the PAI-1 promoter, and stably transfected into HepG2 cells. This region of the PAI-1 promoter was previously found to contain a tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate-response element (TRE; between -58 and -50) necessary for PMA responsiveness and with a high affinity for c-Jun homodimers. Whereas incubation of these transfected HepG2 cells with PMA and serum showed an induction profile of CAT mRNA similar to that of PAI-1 mRNA, hardly any induction of CAT mRNA was found with IL-1alpha. In line with these findings, IL-1alpha poorly induced c-Jun homodimer binding to the PAI-1 TRE in gel mobility-shift assays. Pretreatment of HepG2 cells with the protein kinase C inhibitor Ro 31-8220 or the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MAPKK)1,2 activity blocker PD98059 selectively suppressed the induction of PAI-1 (and CAT) expression by PMA, but not that by IL-1alpha. In contrast, the protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor herbimycin A blocked PAI-1 mRNA induction by IL-1 alpha only. We propose 2 separate PAI-1 inductory pathways for PMA and IL-1alpha in HepG2, both involving protein tyrosine kinase activation; the serum-induced signaling pathway may (partially) overlap with the PMA-activated protein kinase C/mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase pathway, leading to c-Jun homodimer binding to the PAI-1 TRE.
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PMID:On the role of c-Jun in the induction of PAI-1 gene expression by phorbol ester, serum, and IL-1alpha in HepG2 cells. 988 64

Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) gene expression is highly restricted throughout the neuroaxis and regulated by extracellular factors that activate tyrosine- or serine/threonine-directed protein kinase pathways. Cytokine, cyclic AMP, and tissue-specific response elements on the VIP gene have been characterized. Those mediating responsiveness to protein kinase C have not. The endogenous VIP gene and a 5.2-kilobase pair (kb) VIP-luciferase reporter gene, are up-regulated by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) in SK-N-SH neuroblastoma cells. PMA stimulation was abolished by deletion of sequences at -1.37 to -1.28 or -1.28 to -0.904 kb, but not by removal of the single phorbol ester response element (TRE; TGACTCA) located at -2.25 kb. Mutation of sites at -1.32 or -1.20 that mediate neurotrophin responsiveness of the VIP gene (Symes, A., Lewis, S., Corpus, L., Rajan, P., Hyman, S. E., and Fink, J. S. (1994) Mol. Endocrinol. 8, 1750-1763) each reduced PMA induction in SK-N-SH cells by >50%, and double mutation abolished it. The two mutations also reduced basal VIP reporter gene transcription in SH-EP neuroblastoma cells expressing VIP constitutively. Both cis-active elements bound pre-existing AP-1 proteins in SH-EP- or PMA-stimulated SK-N-SH cell nuclear extracts. The AP-1 complex at both sites contained a Fos-related protein with c-Jun in SH-EP cells and c-Fos with a Jun-related protein in SK-N-SH cells. Recruitment of combinatorially distinct AP-1 complexes to these elements may underlie cell type-specific regulation of the VIP gene.
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PMID:Two separate cis-active elements of the vasoactive intestinal peptide gene mediate constitutive and inducible transcription by binding different sets of AP-1 proteins. 1046 93

Oxidant stress is associated with diminution of antioxidant molecules, such as alpha-tocopherol. Alpha-tocopherol specifically decreases, in a concentration dependent way, the proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells. At the same concentrations (10-50 microM) it induces inhibition of protein kinase C (PKC) activity. The latter event is not due to a decrease in PKC level or to alpha-tocopherol binding to PKC, but it results from increase of protein phosphatase 2A1 activity. In vitro data, as well as at a cellular level, demonstrates that protein phosphatase 2A1 is activated, in its trimeric structure--but not as a dimer by alpha-tocopherol. This activation is followed by PKC-alpha dephosphorylation. The activation of protein phosphatase 2A1 and deactivation of PKC-alpha affect the AP1 transcription factor, resulting in a change in the composition and the binding of this factor to DNA. By transfecting smooth muscle cell with a construct containing three TRE (TPA responsive elements), the promoter thymidine kinase and the reporter gene chloramphenicol-acetyl-transferase a modulation of gene expression by alpha-tocopherol is observed. Beta-tocopherol does not cause any of the responses observed with alpha-tocopherol and R,R,R-alpha-tocopherol is twice as potent as all-rac-alpha-tocopherol. When added together, beta-tocopherol prevents the effects of alpha-tocopherol indicating that the mechanism involved is not related to the radical-scavenging properties of these two molecules, which are essentially equal. By differential display analysis it has been found that several genes of smooth muscle cells are differentially transcribed in the presence of alpha-tocopherol but not beta-tocopherol. In particular, the gene of alpha-tropomyosin shows a transient enhancement of transcription as a function of the cell cycle time. Alpha-tropomyosin translation is also increased by alpha-tocopherol and not by beta-tocopherol. Because no changes of mRNA stability can be observed in the presence of alpha-tocopherol, the data supports the conclusion of a transcriptional control exerted by alpha-tocopherol on alpha-tropomyosin. Generally, the data strongly suggests the existence of a ligand/receptor type of mechanism at the basis of alpha-tocopherol action. It is concluded that an oxidative stress-induced diminution of alpha-tocopherol in smooth muscle cell activates a reaction cascade leading to changes in gene expression and increase in cell proliferation by a non-antioxidant mechanism.
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PMID:Vitamin E mediated response of smooth muscle cell to oxidant stress. 1058 72

The present studies were conducted to determine the pharmacological nature of a cytoprotective 11-deoxy-16,16-dimethyl-PGE(2) (DDM-PGE(2)) receptor in LLC-PK(1) cells. DDM-PGE(2)-mediated cytoprotection against 2,3,5-(trisglutathion-S-yl)hydroquinone (TGHQ)-mediated cytotoxicity can be reproduced using thromboxane A(2) (TXA(2)) receptor (TP) agonists (U46619 and IBOP), and the cytoprotective response to DDM-PGE(2) and TP agonists is inhibited by TP antagonists (SQ-29,548 and ISAP). Western blot analysis using an antipeptide antibody against the human platelet TP receptor (55 kDa) identified a particulate associated 54-kDa protein. DDM-PGE(2)-mediated 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) responsive element (TRE) binding activity is not inhibited by cyclooxygenase inhibitors (aspirin and indomethacin) or a TXA(2) synthase inhibitor (sulfasalazine), suggesting that the biological response to DDM-PGE(2) is not dependent on de novo TXA(2) biosynthesis. Peak DDM-PGE(2)- and U46619-mediated TRE binding activity and nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) binding activity are inhibited by SQ-29,548. The full cytoprotective response to DDM-PGE(2) requires an 8-h pulse with agonist. DDM-PGE(2)-mediated TRE and NF-kappaB binding activity remain elevated in the presence of agonist and rapidly decay following agonist washout, suggesting a direct correlation between DDM-PGE(2)-mediated cytoprotection and persistent DNA binding activities. TPA, a protein kinase C activator, induces cytoprotection and a persistent increase of NF-kappaB binding activity. DDM-PGE(2)-mediated cytoprotection and NF-kappaB binding activity but not TRE binding activity are inhibited by sulfasalazine. We conclude that the DDM-PGE(2) receptor is a TP receptor and that the cytoprotective response may be mediated in part by NF-kappaB.
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PMID:DDM-PGE(2)-mediated cytoprotection in renal epithelial cells by a thromboxane A(2) receptor coupled to NF-kappaB. 1066 31

Vas deferens epithelial cell subcultures were used to study the sequential regulation of jun/fos proto-oncogene expression and AP1 activities during cell proliferation, polarization and androgen-induced expression of a terminal differentiation marker, i. e. the mvdp gene. Proliferation of epithelial cells is associated with a high expression in the nucleus of most Jun and Fos oncoproteins. After cell seeding on an extracellular matrix which allows polarization and expression of the mvdp gene in response to androgens, AP1 protein accumulation is greatly altered and consists in a loss of JunB, Fra1, FosB and a decrease in c-Fos, c-Jun and Fra2, while JunD remained at the same level. This was correlated with a drop in AP1 binding activity as evaluated by gel shift assay using either AP1 consensus sequence or AP1 binding sites of the mvdp gene promoter region, and in AP1 transactivating activity, as estimated by stable transfection experiments using an AP1 responsive promoter (TRE-TK-luc). Androgens did not significantly influence AP1 activities. On the contrary, stimulation of AP1 proteins by the tumor-promoting phorbol ester caused a decrease in androgen-induced mvdp mRNA accumulation, and this effect was reversed by staurosporine, a potent inhibitor of PKC. Our data suggest that a down-regulation of AP1 activities induced by epithelial cell differentiation is a prerequisite to androgen-induced mvdp gene expression. The high AP1 activities observed during proliferative state or induced in TPA-treated polarized cells, exert a repressive effect on androgen action.
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PMID:Down-regulation of AP1 activities after polarization of vas deferens epithelial cells correlates with androgen-induced gene expression. 1077 1

The purpose of this study was to determine whether the production of interstitial collagenase mRNA in response to parathyroid hormone (PTH) changes with osteoblast phenotypic development. To accomplish this, cells derived from fetal rat calvaria were examined. The calvarial osteoblasts, which proliferate when placed in culture, can be made to differentiate after confluence. Studies were performed on cells while they were proliferating, at confluence, and during the differentiation process. The cells were treated with PTH for various times, and interstitial collagenase mRNA was quantified by RNase protection assay. We concluded that the ability of PTH to induce interstitial collagenase mRNA in these cells increased with osteoblast phenotypic development. We also determined that the response could be mimicked by combining the effect of 8-bromo-cAMP and 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate, stimulators of the protein kinase A and protein kinase C pathways, respectively, both known to be activated by PTH. The binding of nuclear factors to two regions previously reported to be important for PTH induction of the gene in UMR 106-01 cells was also examined. These data indicated that the binding of nuclear factors to oligonucleotides encompassing the TRE (-51) or the PEA3 (-80) elements changed with development of the osteoblast phenotype. The latter was also shown to be PTH responsive.
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PMID:Induction of rat interstitial collagenase (MMP-13) mRNA in a development-dependent manner by parathyroid hormone in osteoblastic cells. 1096 42

2,3,5-Tris(glutathion-S-yl)hydroquinone [TGHQ] is a potent nephrotoxicant and nephrocarcinogen, and induces a spectrum of mutations in human and bacterial cells consistent with those attributed to reactive oxygen species (ROS). Studies were conducted to determine whether the oxidative stress induced by TGHQ in renal proximal tubule epithelial cells (LLC-PK(1)) modulates transcriptional activities widely implicated in transformation responses, namely 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol 13-acetate (TPA) responsive element (TRE)- and nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kappaB)-binding activity. TGHQ increased TRE- and NF-kappaB-binding activity in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. Catalase fully inhibited peak TGHQ-mediated TRE- and NF-kappaB-binding activity. In contrast, although deferoxamine fully inhibited TGHQ-mediated TRE-binding activity, it had only a marginal effect on NF-kappaB-binding activity. Collectively, these data indicate that TGHQ modulates TRE- and NF-kappaB-binding activity in an ROS-dependent fashion. Cycloheximide and actinomycin D fully inhibited TGHQ-mediated TRE-binding activity, but in the absence of TGHQ increased NF-kappaB-binding activity. Although protein kinase C (PKC) is widely implicated in stress response signaling, pretreatment of cells with PKC inhibitors (H-89, calphostin C) did not modulate TGHQ-mediated DNA-binding activities. In contrast, pretreatment of cells with (PD098059), a mitogen activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitor, markedly reduced TGHQ-mediated TRE-binding activity, but enhanced TGHQ-mediated NF-kappaB-binding activity. We conclude that TGHQ-mediated TRE- and NF-kappaB-binding activities are ROS-dependent. Although there is a common requirement for hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) in the regulation of these DNA-binding activities, there appears to be divergent regulation after H(2)O(2) generation in renal epithelial cells.
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PMID:Differential regulation of redox responsive transcription factors by the nephrocarcinogen 2,3,5-Tris(glutathion-S-yl)hydroquinone. 1145 27


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