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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)
We describe in detail a robust, sensitive, and versatile functional assay for G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) expressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293-EBNA (
Epstein
-Barr virus nuclear antigen) (designated 293E) cells. The ability to grow these cells in suspension, in conjunction with the use of the secreted form of the human placental alkaline phosphatase (SEAP) as the reporter enzyme transcriptionally regulated by 5-cyclic AMP (cAMP) response elements (CREs) (Chen et al., Anal. Biochem. 226, 349-354 (1995)), makes this CRE-SEAP assay potentially attractive for high-throughput screening (HTS). A 293E clonal cell line, stably transfected with the CRE-SEAP plasmid, was initially characterized with compounds known to activate intracellular signal transduction pathways similar to those activated by GPCRs. Forskolin and cAMP analogues were potent at inducing SEAP expression but calcium ionophores (A23187 and ionomycin) were without effect. The forskolin response was also potentiated by the
protein kinase C
activator phorbol myristate acetate as well as the phosphodiesterase inhibitor isobutylmethylxanthine. Previously established cell lines expressing the G(alphas)-coupled DP or the G(alphaq)-coupled-EP(1) prostanoid receptors were stably transfected with the reporter gene construct and clones were selected based on their ability to secrete SEAP upon agonist challenge. Pharmacological characterization of the DP and EP(1) receptors displayed a similar rank order of potency for several known prostanoids and related compounds to that previously reported using classical binding assays or other functional assays. The CRE-SEAP assay was also used to characterize the EP(1) receptor antagonists SC-51322, SC-51089, and AH6809. In summary, we have established a reporter gene assay for GPCRs that couple to both G(alphas) and G(alphaq) and is amenable to HTS of both agonists and antagonists.
...
PMID:A reporter gene assay for high-throughput screening of G-protein-coupled receptors stably or transiently expressed in HEK293 EBNA cells grown in suspension culture. 1096 15
12-Epi-phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate (1), the C12-epimer of the most frequently used phorbol ester probe, phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu), has been synthesized from phorbol in 9 steps in order to investigate the structural requirements for tumor-promoting activity. Compound 1 showed about 100-fold weaker in vitro biological activities related to in vivo tumor promotion,
Epstein
-Barr virus early antigen (EBV-EA)-inducing ability, superoxide (O2-) generation-inducing ability, and binding to the
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) regulatory domain surrogate peptides. The results indicated that the beta-stereochemistry at position 12 of the phorbol skeleton is important for optimal activity. Binding selectivity to each
PKC
C1 domain of 1 was almost equal to that of PDBu.
...
PMID:Synthesis and tumor-promoting activities of 12-Epi-phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate. 1119 12
To investigate the role of the hydroxyl group at position 4 of the phorbol esters in
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) binding and function, 4beta-deoxy-phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate (4beta-deoxy-PDBu, 5a) and 4beta-deoxy-phorbol-13-acetate (6a) were synthesized from phorbol (1). The binding affinities of these 4beta-deoxy compounds (5a, 6a) to the 13
PKC
isozyme C1 domains were quite similar to those of the corresponding 4beta-hydroxy compounds (4a, 4b), suggesting that the C4 hydroxyl group of phorbol esters is not necessary for
PKC
binding. Moreover, functional assays showed that 4beta-deoxy-PDBu (5a) exhibited biological activities (
Epstein
-Barr virus induction and superoxide generation) equally potent to those of PDBu (4a). These solution phase results differ from expectations based on the previously reported solid-phase structure of the complex of
PKCdelta
-C1B and phorbol-13-acetate (4b).
...
PMID:The C4 hydroxyl group of phorbol esters is not necessary for protein kinase C binding. 1126 77
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) is a ubiquitous and highly immunotropic gamma herpesvirus that infects more than 90 % of humans worldwide. Its pathogenicity leads to a number of diseases including tumors that result from EBV's ability to readily transform B-lymphocytes and, to a lesser extent, epithelial cells. EBV utilizes CD21/CR2 as its receptor on B cells to initiate the infection process. EBV binds to CR2 through its major envelope glycoprotein-350 (gp350) and is also a remarkable immunomodulating agent. We had previously shown that EBV is capable of modulating the synthesis of a number of cytokines. We now show that while both purified recombinant gp350 (rgp350) and EBV upregulate IL-6 mRNA synthesis in B cells, EBV-induced IL-6 gene activation occurs for a significantly longer period of time (i.e. 12 hours for EBV as compared to 6 hours for rgp350). Moreover, the half-life of EBV-induced IL-6 mRNA was also significantly longer (10 hours) than that of mRNA induced by rgp350 (about 6 hours). Both EBV and gp350 enhance the binding of the NF-kappaB transcription factor, as determined by band-shift and augment NF-kappaB-mediated activation of a CAT reporter plasmid. Furthermore, we demonstrate that while the activation of IL-6 gene expression by gp350 is mediated primarily by the
protein kinase C
pathway, EBV can mediate its effects through multiple signaling pathways. To our knowledge this is the first report showing that the binding of a herpesvirus envelope glycoprotein to CR2 on human B cells results in the activation of the NF-kappaB transcription factor leading to the upregulation of IL-6 gene expression in these lymphocytes.
...
PMID:Epstein-Barr Virus and its glycoprotein-350 upregulate IL-6 in human B-lymphocytes via CD21, involving activation of NF-kappaB and different signaling pathways. 1132 83
Rotating-wall vessels (RWVs) allow for the cultivation of cells in simulated microgravity. Previously, we showed that the cultivation of lymphoblastoid cells in simulated microgravity results in the suppression of
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) reactivation. To determine if the suppression generated by simulated microgravity could be reversed by changing to static culture conditions, cells were cultured in an RRWV for 5 d, and then switched to static conditions. Following the switch to static conditions, viral reactivation remained suppressed (significantly lower) relative to static control cultures over a 4-d period. Additionally, experiments were conducted to determine if chemical treatment could induce viral reactivation in cells from simulated-microgravity cultures. Cells were cultured in static flask cultures and in simulated microgravity in RWVs for 4-7 d. The cells were then transferred to 50-cm3 tubes, and treated with 3 mM n-butyrate for 48 h, or 18 ng/ml of phorbol ester, viz., 12-0-tetradecanoylphorbol-13 acetate (TPA) for either 2 or 48 h, under static conditions. Although EBV was inducible, the cells from simulated-microgravity cultures treated with n-butyrate displayed significantly lower levels of viral-antigen expression compared with the treated cells from static cultures. Also, incubation with TPA for 2-3 h, but not for 48 h, reactivated EBV in cells from RWV cultures. In contrast, EBV was inducible in cells from static cultures treated for either 2-3 or 48 h with TPA. TPA reactivation of EBV following a 2-3-h period of treatment indicates that the
protein kinase C
signal-transduction pathway is not impaired in lymphoblastoid cells cultured in simulated microgravity. However, the exposure of B-lymphoblastoid cells from simulated-microgravity cultures to TPA for more than 3-4 h triggered a lytic event (apoptosis or necrosis), which prevented replication of the virus. Thus, EBV-infected cells in simulated microgravity were negatively selected in the absence of any cytotoxic cells.
...
PMID:Epstein-Barr virus latently infected cells are selectively deleted in simulated-microgravity cultures. 1140 87
Signaling pathway components mediating
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) reactivation by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) were characterized in terms of induction and modification of specific transacting factors. The consequences of
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) activation by TPA in inhibiting inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) mRNA expression were analyzed in the EBV-infected gastric epithelial cell line GT38. Spontaneous expression of the EBV BZLF1 gene product ZEBRA became undetectable upon long-term culturing of GT38 cells, while iNOS mRNA expression increased. In such cells the
PKC
inhibitors 1-(5-isoquinolinesulphonyl)-2,5-dimethylpiperazine (H7) and staurosporine inhibited TPA-induced expression of BZLF1 and BRLF1 and reversed TPA-mediated inhibition of iNOS gene expression. The mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitor PD98059 inhibited TPA-induced BZLF1 expression. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays demonstrated that transcription factors NF-kappaB and AP-1 were also activated by TPA in a time-dependent manner. The TPA-induced NF-kappaB activation was inhibited by prior treatment of the cells with the NF-kappaB inhibitor pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC). TPA-induced BZLF1 expression was also inhibited by the treatment with PDTC. Northern blot analyses characterized changes in levels of the c-jun and junB expressions of the AP-1 family. These results show that TPA induces EBV reactivation via NF-kappaB and AP-1 and that
PKC
is an important mediator in regulating gene expression leading to EBV reactivation after TPA treatment of GT38 cells.
...
PMID:12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate induces Epstein-Barr virus reactivation via NF-kappaB and AP-1 as regulated by protein kinase C and mitogen-activated protein kinase. 1144 62
We have reported previously that the abnormally down-regulated
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) causes cellular dysfunction observed in natural killer (NK) cells, polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNs) and fibroblasts from beige mouse, an animal model of Chediak-Higashi syndrome (CHS). Here we show that the abnormal down-regulation of
PKC
activity also occurs in
Epstein
-Barr (EB) virus-transformed cell lines from CHS patients. When CHS cell lines were stimulated with concanavalin A (Con A) for 20 min, the membrane-bound
PKC
activity declined markedly, whereas that in control cell lines increased. We found that E-64-d, which protects
PKC
from calpain-mediated proteolysis, reversed the declined
PKC
activity and corrected the increased Con A cap formation to almost normal levels in CHS cell lines. We confirmed that the dysregulation of
PKC
activity also occurred in peripheral blood mononuclear leucocytes (PBMC) from CHS patients and that E-64-d corrected both the declined
PKC
activity and increased Con A cap formation. E-64-d also corrected the reduced lysosomal elastase and cathepsin G activity in CHS cell lines. In contrast, chelerythrin, a specific inhibitor of
PKC
, and C2-ceramide, which promotes
PKC
breakdown induced by calpain, increased Con A cap formation and inhibited both elastase and cathepsin G activity in normal cell lines. Moreover, we found that ceramide production in CHS cell lines increased significantly after Con A stimulation, which coincides with our previous observation in fibroblasts from CHS mice. These results suggest an association between ceramide-induced
PKC
down-regulation and the cellular dysfunctions in CHS.
...
PMID:A thiol proteinase inhibitor, E-64-d, corrects the abnormalities in concanavalin A cap formation and the lysosomal enzyme activity in leucocytes from patients with Chediak-Higashi syndrome by reversing the down-regulated protein kinase C activity. 1152 21
Infection of human monocytes by
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) has been linked to a decrease in the production of proinflammatory mediators as well as an impairment of phagocytosis. Considering the key role of protein kinases C (PKCs) in many biological functions of monocytes, including phagocytosis, we investigated the effects of EBV on the
PKC
activity in infected monocytes. Our results indicate that infection of monocytes by EBV impairs both phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)-induced translocation of
PKC
isozymes alpha and beta from cytosol to membrane as well as the
PKC
enzymatic activity. Similarly, the subcellular distribution of the receptor for activated C kinase (RACK), an anchoring protein essential to
PKC
translocation, was also found to be reduced in EBV-infected monocytes. Transfection of 293T cells with an expression vector coding for the immediate-early protein ZEBRA of EBV resulted in impaired PMA-induced translocation and activity of
PKC
. Using co-immunoprecipitation assays, the ZEBRA protein was found to physically interact with the RACK1 protein. Thus interaction of ZEBRA with RACK likely results in the inhibition of
PKC
activity, which in turn affects functions of monocytes, such as phagocytosis.
...
PMID:Impaired protein kinase C activation/translocation in Epstein-Barr virus-infected monocytes. 1197 96
The
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) pathway has been considered to be essential for activation of latent
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) into the lytic cycle. The phorbol ester tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate (TPA), a
PKC
agonist, is one of the best understood activators of EBV lytic replication. Zp, the promoter of the EBV immediate-early gene BZLF1, whose product, ZEBRA, drives the lytic cycle, contains several phorbol ester response elements. We investigated the role of the
PKC
pathway in lytic cycle activation in prototype cell lines that differed dramatically in their response to inducing agents. We determined whether
PKC
was involved in lytic cycle induction by histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors. Consistent with prevailing views, B95-8 cells were activated into the lytic cycle by the phorbol ester TPA, via a
PKC
-dependent mechanism. B95-8 was not inducible by HDAC inhibitors such as n-butyrate and trichostatin A (TSA). Bisindolylmaleimide I, a selective
PKC
inhibitor, blocked lytic cycle activation in B95-8 cells in response to TPA. In marked contrast, in HH514-16 cells, the immediate-early promoters Zp and Rp were simultaneously activated by the HDAC inhibitors; TPA by itself failed to activate lytic gene expression. Inhibition of
PKC
activity by bisindolylmaleimide I did not block lytic cycle activation in HH514-16 cells by n-butyrate or TSA. In an extensive exploration of the mechanism underlying these different responses we found that the variable role of the
PKC
pathway in the two cell lines could not be accounted for by significant polymorphisms in the promoters of the immediate-early genes, by differences in the start sites of immediate-early gene transcription, or by differences in the nucleosomal organization of EBV DNA in the region of Zp or Rp. While B95-8 cells contained more total
PKC
activity than did HH514-16 cells in an in vitro assay, another EBV-transformed marmoset lymphoblastoid cell line, FF41, in which the lytic cycle was not inducible by TPA, contained comparably high levels of
PKC
activity. Moreover, two marmoset lymphoblastoid cells lines in which the lytic cycle could not be triggered by TPA maintained the same profile of EBV latency proteins as B95-8 cells. Thus, the profile of EBV latency proteins did not account for susceptibility to induction by
PKC
agonists.
PKC
activation is neither obligatory nor sufficient for the switch between latency and lytic cycle gene expression of EBV in many cell backgrounds. Lytic cycle induction by HDAC inhibitors proceeds by a
PKC
-independent mechanism.
...
PMID:Protein kinase C-independent activation of the Epstein-Barr virus lytic cycle. 1199 90
ZEBRA protein converts
Epstein
-Barr virus (EBV) infection from the latent to the lytic state. The ability of ZEBRA to activate this switch is strictly dependent on the presence of serine or threonine at residue 186 of the protein (A. Francis, T. Ragoczy, L. Gradoville, A. El-Guindy, and G. Miller, J. Virol. 72:4543-4551, 1999). We investigated whether phosphorylation of ZEBRA protein at this site by a serine-threonine protein kinase was required for activation of an early lytic cycle viral gene, BMRF1, as a marker of disruption of latency. Previous studies suggested that phosphorylation of ZEBRA at S186 by
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) activated the protein (M. Baumann, H. Mischak, S. Dammeier, W. Kolch, O. Gires, D. Pich, R. Zeidler, H. J. Delecluse, and W. Hammerschmidt, J. Virol 72:8105-8114, 1998). Two residues of ZEBRA, T159 and S186, which fit the consensus for phosphorylation by
PKC
, were phosphorylated in vitro by this enzyme. Several isoforms of
PKC
(alpha, beta(1), beta(2), gamma, delta, and epsilon ) phosphorylated ZEBRA. All isoforms that phosphorylated ZEBRA in vitro were blocked by bisindolylmaleimide I, a specific inhibitor of
PKC
. Studies in cell culture showed that phosphorylation of T159 was not required for disruption of latency in vivo, since the T159A mutant was fully functional. Moreover, the
PKC
inhibitor did not block the ability of ZEBRA expressed from a transfected plasmid to activate the BMRF1 downstream gene. Of greatest importance, in vivo labeling with [(32)P]orthophosphate showed that the tryptic phosphopeptide maps of wild-type ZEBRA, Z(S186A), and the double mutant Z(T159A/S186A) were identical. Although ZEBRA is a potential target for
PKC
, in the absence of
PKC
agonists, ZEBRA is not constitutively phosphorylated in vivo by
PKC
at T159 or S186. Phosphorylation of ZEBRA by
PKC
is not essential for the protein to disrupt EBV latency.
...
PMID:Disruption of Epstein-Barr virus latency in the absence of phosphorylation of ZEBRA by protein kinase C. 1238 79
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