Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 studied the effect of fasting on phosphotyrosine phosphatase (PTPase) activities in particulate (PF) and cytosolic (CF) fractions of rat adipocytes and liver. PTPase activity was assessed using [32P]tyrosine insulin receptor (IR). In adipocytes, 48 h fasting significantly inhibited PTPase activity. Dephosphorylation of IR by PF and CF PTPases was reduced by 80 and 65%, respectively. Similar reductions of lesser magnitude were observed in fasted rat livers. The effect of fasting was completely reversed by either refeeding or by incubating "fasted" adipocytes for 2 h in tissue culture medium containing 5 mM glucose. Neither 20 mM glucose nor the presence of insulin influenced phosphatase activity. Because fasting is accompanied by elevated protein kinase C (PKC) and adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) levels, we examined their influence on adipocyte PTPases. Neither activation (1 microM 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate) nor inhibition (20 microM sphingosine) of PKC affected PTPase activity. In contrast, cAMP (2 mM) significantly inhibited PTPase activity (80% inhibition at 2 h), and its effect was prevented by a cAMP antagonist RpcAMP. Fasting- and cAMP-induced inhibition of PTPase activity was restored by incubating PF with trypsin (4 micrograms/ml for 5 min), which separated the putative inhibitors from the phosphatases. We conclude that fasting-induced inhibition of PTPases is mediated by elevated cAMP levels, most likely by activating phosphatase inhibitors.
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PMID:Role of cAMP in mediating effects of fasting on dephosphorylation of insulin receptor. 131 6

To elucidate the acute effect of insulin on its receptor, rat adipocytes were preincubated with insulin, washed with KCN to inhibit receptor cycling, and 125I-labeled insulin binding was measured. Preincubating cells from young insulin-sensitive rats with insulin increased cell surface binding up to approximately fourfold without changing apparent receptor affinity. This effect was rapid (t1/2 less than 5 min) and had a similar dose-response relationship as the effect on glucose transport. It was also energy dependent because preincubation with KCN completely abolished the effect of subsequent insulin exposure. The increased binding capacity was not recovered after cell solubilization or in partially purified receptors or isolated plasma membranes. Cells pretreated with insulin were less sensitive to the ability of trypsin to remove cell surface receptors, suggesting a conformational change of the receptors. This was also supported by the finding that the polyclonal binding in insulin-treated but not in control cells. Vanadate mimicked the effect of insulin to increase insulin binding, whereas concanavalin A, vasopressin, phorbol esters, or the adenosine analogue phenyl isopropyl adenosine was without effect. Insulin-resistant adipocytes from obese rats displayed no increase in cell surface binding after insulin treatment, despite normal tyrosine kinase activity in response to insulin. Thus, both insulin and vanadate elicit a rapid effect to markedly increase the number of cell surface insulin binding sites in intact rat adipocytes. This appears to occur independently of protein kinase C and the inhibitory GTP binding protein (Gi). Furthermore, the effect of insulin could not be demonstrated in insulin-resistant cells, suggesting that this mechanism may be of importance for the regulation of insulin sensitivity.
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PMID:Insulin can rapidly increase cell surface insulin binding capacity in rat adipocytes. A novel mechanism related to insulin sensitivity. 131 56

The purpose of this study was to purify and identify the proteinase-like substance previously recognized as responsible for the Na+/K(+)-ATPase stimulating property of plasma from insulin-dependent diabetic subjects. Anion-exchange chromatography followed by two-step heparin affinity chromatography resulted in a fraction highly enriched in both potent Na+/K(+)-ATPase stimulating activity and potent proteolytic activity. Approx. 400 micrograms of purified protein was isolated from 62 mg of starting plasma proteins. When analyzed on sodium dodecyl sulfate gels the active fraction consisted mainly of one polypeptide band with an apparent molecular mass of 66 kDa under either reducing or nonreducing conditions. The proteinase-like properties of the purified fraction were further revealed by its ability to clot plasma, split fibrinogen with production of fibrinopeptide A and induce shape change in human platelets and irreversible platelet aggregation in the presence of the stable analogue of endoperoxides U46619. Its additional capacity to affect platelet phosphoinositol metabolism was shown by the stimulation of protein kinase C-dependent phosphorylation of 47 kDa platelet membrane protein. In designing an identification protocol for the purified fraction, it was postulated that plasma proteinases are probably bound to their inhibitors, to form a stable covalently linked complex. The possibility that a proteinase-proteinase inhibitor complex was purified instead of single proteinase(s) was investigated. Neither trypsin nor neutrophil elastase were present in the active fraction whereas, among the possible plasma proteinase inhibitors tested, immunoreactivity was observed only in the presence of alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1 AT) antiserum. Double immunodiffusion showed that control human alpha 1 AT and the plasma-purified fraction shared common antigens. Furthermore, both isoelectric focusing and amino acid composition analysis showed that the two substances were similar. The results obtained indicate that alpha 1 AT is apparently the only active component of the purified fraction from the plasma of insulin-dependent diabetics, thus suggesting that an altered form of the inhibitor is responsible for the broad range of proteinase-like effects elicited by the plasma-purified fraction.
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PMID:Purification of proteinase-like and Na+/K(+)-ATPase stimulating substance from plasma of insulin-dependent diabetics and its identification as alpha 1-antitrypsin. 131 11

Synapsin I, a prominent phosphoprotein in nerve terminals, is proposed to modulate exocytosis by interaction with the cytoplasmic surface of small synaptic vesicles and cytoskeletal elements in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. Tetanus toxin (TeTx), a potent inhibitor of neurotransmitter release, attenuated the depolarization-stimulated increase in synapsin I phosphorylation in rat cortical particles and in synaptosomes. TeTx also markedly decreased the translocation of synapsin I from the small synaptic vesicles and the cytoskeleton into the cytosol, on depolarization of synaptosomes. The effect of TeTx on synapsin I phosphorylation was both time and TeTx concentration dependent and required active toxin. One- and two-dimensional peptide maps of synapsin I with V8 proteinase and trypsin, respectively, showed no differences in the relative phosphorylation of peptides for the control and TeTx-treated synaptosomes, suggesting that both the calmodulin- and the cyclic AMP-dependent kinases that label this protein are equally affected. Phosphorylation of synapsin IIb and the B-50 protein (GAP43), a known substrate of protein kinase C, was also inhibited by TeTx. TeTx affected only a limited number of phosphoproteins and the calcium-dependent decrease in dephosphin phosphorylation remained unaffected. In vitro phosphorylation of proteins in lysed synaptosomes was not influenced by prior TeTx treatment of the intact synaptosomes or by the addition of TeTx to lysates, suggesting that the effect of TeTx on protein phosphorylation was indirect. Our data demonstrate that TeTx inhibits neurotransmitter release, the phosphorylation of a select group of phosphoproteins in nerve terminals, and the translocation of synapsin I. These findings contribute to our understanding of the basic mechanism of TeTx action.
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PMID:Tetanus toxin inhibits depolarization-stimulated protein phosphorylation in rat cortical synaptosomes: effect on synapsin I phosphorylation and translocation. 132 20

The human erythroleukemia cell line (HEL) has been used as a model system for studying signal transduction processes as they might relate to platelet/megakaryocyte function. We were interested in examining the role of thrombin in the regulation of adenylyl cyclase in this cell line. As opposed to its predominantly inhibitory effects on cyclic AMP production in platelets or in membranes from HEL cells, our initial experiments in intact HEL cells revealed that thrombin markedly potentiated the cyclic AMP response to prostaglandin E1 (2.9 +/- 0.2-fold), prostacyclin (1.9 +/- 0.2-fold) and carbacyclin (2.5 +/- 0.5-fold), measured either by radioimmunoassay or by the [3H]adenine preloading procedure. Thrombin, although ineffective alone, also potentiated cyclic AMP production stimulated by vasoactive intestinal peptide (1.6 +/- 0.2-fold), cholera toxin (3.0 +/- 0.6-fold) and AIF4- (2.3 +/- 0.6-fold), but not by forskolin (0.9 +/- 0.1-fold). The thrombin effect 1) produced an increase in the efficacy of the prostaglandins with no change in potency; 2) was long-lived; 3) required the proteolytic activity of thrombin; 4) was insensitive to pertussis toxin; and 5) was at least partially mimicked by trypsin, extracellular ATP and UTP, platelet activating factor and activators of protein kinase C. Down-regulation of protein kinase C or pre-exposure to the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine blocked the potentiating effect. Together, these results suggest that in HEL cells, the mechanism of thrombin potentiation of cyclic AMP production may involve alterations in the interaction between stimulatory guanine nucleotide binding protein and the catalytic subunit of adenylyl cyclase, possibly involving protein kinase C-mediated phosphorylation.
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PMID:Potentiation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate production by thrombin in the human erythroleukemia cell line, HEL. 133 12

The myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate, or MARCKS protein, has been implicated in several cellular processes, yet its physiological function remains unknown. We have studied the molecular basis of its membrane association in a cell-free system in order to help elucidate its regulation and function. First, we showed that the MARCKS protein incorporated [3H]myristate when its mRNA was translated in vitro in reticulocyte lysates. The myristoylated protein bound rapidly to freshly fractionated cell membranes, while a nonmyristoylated mutant associated to a much lesser extent (< 15% of wild type). To determine whether this binding was due to a specific cytoplasmic-face protein "receptor," as is seen with pp60v-src, we pretreated the membranes in several ways. Prior treatment of membranes with heat (100 degrees C for 3 min) or trypsin did not affect subsequent MARCKS binding. Binding was markedly decreased in 50 mM EDTA, 0.5 M NaCl, or 1.0% Triton X-100; it was restored to normal after removal of the NaCl and EDTA but was still decreased after removal of the Triton X-100. These findings argued against the existence of a protein receptor for the MARCKS protein on cellular membranes. Finally, MARCKS protein phosphorylated in vitro with protein kinase C bound to the cell membranes to the same extent as the nonphosphorylated protein; this binding was also unaffected by an excess of a synthetic peptide corresponding to the phosphorylation site domain of the protein. We conclude that, at least in this in vitro system, the membrane association of the MARCKS protein is primarily dependent on the amino-terminal myristate moiety and does not appear to involve a specific cytoplasmic-face protein receptor.
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PMID:Membrane association of the myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS) protein appears to involve myristate-dependent binding in the absence of a myristoyl protein receptor. 133 70

The specificity and properties of a novel IgA receptor expressed on the surface of a tissue culture-adapted B cell lymphoma, T560, that originated in murine gut-associated lymphoid tissue, have been explored. Like the IgA receptors of murine T and splenic B cells studied by others, the T560 IgA receptor is trypsin sensitive and neuraminidase resistant and is up-regulated on T560 cells by exposing them overnight to high concentrations of polymeric IgA. Unlike them, the T560 IgA receptor is inhibited by low concentrations of IgM and high concentrations of IgG2a and IgG2b, binds at pH 4.0 but not at pH 8.0, is down-regulated by activation of protein kinase C and is sensitive to phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C, indicating that it is glycosyl phosphatidylinositol-linked to the cell membrane. It is not a cell-bound form of galactosyl transferase, does not appear to bind to Ig through carbohydrate residues and does not react specifically with antibody to secretory component. It may be a completely new, cross-reactive receptor, perhaps related in some way to the polymeric Ig receptor or to the receptor for IgA expressed on the apical surface of Peyer's patch M cells, which is known to cross-react with IgG. Alternatively, it may be homologous to the highly IgA-specific Fc alpha R of T cells but, perhaps because of its glycosyl phosphatidylinositol linker, may have an ability to move and interact with other Ig receptors on the cell surface such that Ig bound to them are cross-inhibitory.
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PMID:A novel IgA receptor expressed on a murine B cell lymphoma. 137 46

Cell-substrate adhesion is crucial at various stages of development and for the maintenance of normal tissues. Little is known about the regulation of these adhesive interactions. To investigate the role of GTPases in the control of cell morphology and cell-substrate adhesion we have injected guanine nucleotide analogs into Xenopus XTC fibroblasts. Injection of GTP gamma S inhibited ruffling and increased spreading, suggesting an increase in adhesion. To further investigate this, we made use of GRGDSP, a peptide which inhibits binding of integrins to vitronectin and fibronectin. XTC fibroblasts injected with non-hydrolyzable analogs of GTP took much more time to round up than mock-injected cells in response to treatment with GRGDSP, while GDP beta S-injected cells rounded up in less time than controls. Injection with GTP gamma S did not inhibit cell rounding induced by trypsin however, showing that cell contractility is not significantly affected by the activation of GTPases. These data provide evidence for the existence of a GTPase which can control cell-substrate adhesion from the cytoplasm. Treatment of XTC fibroblasts with the phorbol ester 12-o-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate reduced cell spreading and accelerated cell rounding in response to GRGDSP, which is essentially opposite to the effect exerted by non-hydrolyzable GTP analogs. These results suggest the existence of at least two distinct pathways controlling cell-substrate adhesion in XTC fibroblasts, one depending on a GTPase and another one involving protein kinase C.
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PMID:A GTPase controls cell-substrate adhesion in Xenopus XTC fibroblasts. 151 94

We describe some properties on an Mr 30,000 thermolabile and trypsin-sensitive protein that activates phospholipase A2 (PLA2) and which was isolated from nervous tissue of the marine mollusk, Aplysia californica. A similar protein is present in rat cerebral cortex. This protein was partially purified from crude homogenates of nervous tissue by ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex followed by size-exclusion high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). It is loosely associated with membrane fractions, and is extracted by 0.05% Tween 20. Although similar in size to several previously described PLA2-stimulating proteins from non-neural mammalian cells and tissues, it differs from them in some aspects of biological activity. The protein promotes the release of eicosanoids from the membranes of intact Aplysia neurons prelabeled with [3H]arachidonic acid and appears to be an in vitro substrate for protein kinase C (PKC). PLA2-stimulating activity is greatly enhanced after exposing isolated ganglia to phorbol dibutyrate (PDBu) and is reduced by treatment with immobilized E. coli alkaline phosphatase. These observations suggest that phosphorylation of this stimulatory protein by PKC regulates PLA2 in neurons.
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PMID:A phospholipase A2-stimulating protein regulated by protein kinase C in Aplysia neurons. 164 37

The phosphorylation of diacylglycerol (DG), a reaction catalyzed by DG kinase, may be critical in the termination of effector-induced signals mediated by protein kinase C. Synapsin I is a principal target of intracellular protein kinases and is thought to be involved in the release of neurotransmitter from axon terminals. We present several lines of evidence which indicate that rat brain synapsin, in addition to this role, may function as a DG kinase. Purified rat brain DG kinase was digested with trypsin, which produced three major fragments whose sequence was identical to three regions in synapsin I. Using a rabbit anti-synapsin polyclonal antiserum, the elution profile of synapsin immunoreactivity coincided exactly with that of DG kinase activity in column fractions from the final step in the DG kinase purification procedure. As is the case with synapsin, the purified enzyme was a strongly basic protein with an isoelectric point greater than 10.0. Finally, incubating the DG kinase with highly purified bacterial collagenase, an enzyme that partially degrades the proline- and glycine-rich synapsin, resulted in the simultaneous loss of DG kinase activity and synapsin immunoreactivity. We conclude that cytosolic rat brain synapsin is capable of functioning as a DG kinase.
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PMID:Cytosolic rat brain synapsin I is a diacylglycerol kinase. 164 30


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