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)

The ability of the CD44 adhesion molecule to interact with its ligand hyaluronic acid (HA) is tightly regulated. CD44-positive mouse LB lymphoma cells are unable to bind HA unless activated by the tumor promoter phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA). PMA causes a dose-dependent increase in both CD44 expression level and HA-binding capacity, with the binding of HA observed only above a threshold amount of CD44 molecules. This induction of HA-binding as well as the increase in CD44 expression are prevented by cycloheximide, suggesting a requirement for new additional CD44 molecules on the cell surface and/or cooperating proteins. In the present study, we have investigated which of the signal transduction pathways activated by PMA leads to the increased CD44 expression with subsequent acquisition of HA-binding capacity. By comparing the influence of each inhibitory agent on PMA-activated LB lymphoma cells versus that on a constitutive HA-binder cell line derived from LB cells (designated HA9 cells), we could distinguish between an effect on the PMA-activation phase and a one on the HA-binding phase. Our data show that the PMA-induced HA-binding could not be blocked by agents inhibiting protein kinase C (PKC) (staurosporine, sphingosine, polymyxin B, quercetin) or genestein, an inhibitor of tyrosine protein kinases. However, this PMA response was strongly inhibited by calmodulin antagonists (chlorpromazine, trifluoperazine, W-7) and the calcium blocker verapamil. The calmodulin antagonists inhibited the PMA-induced increase in CD44 expression on LB cells, but had no influence on the ability of the constitutive HA-binder HA9 cell line to interact with HA, indicating an effect on the PMA induction phase rather than on the binding itself. Verapamil also blocked the PMA-induced increase in CD44 expression on LB cells, but in addition it slightly reduced the ability of the HA9 cells to bind HA without affecting their CD44 expression level. In conclusion, our data suggest that CD44 activation by PMA is calcium and calmodulin dependent, rather than mediated by protein kinase C.
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PMID:Calcium- and calmodulin-dependent PMA-activation of the CD44 adhesion molecule. 992 43

Calpain, also named CANP (for calcium-activated neutral protease), is an intracellular cytoplasmatic non-lysosomal cysteine endopeptidase that requires calcium ions for activity. Many substrates of the calpain isoenzymes, such as the transcription factors c-Fos and c-Jun, the tumor supressor protein p53, protein kinase C, pp60c-src and the adhesion molecule integrin, have been implicated in the pathogenesis of different human tumors, suggesting an important role of the calpains in malignant diseases. We now report differential expression of the calpain I gene (CL I) in a variety of tumors, extending our study to a larger series of renal cell carcinomas. Using Northern-blot analysis, we studied calpain I expression in 30 renal cell carcinomas as compared with matched healthy tissues. Tumor samples were classified according to their histological type: 21 clear cell carcinomas, 4 chromophobe carcinomas, 3 papillary carcinomas and 2 oncocytomas. In renal tumor samples, calpain I gene mRNA was expressed at highly variable levels, significantly depending on the different histological types. Moreover, there was a correlation of higher calpain I expression with increased malignancy: within the clear cell carcinoma subset, tumor samples with advanced nodal status (N1 and N2) showed a significantly higher calpain I expression than tumors without metastasis to regional lymph nodes. Our data suggest an important role of calpain isoenzymes in carcinogenesis and tumor progression.
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PMID:Expression of calpain I messenger RNA in human renal cell carcinoma: correlation with lymph node metastasis and histological type. 998 24

We tested the hypothesis that activation of protein kinase C (PKC) and generation of oxidants are critical sequential signals mediating tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha-induced activation of nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) and transcription of the intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM)-1 gene. Stimulation of human pulmonary artery endothelial (HPAE) cells with TNF-alpha (100 U/ml) induced the activation of PKC and, subsequently, generation of oxidants. Pretreatment with calphostin C, a specific PKC inhibitor, prevented oxidant generation after TNF-alpha stimulation, indicating that PKC activation mediated the production of oxidants in HPAE cells. In contrast, pretreatment of HPAE cells with N-acetylcysteine, an antioxidant and a precursor of glutathione, failed to prevent PKC activation, indicating that PKC activation was not secondary to the oxidant production. These findings suggest that oxidant generation in endothelial cells occurs downstream of PKC activation. However, both PKC activation and oxidant generation were necessary for ICAM-1 mRNA expression because the pretreatment of HPAE cells with either calphostin C or N-acetylcysteine inhibited the TNF-alpha-induced activation of NF-kappaB and prevented the activation of ICAM-1 promoter. Prolonged exposure of HPAE cells to the phorbol ester, phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate, which is known to deplete all except atypical PKC isozymes, failed to prevent TNF-alpha-induced ICAM-1 mRNA expression. We conclude that TNF-alpha-induced oxidant generation secondary to the activation of a phorbol ester-insensitive PKC isozyme signals the activation NF-kappaB and ICAM-1 gene transcription.
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PMID:Protein kinase C-activated oxidant generation in endothelial cells signals intercellular adhesion molecule-1 gene transcription. 1005 43

Tumor cell attachment to endothelial cells (ECs) is an important step in the metastasis of small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC). Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) stimulation of ECs increases the attachment of some malignant cell types to ECs by affecting the expression of cell adhesion molecules (CAMs). Similarly, the inhibition of EC protein kinase C (PKC) and tyrosine kinase (TK) pathways modulates TNF-alpha-mediated effects on CAM expression. We hypothesized that TNF-alpha would increase SCLC attachment to ECs by affecting CAM expression through activation of PKC and TK pathways. To test this hypothesis, human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were stimulated with TNF-alpha (0 to 500 U/mL) for variable time periods (1 to 24 hours), and the attachment of H82 cells (an SCLC cell line) to the HUVECs was quantified. TNF-alpha stimulation of the HUVECs increased H82 attachment from 28.1% +/- 1.6% to 48.8% +/- 1.7% (P < .05). Preincubation of HUVECs with the PKC inhibitors bis-indolylmaleimide (BIN) or calphostin C or the TK inhibitors genistein or herbimycin A (HMA) blocked the TNF-alpha-induced increase in H82 cell attachment. The addition of antibodies to vitronectin (Vn) or beta1-integrin to TNF-alpha-activated HUVECs before the addition of the H82 cells also significantly decreased H82 attachment, whereas the addition of antibodies to E-selectin, P-selectin, vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM), intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM), neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM), sialyl-Lewis(x), fibronectin (Fn), alpha(v)-integrin, alpha3-integrin, alpha4-integrin, or alpha5-integrin had no effect on SCLC attachment. In summary, the TNF-alpha-mediated increase in SCLC attachment to ECs appears to be mediated by the activation of EC PKC and TK pathways as well as through effects on the function or expression of EC Vn and beta1 integrin.
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor-alpha stimulates attachment of small cell lung carcinoma to endothelial cells. 1007 59

Macrovascular complications are the most important causes of morbidity, mortality and disability in people with Type 2 diabetes mellitus. Although other known risk factors for macrovascular disease (e.g. dyslipidaemia, hypertension, obesity) often co-exist, diabetes itself is an important risk factor for accelerated development of atherosclerosis. Hyperglycaemia, hyperinsulinaemia and insulin resistance may each play a major role in the onset and development of atherosclerotic disease, which causes arterial wall dysfunction, haematological disturbances and lipid abnormalities through two mechanisms: oxidative stress and non-enzymatic glycation. Hyperglycaemia induces damage to the endothelium through activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase, protein kinase C and transcription factor nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB and through increased levels of pro-adhesion proteins such as intracellular adhesion molecule (ICAM)-1. The arterial wall tone is shifted towards vasoconstriction by hyperglycaemia, which is also associated with vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation and increased intimal wall thickness. Alteration of the coagulation system towards thrombophilia is observed in Type 2 diabetes and a series of lipid abnormalities that facilitate the development of atherosclerosis is evident. In Type 2 diabetes, undiagnosed disease and unrecognized postprandial hyperglycaemia are becoming the most relevant issues in reducing the risk of vascular complications and cardiovascular mortality; improved glycaemic control may reduce the incidence of macrovascular complications.
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PMID:Cardiovascular risk factors in type 2 diabetes: the role of hyperglycaemia. 1052 35

Although the absence of Substance P (SP), a neurotransmitter in the trigeminal nerve, has been speculated as a cause for developing neurotrophic keratitis, its exact pathogenesis is still not clarified. In a previous report, we showed with electron microscopic examination that epithelial cell attachment was weakened in denervated corneas. In this study, SV40-transformed human corneal epithelial cells (HCE-Ts) were used to explore the molecular mechanisms responsible for mediating regulation of E-cadherin expression in response to Substance P receptor stimulation. Expression of the mRNAs for specific SP receptors, neurokinin (NK)-1R, NK-2R, and NK-3R, was demonstrated with RT-PCR. The cells were treated with various concentrations of SP in vitro, and the expression of an adhesion molecule E-cadherin was analyzed by immunofluorescence, immunoblotting, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using an anti-E-cadherin antibody. E-cadherin expression was increased by SP in a dose-dependent manner both in the cytosolic fraction and in the cell membrane fraction. This increase in E-cadherin expression was completely inhibited by Calphostin C (PKC inhibitor) and KN-62 (CaMK inhibitor), but not by H-89 (PKA inhibitor), indicating that SP-induced E-cadherin expression involves the activation of protein kinase C (PKC) and calmodulin kinase (CaMK). SP did not affect cell proliferation at all. All these findings indicate that SP induced E-cadherin expression through PKC and CaMK activation and suggest that a lack of SP may account in part for the pathogenesis of neurotrophic keratitis.
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PMID:Substance P-induced cadherin expression and its signal transduction in a cloned human corneal epithelial cell line. 1062 82

The ectodomain of several membrane-bound proteins can be shed by proteolytic cleavage. The activity of the proteases involved in shedding is highly regulated by several intracellular second messenger pathways, such as protein kinase C (PKC) and intracellular Ca(2+). Recently, the shedding of the adhesion molecule L-selectin has been shown to be regulated by the interaction of calmodulin (CaM) with the cytosolic tail of L-selectin. Prevention of CaM-L-selectin interaction by CaM inhibitors or mutation of a CaM binding site in L-selectin induced L-selectin ectodomain shedding. Whether this action of CaM inhibitors also affects other membrane-bound proteins is not known. In the present paper we show that CaM inhibitors also stimulate the cleavage of several other transmembrane proteins, such as the membrane-bound growth factor precursors pro-transforming growth factor-alpha and pro-neuregulin-alpha2c, the receptor tyrosine kinase, TrkA, and the beta-amyloid precursor protein. Cleavage induced by CaM inhibitors was a rapid event, and resulted from the activation of a mechanism that was independent of PKC or intracellular Ca(2+) increases, but was highly sensitive to hydroxamic acid-based metalloprotease inhibitors. Mutational analysis of the intracellular domain of the TrkA receptor indicated that CaM inhibitors may stimulate membrane-protein ectodomain cleavage by mechanisms independent of CaM-substrate interaction.
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PMID:Stimulation of cleavage of membrane proteins by calmodulin inhibitors. 1067 54

Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease characterised by increased expression of adhesion molecules for leukocytes on both the surface of dysfunctional endothelium and on smooth muscle cells (SMC) within the lesion. It is also characterised by altered SMC phenotypic expression, indicated by a decreased volume fraction of myofilaments (V(v)myo) [1,2] and changes in gene expression [3]. The present study used an in vitro model to investigate, by immunofluorescence staining and flow cytometry, the influence of phenotype on vascular SMC expression of the adhesion molecule for leukocytes, intracellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), and the regulatory mechanisms involved in this process. Smooth muscle cells with a high V(v)myo, freshly isolated from rat aortic media, expressed little or no ICAM-1 and this could not be induced by interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta). As SMC modulated phenotype, indicated by decreasing V(v)myo over the first 5 days of culture, there was a concomitant increase in ICAM-1 expression. At day 9 of primary culture, when SMC cultures had returned to the high V(v)myo phenotype, ICAM-1 expression was markedly lower. However, these cells retained the capacity to express ICAM-1 in response to IL-1beta. After several passages in culture, cells (with a low V(v)myo) constitutively expressed ICAM-1, with levels further up-regulated in response to IL-1beta. These changes in ICAM-1 expression were not related to proliferative state, since similar results were obtained with growth arrested SMC. Investigation of signalling pathways involved in regulating ICAM-1 expression by primary vascular SMC suggested a complex regulatory mechanism. Activation of adenyl cyclase (with forskolin) caused a significant increase in cells expressing ICAM-1. Treatment with inhibitors of protein kinase C (chelerythrine chloride), protein tyrosine kinase (genistein), or the transcription factor NF-kappaB (PDTC) had no significant effect on IL-1-induced ICAM-1 expression. However, in the presence of serum, both genistein and PDTC caused a significant increase in basal expression. The results indicate that ICAM-1 expression by SMC is phenotype-dependent, with expression evident only after cells have modulated to a low V(v)myo phenotype. They also indicate the existence of complex regulatory mechanisms, possibly involving the SMC cytoskeleton.
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PMID:ICAM-1 expression by vascular smooth muscle cells is phenotype-dependent. 1070 20

The carbohydrate antigen sialyl-Lewis(a) is important to pancreatic tumour biology because the circulating antigen is used in serological tests for malignancy and because cell surface antigen is involved in tumour cell binding to the endothelial adhesion molecule, E-selectin, in extravasation. In this study, we examined the effects of the adenylyl cyclase activator, forskolin, and the diacylglycerol analogue, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), on the expression and release of sialyl-Lewis(a) in human pancreatic cancer cells. Increases in the release of sialyl-Lewis(a) from SW1990 cells produced by forskolin and PMA were associated with increases in the activities of protein kinases A and C, respectively, and could be blocked by inhibitors specific for these enzymes. Immunoprecipitation experiments showed that sialyl-Lewis(a) was associated with MUC1 mucin. Forskolin also increased the cellular content of antigen and MUC1 mRNA. Actinomycin D and a protein kinase A inhibitor, H8, blocked these effects. In contrast, PMA reduced cellular antigen and MUC1 mRNA levels, although it produced a temporary increase in release of the antigen. The effects of PMA were blocked by the protein kinase C inhibitor, H7. PMA also reduced cell binding to the adhesion molecule E-selectin. In summary, PKA and PKC alter cell MUC1-associated sialyl-Lewis(a) in opposite directions. These changes may have clinical utility in the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer and the prevention of metastases.
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PMID:Forskolin and phorbol ester have opposite effects on the expression of mucin-associated sialyl-Lewis(a) in pancreatic cancer cells. 1074 4

To clarify the pathogenesis of oral lichen planus (OLP), we investigated the roles of keratinocytes (KC) in mononuclear cell infiltration. When peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) obtained from healthy donors were cultured in the presence of culture supernatants of KC separated from the noninflamed gingivae (Nor-KC) and cheek mucosae of patients with OLP (OLP-KC), the number of migrated PBMC across monolayered human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were increased to about 1.3-fold and 1.5-fold of the control level, respectively, with increases of the expression of CD11a, CD11b, CD18, and CD49d on PBMC and intracellular adhesion molecule-1, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, and endothelial-leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 on HUVEC. The number of migrated PBMC was reduced to about 60% of the control level by pretreatment of PBMC with anti-CD11a or anti-CD18 MAb and reduced to about 70% by pretreatment of HUVEC with anti-CD54 MAb. The pretreatment of PBMC with genistein, H-7, wortmannin, or exoenzyme C3 decreased the migrated PBMC by about 70 to 90%. In agreement with these results, the culture supernatants of OLP-KC up-regulated tyrosine phosphorylation of 62-kDa, 70-kDa, and 102-kDa proteins, phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase, and protein kinase C activities and activated Rho protein level more so than did those of Nor-KC. Additionally, actin reorganization with the formation of membrane ruffles and lamellipodia was distinctly induced by the culture supernatants of OLP-KC. These results indicate that cytokines generated by KC transduce their signals in PBMC, up-regulating the expression of cell surface adhesion molecules and migration activity with reorganization of actin filaments.
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PMID:The mechanism of mononuclear cell infiltration in oral lichen planus: the role of cytokines released from keratinocytes. 1093 17


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