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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)
PEA-15
has recently been identified as a major phosphoprotein in astrocytes and an endogenous substrate for
protein kinase C
. This 15-kDa protein exists under three molecular forms, an unphosphorylated form, N, and two phosphorylated forms, Pa and Pb. Antisera were raised against synthetic peptides corresponding to the internal sequences of the mouse protein containing the two specific phosphorylation sites and affinity-purified antibodies were used for immunoblotting.
PEA-15
was found mainly in the cytosol, but its
protein kinase C
-phosphorylated form, Pb, was also detectable in association with the membrane and remained with the fraction that contains stabilized microtubules. Abundant in astrocytes, particularly in the hippocampus,
PEA-15
was also detected in all cultured brain cell types examined, indicating a more ubiquitous distribution of the protein, further demonstrated by its detection in the eye and in the lung. Parallel to the increase in expression levels, phosphorylation of
PEA-15
also increased during development. This paralleled results obtained in primary cultures, whereas
PEA-15
levels increase with cell maturation. Finally, physiological importance of
PEA-15
phosphorylation was illustrated by immunoreactivity observed in brain homogenates of different mammals, birds, amphibians, and fish.
...
PMID:Cellular expression, developmental regulation, and phylogenic conservation of PEA-15, the astrocytic major phosphoprotein and protein kinase C substrate. 786 Nov 30
Astrocytes in the central nervous system are involved in a variety of functions including storage of glycogen, maintenance of the extracellular ionic equilibrium, and support for the migration and the differentiation of neurons. Astrocytes express membrane receptors allowing them to respond to extracellular signals. Activation of receptors induces a cascade of events, such as stimulation of protein kinases and subsequent phosphorylation of target proteins. To understand the regulatory processes underlying neuroglial interactions, attempts were made to identify major phosphorylated proteins in striatal astrocytes, grown in primary culture and labeled with [32P]phosphate. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed a major doublet, Pa and Pb, of highly labeled spots, with a low molecular weight (M(r) = 15,000) and acidic pI (pI = 5.2 and 5.3, respectively). Using an enriched, heat-stable, cytosolic fraction, Pa and Pb were eluted from semi-preparative two-dimensional gels and subjected to a limited proteolysis and partial microsequencing. The same sequences were obtained within Pa and Pb and had no homology with other known protein. Antibodies raised against corresponding synthetic peptides confirm that the doublet represents two isoelectric variants of the same protein, which also exists under a nonphosphorylated form, N. We propose to name this protein
PEA-15
, for Phosphoprotein Enriched in Astrocytes-15 kDa, according to its large enrichment in these cells. Treatment of intact astrocytes with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), which stimulates
protein kinase C
(
PKC
), increased the phosphorylation of the more acidic spot (Pb) while decreasing Pa intensity. Stimulations of astrocytes known to increase
PKC
activity, i.e. noradrenaline, or its inhibition by decreasing extracellular calcium concentrations, staurosporine, or desensitization following long term treatment with TPA, induced a phosphorylation or a dephosphorylation of
PEA-15
, respectively. Using purified
PKC
,
PEA-15
appeared to be a good substrate in vitro. Two-dimensional peptide mapping revealed that the phosphorylation site in intact cells was identical with the site phosphorylated by
PKC
in vitro. Mapping the phosphopeptides by HPLC following endolysine C treatment lead to the identification of a sequence, phosphorylated in intact astrocytes and in vitro by
PKC
, containing a consensus site for
PKC
: LTRIPSAKK. Antibodies raised against a synthetic peptide derived from this sequence recognized N and Pa in control conditions and Pb after its dephosphorylation. Thus,
PEA-15
is an endogenous substrate for
PKC
, the kinase mediating the transition from Pa to Pb.
...
PMID:Characterization of PEA-15, a major substrate for protein kinase C in astrocytes. 844 55
We have used differential display to identify genes whose expression is altered in type 2 diabetes thus contributing to its pathogenesis. One mRNA is overexpressed in fibroblasts from type 2 diabetics compared with non-diabetic individuals, as well as in skeletal muscle and adipose tissues, two major sites of insulin resistance in type 2 diabetes. The levels of the protein encoded by this mRNA are also elevated in type 2 diabetic tissues; thus, we named it PED for phosphoprotein enriched in diabetes. PED cloning shows that it encodes a 15 kDa phosphoprotein identical to the
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) substrate
PEA-15
. The PED gene maps on human chromosome 1q21-22. Transfection of PED/
PEA-15
in differentiating L6 skeletal muscle cells increases the content of Glut1 transporters on the plasma membrane and inhibits insulin-stimulated glucose transport and cell-surface recruitment of Glut4, the major insulin-sensitive glucose transporter. These effects of PED overexpression are reversed by blocking
PKC
activity. Overexpression of the PED/
PEA-15
gene may contribute to insulin resistance in glucose uptake in type 2 diabetes.
...
PMID:PED/PEA-15 gene controls glucose transport and is overexpressed in type 2 diabetes mellitus. 967 3
PEA-15
(phosphoprotein enriched in astrocytes, Mr = 15,000) is an acidic serine-phosphorylated protein highly expressed in the CNS, where it can play a protective role against cytokine-induced apoptosis.
PEA-15
is a major substrate for
protein kinase C
. Endothelins, which are known to exert pleiotropic effects on astrocytes, were used to analyze further the processes involved in
PEA-15
phosphorylation. Endothelin-1 or endothelin-3 (0.1 microM) induced a robust phosphorylation of
PEA-15
that was abolished by the removal of extracellular calcium, but only diminished by inhibitors of
protein kinase C
. Microsequencing of phosphopeptides generated by digestion of
PEA-15
following endothelin-1 treatment identified two phosphorylated residues: Ser104, previously recognized as the
protein kinase C
site, and a novel phosphoserine, Ser116, located in a consensus motif for either protein kinase casein kinase II or calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII). Partly purified
PEA-15
was a substrate in vitro for CaMKII, but not for casein kinase II. Two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping demonstrated that the site phosphorylated in vitro by CaMKII was also phosphorylated in intact astrocytes in response to endothelin. CaMKII phosphorylated selectively Ser116 and had no effect on Ser104, but in vitro phosphorylation by CaMKII appeared to facilitate further phosphorylation by
protein kinase C
. Treatment of intact astrocytes with okadaic acid enhanced the phosphorylation of the CaMKII site. These results demonstrate that
PEA-15
is phosphorylated in astrocytes by CaMKII (or a related kinase) and by
protein kinase C
in response to endothelin.
...
PMID:Endothelin induces a calcium-dependent phosphorylation of PEA-15 in intact astrocytes: identification of Ser104 and Ser116 phosphorylated, respectively, by protein kinase C and calcium/calmodulin kinase II in vitro. 972 57
PED/
PEA-15
is a recently cloned 15 kDa protein possessing a death effector domain (DED). In MCF-7 and HeLa cells, a fivefold overexpression of PED/
PEA-15
blocked FasL and TNFalpha apoptotic effects. This effect of PED overexpression was blocked by inhibition of
PKC
activity. In MCF-7 and HeLa cell lysates, PED/
PEA-15
co-precipitated with both FADD and FLICE. PED/
PEA-15
-FLICE association was inhibited by overexpression of the wild-type but not of a DED-deletion mutant of FADD. Simultaneous overexpression of PED/
PEA-15
with FADD and FLICE inhibited FADD-FLICE co-precipitation by threefold. Based on cleavage of the FLICE substrate PARP, this inhibitory effect was paralleled by a threefold decline in FLICE activation in response to TNF-alpha. TNFalpha, in turn, reduces PED association with the endogenous FADD and FLICE of the cells. Thus, PED/
PEA-15
is an endogenous protein inhibiting FAS and TNFR1-mediated apoptosis. At least in part, this function may involve displacement of FADD-FLICE binding through the death effector domain of PED/
PEA-15
.
...
PMID:PED/PEA-15: an anti-apoptotic molecule that regulates FAS/TNFR1-induced apoptosis. 1044 31
Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) preferentially triggers apoptosis in tumor cells versus normal cells, thus providing a therapeutic potential. In this study, we examined a large panel of human malignant glioma cell lines and primary cultures of normal human astrocytes for their sensitivity to TRAIL. Of 13 glioma cell lines, 3 were sensitive (80-100% death), 4 were partially resistant (30-79% death), and 6 were resistant (< 30% death). Normal astrocytes were also resistant. TRAIL-induced cell death was characterized by activation of caspase-8 and -3, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage, and DNA fragmentation. Decoy receptor (DcR1 and DcR2) expression was limited in the glioma cell lines and did not correlate with TRAIL sensitivity. Both sensitive and resistant cell lines expressed TRAIL death receptor (DR5), adapter protein Fas-associated death domain (FADD), and caspase-8; but resistant cell lines expressed 2-fold higher levels of the apoptosis inhibitor phosphoprotein enriched in diabetes/phosphoprotein enriched in astrocytes-15 kDa (PED/
PEA-15
). In contrast, cellular FADD-like IL-1beta-converting enzyme-like inhibitory protein (cFLIP) expression was similar in sensitive and resistant cells. Transfection of sense PED/
PEA-15
cDNA in sensitive cells resulted in cell resistance, whereas transfection of antisense in resistant cells rendered them sensitive. Inhibition of
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) activity restored TRAIL sensitivity in resistant cells, suggesting that PED/
PEA-15
function might be dependent on
PKC
-mediated phosphorylation. In summary, TRAIL induces apoptosis in > 50% of glioma cell lines, and this killing occurs through activation of the DR pathway. This caspase-8-induced apoptotic cascade is regulated by intracellular PED/
PEA-15
, but not by cFLIP or decoy receptors. This pathway may be exploitable for glioma and possibly for other cancer therapies.
...
PMID:Induction and intracellular regulation of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) mediated apotosis in human malignant glioma cells. 1122 47
Cell signalling pathways that regulate proliferation and those that regulate programmed cell death (apoptosis) are co-ordinated. The proteins and mechanisms that mediate the integration of these pathways are not yet fully described. The phosphoprotein
PEA-15
(phosphoprotein enriched in astrocytes) can regulate both the ERK (extracellular-signal-regulated kinase)/MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase) pathway and the death receptor-initiated apoptosis pathway. This is the result of
PEA-15
binding to the ERK/MAPK or the proapoptotic protein FADD (Fas-activated death domain protein) respectively. The mechanism by which binding of
PEA-15
to these proteins is controlled has not been elucidated.
PEA-15
is a phosphoprotein containing a Ser-104 phosphorylated by
protein kinase C
and a Ser-116 phosphorylated by CamKII (calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II) or AKT. Phosphorylation of Ser-104 is implicated in the regulation of glucose metabolism, while phosphorylation at Ser-116 is required for
PEA-15
recruitment to the DISC (death-initiation signalling complex). Moreover,
PEA-15
must be phosphorylated at Ser-116 to inhibit apoptosis. In the present study, we report that phosphorylation at Ser-104 blocks ERK binding to
PEA-15
in vitro and in vivo, whereas phosphorylation at Ser-116 promotes its binding to FADD. We further characterize phospho-epitope-binding antibodies to these sites. We report that phosphorylation does not influence the distribution of
PEA-15
between the cytoplasm and nucleus of the cell since all phosphorylated states are found predominantly in the cytoplasm. We propose that phosphorylation of
PEA-15
acts as the switch that controls whether
PEA-15
influences proliferation or apoptosis.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of PEA-15 switches its binding specificity from ERK/MAPK to FADD. 1591 34
Phosphoprotein enriched in diabetes/phosphoprotein enriched in astrocytes (PED/PEA)-15 is an anti-apoptotic protein whose expression is increased in several cancer cells and following experimental skin carcinogenesis. Exposure of untransfected C5N keratinocytes and transfected HEK293 cells to phorbol esters (12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)) increased PED/
PEA-15
cellular content and enhanced its phosphorylation at serine 116 in a time-dependent fashion. Ser-116 --> Gly (PED(S116G)) but not Ser-104 --> Gly (PED(S104G)) substitution almost completely abolished TPA regulation of PED/
PEA-15
expression. TPA effect was also prevented by antisense inhibition of
protein kinase C
(
PKC
)-zeta and by the expression of a dominant-negative
PKC
-zeta mutant cDNA in HEK293 cells. Similar to long term TPA treatment, overexpression of wild-type
PKC
-zeta increased cellular content and phosphorylation of WT-PED/
PEA-15
and PED(S104G) but not of PED(S116G). These events were accompanied by the activation of Ca2+-calmodulin kinase (CaMK) II and prevented by the CaMK blocker, KN-93. At variance, the proteasome inhibitor lactacystin mimicked TPA action on PED/
PEA-15
intracellular accumulation and reverted the effects of
PKC
-zeta and CaMK inhibition. Moreover, we show that PED/
PEA-15
bound ubiquitin in intact cells. PED/
PEA-15
ubiquitinylation was reduced by TPA and
PKC
-zeta overexpression and increased by KN-93 and
PKC
-zeta block. Furthermore, in HEK293 cells expressing PED(S116G), TPA failed to prevent ubiquitin-dependent degradation of the protein. Accordingly, in the same cells, TPA-mediated protection from apoptosis was blunted. Taken together, our results indicate that TPA increases PED/
PEA-15
expression at the post-translational level by inducing phosphorylation at serine 116 and preventing ubiquitinylation and proteosomal degradation.
...
PMID:Phorbol esters induce intracellular accumulation of the anti-apoptotic protein PED/PEA-15 by preventing ubiquitinylation and proteasomal degradation. 1722 70
The phosphoprotein enriched in diabetes/phosphoprotein enriched in astrocytes (ped/pea-15) gene is overexpressed in human diabetes and causes this abnormality in mice. Transgenic mice with beta-cell-specific overexpression of ped/pea-15 (beta-tg) exhibited decreased glucose tolerance but were not insulin resistant. However, they showed impaired insulin response to hyperglycemia. Islets from the beta-tg also exhibited little response to glucose. mRNAs encoding the Sur1 and Kir6.2 potassium channel subunits and their upstream regulator Foxa2 were specifically reduced in these islets. Overexpression of PED/
PEA-15
inhibited the induction of the atypical protein kinase C (
PKC
)-zeta by glucose in mouse islets and in beta-cells of the MIN-6 and INS-1 lines. Rescue of
PKC
-zeta activity elicited recovery of the expression of the Sur1, Kir6.2, and Foxa2 genes and of glucose-induced insulin secretion in PED/
PEA-15
-overexpressing beta-cells. Islets from ped/pea-15-null mice exhibited a twofold increased activation of
PKC
-zeta by glucose; increased abundance of the Sur1, Kir6.2, and Foxa2 mRNAs; and enhanced glucose effect on insulin secretion. In conclusion, PED/
PEA-15
is an endogenous regulator of glucose-induced insulin secretion, which restrains potassium channel expression in pancreatic beta-cells. Overexpression of PED/
PEA-15
dysregulates beta-cell function and is sufficient to impair glucose tolerance in mice.
...
PMID:PED/PEA-15 regulates glucose-induced insulin secretion by restraining potassium channel expression in pancreatic beta-cells. 1732 29
Phosphoprotein enriched in diabetes/phosphoprotein enriched in astrocytes (PED/
PEA-15
) is overexpressed in several tissues of individuals affected by type 2 diabetes. In intact cells and in transgenic animal models, PED/
PEA-15
overexpression impairs insulin regulation of glucose transport, and this is mediated by its interaction with the C-terminal D4 domain of phospholipase D1 (PLD1) and the consequent increase of
protein kinase C
-alpha activity. Here we show that interfering with the interaction of PED/
PEA-15
with PLD1 in L6 skeletal muscle cells overexpressing PED/
PEA-15
(L6(PED/
PEA-15
)) restores insulin sensitivity. Surface plasmon resonance and ELISA-like assays show that PED/
PEA-15
binds in vitro the D4 domain with high affinity (K(D) = 0.37 +/- 0.13 mum), and a PED/
PEA-15
peptide, spanning residues 1-24, PED-(1-24), is able to compete with the PED/
PEA-15
-D4 recognition. When loaded into L6(PED/
PEA-15
) cells and in myocytes derived from PED/
PEA-15
-overexpressing transgenic mice, PED-(1-24) abrogates the PED/
PEA-15
-PLD1 interaction and reduces
protein kinase C
-alpha activity to levels similar to controls. Importantly, the peptide restores insulin-stimulated glucose uptake by approximately 70%. Similar results are obtained by expression of D4 in L6(PED/
PEA-15
). All these findings suggest that disruption of the PED/
PEA-15
-PLD1 molecular interaction enhances insulin sensitivity in skeletal muscle cells and indicate that PED/
PEA-15
as an important target for type 2 diabetes.
...
PMID:Targeting of PED/PEA-15 molecular interaction with phospholipase D1 enhances insulin sensitivity in skeletal muscle cells. 1854 25
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