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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 have compared the properties of a rat aorta-derived
protein kinase C substrate
(p75) with those of 80 kDa kinase C substrates from rat brain (MARCKS) and rabbit aorta (p80). Rat aortic p75 appeared to be closely related to rat brain MARCKS on the basis of: solubility in perchloric acid and trichloroacetic acid, heat stability, isoelectric point (pI approximately 4.2), overall V8 protease phosphopeptide map, and immunocrossreactivity with an antibody directed against the N-terminal domain of MARCKS. However, p75 could be distinguished from rat brain MARCKS and from the rabbit aorta-derived p80 on the basis of its consistently more rapid electrophoretic mobility in SDS-containing gels, and in terms of a unique proteolytic phosphopeptide found in MARCKS but not in aortic p75. We conclude that p75 probably belongs to the family of
protein kinase C
substrates represented by MARCKS, and that differences in post-translational processing (glycosylation) or mRNA processing may account for the unique properties of the p75 protein in rat aortic tissue.
...
PMID:Comparison of an endogenous protein kinase C substrate in rat aorta with rat brain MARCKS. 133 18
We have examined signal transduction via membrane IgM (mIgM) in resting and cycling human B cells. Crosslinking mIgM on all of the cell types studied transduced a signal through the phosphatidylinositol pathway, producing inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate and release of intracellular free calcium. These second messengers were formed regardless of quantitative or qualitative differences in the surface expression of mIgM: cells that had low levels of surface IgM (T-51) or had no light chain associated with surface heavy chain (DB) signaled phosphatidylinositol pathway activation after mIgM crosslinking. Production of specific lipid products in nonquiescent B cells differed from that in normal resting cells. Ligation of surface immunoglobulin on resting B cells resulted in sustained increases of both diacylglycerol and phosphatidic acid, two lipids that can influence
PKC
activation. Whereas
PKC
was strongly activated in normal tonsillar B cells, several cell lines had reduced
PKC
activation following crosslinking of mIgM. The reduction in
protein kinase C
activation correlated with the absence or reduced levels of phosphatidic acid or diacylglycerol following stimulation:
protein kinase C
translocated and was activated only in cells that had elevated levels of both diacylglycerides and phosphatidic acid. Anti-IgM-induced phosphorylation of a
protein kinase C substrate
protein CD20, also increased in those cells having
PKC
activation and not in cells in which kinase activity was reduced. CD20 phosphorylation also increased following the direct addition of exogenous phosphatidic acid to resting B cells. Together, these observations show that the generation of lipid products following mIgM crosslinking in resting cells can vary from that in cycling cells and may relate to the different levels of
PKC
activation. In a companion study we report that ligation of surface IgM activates both an acyltransferase and phospholipase D to form phosphatidic acid.
...
PMID:Generation of phosphatidic acid and diacylglycerols following ligation of surface immunoglobulin in human B lymphocytes: potential role in PKC activation. 137 90
The activation of
protein kinase C
was investigated in digitonin-permeabilized human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells by measuring the phosphorylation of the specific
protein kinase C substrate
myelin basic protein4-14. The phosphorylation was inhibited by the
protein kinase C
inhibitory peptide PKC19-36 and was associated to a translocation of the enzyme to the membrane fractions of the SH-SY5Y cells. 1,2-Dioctanoyl-sn-glycerol had no effect on
protein kinase C
activity unless the calcium concentration was raised to concentrations found in stimulated cells (above 100 nM). Calcium in the absence of other activators did not stimulate
protein kinase C
. Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate was not dependent on calcium for the activation or the translocation of
protein kinase C
. The induced activation was sustained for 10 min, and thereafter only a small net phosphorylation of the substrate could be detected. Calcium or dioctanoylglycerol, when applied alone, only caused a minor translocation, whereas in combination a marked translocation was observed. Arachidonic acid (10 microM) enhanced
protein kinase C
activity in the presence of submaximal concentrations of calcium and dioctanoylglycerol. Quinacrine and p-bromophenacyl bromide did not inhibit calcium- and dioctanoylglycerol-induced
protein kinase C
activity at concentrations which are considered to be sufficient for phospholipase A2 inhibition.
...
PMID:Activation of protein kinase C in permeabilized human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells. 137 89
The myristoylated, alanine-rich C kinase (
PKC
) substrate (MARCKS) is a major, specific substrate of
PKC
that is phosphorylated during macrophage and neutrophil activation, growth factor-dependent mitogenesis and neurosecretion. MARCKS is also a
calmodulin-binding protein
and binding of calmodulin inhibits phosphorylation of the protein by
PKC
. Several recent observations from our laboratories suggest a role for MARCKS in cellular morphology and motility. First, in macrophages MARCKS is located at points of cellular adherence where actin filaments insert at the plasma membrane and is released to the cytoplasm upon activation of
PKC
. Second, during neutrophil chemotaxis MARCKS undergoes a cycle of release from, and reassociation with, the plasma membrane. Third, in vitro, MARCKS is an F-actin cross-linking protein whose activity is inhibited by
PKC
-mediated phosphorylation and by binding to calmodulin. MARCKS therefore appears to be a regulated cross-bridge between actin and the plasma membrane. Regulation of the plasma membrane-binding and actin-binding properties of MARCKS represents a convergence of the
PKC
and calmodulin signal transduction pathways in the control of actin cytoskeleton-plasma membrane interactions.
...
PMID:Calmodulin and protein kinase C cross-talk: the MARCKS protein is an actin filament and plasma membrane cross-linking protein regulated by protein kinase C phosphorylation and by calmodulin. 139 31
The myristoylated, alanine-rich C-kinase substrate, or MARCKS protein, is a major cellular substrate for
protein kinase C
that is also a high-affinity
calmodulin-binding protein
. In addition, it is the prototype of a small family of myristoylated,
calmodulin-binding protein
kinase C substrate proteins. We isolated a phage clone from a mouse genomic library that spanned the entire coding sequence of the mouse MARCKS protein. The first 612 bp of the putative promoter was 89% identical to a corresponding region of the human promoter, and contained at least 59 potential transcription factor binding sites in analogous locations; both human and mouse promoters lacked TATA boxes. The mouse genomic probe was used to localize the mouse gene to chromosome 10, in the middle of a linkage group that corresponds to a region on human chromosome 6q. These data strongly suggested that the human gene would localize to 6q21. This was confirmed by studies of DNA from a patient with del(6)(q21), in which expression of the human gene encoding MARCKS, MACS, was only about 50% of normal; MARCKS mRNA expression in lymphoblast RNA from this patient was only 22% of normal. These studies confirm that the mouse and human MARCKS proteins are products of the same genes in their respective species; differences in their primary sequence can therefore be attributed to species variation rather than to the existence of related genes.
...
PMID:Chromosomal mapping of the human (MACS) and mouse (Macs) genes encoding the MARCKS protein. 142 22
Neuromodulin (also designated GAP-43, B-50, and F-1) is a prominent
protein kinase C substrate
attached to the membranes of neuronal growth cones during development and to presynaptic membranes in discrete subsets of adult synapses. In this study, we have examined the relationship between the attachment of neuromodulin to membranes and its phosphorylation by
protein kinase C
. To address this issue, we have compared wild-type and mutant neuromodulins expressed in cells that normally lack the protein. Wild-type neuromodulin expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells was associated with membranes, incorporated [3H]palmitic acid, and was phosphorylated in response to phorbol ester treatment. Substitution of serine 41, the in vitro
protein kinase C
site, abolished the phorbol ester response, indicating that serine 41 serves as the sole
protein kinase C
phosphorylation site in vivo. Substitution of the putative fatty acylation sites, cysteines 3 and 4, abolished membrane association as well as [3H]palmitic acid labeling of neuromodulin. Fatty acylation therefore appears to serve as the mechanism for anchoring neuromodulin to membranes. Surprisingly, the soluble cysteine substitution mutant was phosphorylated by
protein kinase C
at a rate indistinguishable from that of the wild-type protein. Therefore, membrane association may not be required for the phosphorylation of neuromodulin by
protein kinase C
.
...
PMID:Palmitylation of neuromodulin (GAP-43) is not required for phosphorylation by protein kinase C. 146 23
Cytoskeletal protein (CSP) interactions are critical to the contractile response in muscle and non-muscle cells. Current concepts suggest that activation of the contractile apparatus occurs through selective phosphorylation by specific cellular kinase systems. Because the Ca(2+)-phospholipid-dependent
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) is involved in the regulation of a number of key endothelial cell responses, the hypothesis that
PKC
modulates endothelial cell contraction and monolayer permeability was tested. Phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), a direct
PKC
activator, and alpha-thrombin, a receptor-mediated agonist known to increase endothelial cell permeability, both induced rapid, dose-dependent activation and translocation of
PKC
in bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells (BPAEC), as assessed by gamma-[32P]ATP phosphorylation of H1 histone in cellular fractions. This activation was temporally associated with evidence of agonist-mediated endothelial cell contraction as demonstrated by characteristic changes in cellular morphology. Agonist-induced activation of the contractile apparatus was associated with increases in BPAEC monolayer permeability to albumin (approximately 200% increase with 10(-6) MPMA, approximately 400% increase with 10(-8) M alpha-thrombin). To more closely examine the role of
PKC
in activation of the contractile apparatus,
PKC
-mediated phosphorylation of two specific CSPs, the actin- and
calmodulin-binding protein
, caldesmon77, and the intermediate filament protein, vimentin, was assessed. In vitro phosphorylation of both caldesmon and vimentin was demonstrated by addition of exogenous, purified BPAEC
PKC
to unstimulated BPAEC homogenates, to purified bovine platelet caldesmon77, or to purified smooth muscle caldesmon150. Caldesmon77 and vimentin phosphorylation were observed in intact [32P]-labeled BPAEC monolayers stimulated with either PMA or alpha-thrombin, as detected by immunoprecipitation. In addition, BPAEC pretreatment with the
PKC
inhibitor, staurosporine, prevented alpha-thrombin- and PMA-induced phosphorylation of both cytoskeletal proteins, attenuated morphologic evidence of contraction, and abolished agonist-induced barrier dysfunction. These results demonstrate that agonist-stimulated
PKC
activity results in cytoskeletal protein phosphorylation in BPAEC monolayer, an event which occurs in concert with agonist-mediated endothelial cell contraction and resultant barrier dysfunction.
...
PMID:Protein kinase C phosphorylates caldesmon77 and vimentin and enhances albumin permeability across cultured bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cell monolayers. 152 36
The rodent protein RC3 is expressed mainly by forebrain neurons during postnatal development and maturity. RC3 and its bovine homolog
neurogranin
/B-50 immunoreactive C-kinase substrate (BICKS) contain overlapping sites for
protein kinase C
phosphorylation and calmodulin binding that resemble those of the presynaptic 43-kDa growth-associated protein (GAP-43). However, morphological evidence suggests that RC3 has a postsynaptic localization. To test this hypothesis, we used two polyclonal antisera against synthetic peptides corresponding to nonoverlapping sequences within RC3 and compared cellular distributions of their binding in neostriatum of adult rats by immunohistochemistry, Golgi impregnation/gold toning, and correlative light/electron microscopy. Somatic and punctate patterns of RC3 immunoreactivity were observed. Somatic RC3 was found in cyto- and nucleoplasmic compartments of all neuronal phenotypes (medium spiny, medium aspiny, and large aspiny cells). Punctate RC3 was found mostly in dendritic spines. In contrast to the 43-kDa growth-associated protein, RC3 was seen infrequently in axons. We conclude that RC3 accumulates postsynaptically in dendritic spines of neostriatal neurons. We propose that RC3 acts as a "third messenger" substrate of
protein kinase C
-mediated molecular cascades during synaptic development and remodeling.
...
PMID:Localization of the protein kinase C phosphorylation/calmodulin-binding substrate RC3 in dendritic spines of neostriatal neurons. 152 65
Protein phosphorylation and
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) levels were analyzed in intact cultures of spontaneously transformed, chemically transformed, and untransformed mouse pulmonary epithelial cell lines. It was found that although the transformed cell lines contained about 80% less
protein kinase C
, measured as total enzyme activity or binding of [3H]phorbol ester, phosphorylation events after phorbol ester treatment could still be easily detected. A commonly described Mr 80-kDa
protein kinase C substrate
(p80, 80 K, MARKS) was identified using 2D-PAGE, following phosphorylation in intact cells, and found to have reduced availability for phosphorylation in the transformed cell lines C4SE9, C1SA5 and NULB5 in comparison to the untransformed C4E10 and C1C10. Available levels of p80 were further analyzed in heat-denatured extracts from all cell lines using partially purified bovine brain
PKC
and correlated well with changes seen in intact cells. It was also noted that all transformed cell lines contained large amounts of a family of phosphoproteins of Mr 55-65 kDa, that could not be detected in the untransformed cell lines and whose phosphorylation state was increased by
protein kinase C
activation. This protein was found to be located in the nucleus. Hence, spontaneously and chemically transformed mouse pulmonary epithelial cells exhibit reduced levels of
PKC
, along with an altered pattern of
PKC
-mediated phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Altered levels and protein kinase C-mediated phosphorylation of substrates in normal and transformed mouse lung epithelial cells. 156 83
Protein kinase C activity was partially purified from tick salivary glands by fast protein liquid chromatography anion-exchange chromatography. Enzyme activity was stimulated by Ca2+, phosphatidylserine, and diacylglycerol with the highest activity observed in the presence of all three modulators. Enzyme activity was inhibited by a synthetic pseudosubstrate peptide with an amino acid sequence resembling the
protein kinase C substrate
phosphorylation site. The
protein kinase C
activator, 1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol (OAG), when added to whole in vitro salivary glands previously prelabeled with 32P, stimulated the phosphorylation of salivary gland proteins. Activators of
protein kinase C
(phorbol ester or OAG) did not stimulate fluid secretion by isolated tick salivary glands. OAG and phorbol ester had only minimal affects on the ability of dopamine to stimulate secretion by isolated salivary glands and dopamine's ability to increase salivary gland cyclic AMP.
...
PMID:Amblyomma americanum (L.): protein kinase C-independent fluid secretion by isolated salivary glands. 158 85
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