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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)
Although ion channels are regulated by protein kinases, it has yet to be established whether the behavioral state of an animal may dictate whether or not modulation by a kinase can occur. Here, we describe behaviorally relevant changes in the ability of a nonselective cation channel from
Aplysia
bag cell neurons to be regulated by
protein kinase C
(
PKC
). This channel drives a prolonged afterdischarge that triggers the release of egg-laying hormone and a series of reproductive behaviors. The afterdischarge is followed by a lengthy refractory period, during which additional bursting cannot be elicited. Previously, we reported that, in excised inside-out patches, the cation channel is closely associated with
PKC
, which increases channel activity. We now show that this channel-kinase association is plastic, because channels excised from certain neurons lack
PKC
-dependent modulation. Although direct application of
PKC
-activating phorbol ester to these patches had no effect, exposing the neurons themselves to phorbol ester reinstated modulation, suggesting that an absence of modulation was attributable to a lack of associated kinase. Furthermore, modulation was restored by pretreating neurons with either PP1 [4-amino-5-(4-methylphenyl)-7-(t-butyl)pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine] or SU6656, inhibitors of Src tyrosine kinase, an enzyme whose Src homology 3 domain is required for channel-
PKC
association. Neurons that were stimulated to afterdischarge and had entered the prolonged refractory period were found to have more phosphotyrosine staining and less channel-
PKC
association than unstimulated neurons. These findings suggest that Src-dependent regulation of the association between the cation channel and
PKC
controls both the long-term excitability of these neurons and their ability to induce reproduction.
...
PMID:Association/dissociation of a channel-kinase complex underlies state-dependent modulation. 1646 9
Highly selective serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) receptor antagonists developed for mammals are ineffective in
Aplysia
due to the evolutionary divergence of neurotransmitter receptors and because the higher ionic strength of physiological saline for marine invertebrates reduces antagonist affinity. It has therefore been difficult to identify antagonists that specifically block individual signaling cascades initiated by 5-HT. We studied two broad-spectrum 5-HT receptor antagonists that have been characterized biochemically in
Aplysia
CNS: methiothepin and spiperone. Methiothepin is highly effective in inhibiting adenylyl cyclase (AC)-coupled 5-HT receptors in
Aplysia
. Spiperone, which blocks phospholipase C (PLC)-coupled 5-HT receptors in mammals, does not block AC-coupled 5-HT receptors in
Aplysia
. In electrophysiological studies, we explored whether methiothepin and spiperone can be used in parallel to distinguish between the AC-cAMP and PLC-
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) modulatory cascades that are initiated by 5-HT. 5-HT-induced broadening of the sensory neuron action potential in the presence of tetraethylammonium/nifedipine, which is mediated by modulation of the S-K+ currents, was used an assay for the AC-cAMP cascade. Spike broadening initiated by 5 microM 5-HT was unaffected by 100 microM spiperone, whereas it was effectively blocked by 100 microM methiothepin. Facilitation of highly depressed sensory neuron-to-motor neuron synapses by 5-HT was used as an assay for the PLC-
PKC
cascade. Spiperone completely blocked facilitation of highly depressed synapses by 5 microM 5-HT. In contrast, methiothepin produced a modest, nonsignificant, reduction in the facilitation of depressed synapses. Interestingly, these experiments revealed that the PLC-
PKC
cascade undergoes desensitization during exposure to 5-HT.
...
PMID:Serotonin receptor antagonists discriminate between PKA- and PKC-mediated plasticity in aplysia sensory neurons. 1623 85
In
Aplysia
, persistent increases in synaptic strength are paralleled by the persistent activation of the novel
protein kinase C
Apl II. We raised a phosphospecific antibody against serine 725, the hydrophobic motif in
protein kinase C
Apl II. Phosphorylation of serine 725 increased in parallel to the persistent activation of the kinase. We expressed
protein kinase C
where this site was mutated to an alanine to prevent phosphorylation. The mutated
protein kinase C
showed decreased specific activity consistent with a model where the kinase is less stable in the absence of phosphorylation of this site. Endogenous phosphorylation of
protein kinase C
Apl II at serine 725 was unaffected by either activation of
protein kinase C
by phorbol esters, or inhibition of
protein kinase C
using two distinct inhibitors, suggesting the site is not autophosphorylated. Consistent with this, overexpressed kinase-dead
protein kinase C
Apl II still was phosphorylated at serine 725, although to a lesser extent than wild-type
protein kinase C
Apl II. While PDK appears to interact with the serine 725 site, it is not responsible for its phosphorylation. Finally inhibition of phosphoinositide-3 kinase or the target of rapamycin by pharmacological agents did not block basal phosphorylation of serine 725 in
Aplysia
ganglia. Our results suggest trans-phosphorylation of
protein kinase C
Apl II as Ser 725 occurs during persistent activation of the kinase, but this does not appear to be downstream of phosphoinositide-3 kinase.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation at the hydrophobic site of protein kinase C Apl II is increased during intermediate term facilitation. 1667 67
Receptor-induced activation of
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) plays an important role in modulation of various types of ionic channels in neurons. For example,
PKC
causes facilitation or long-lasting activation of certain ionic channels involved in spike firing after the receptor stimulation. We investigated the effect of serotonin (5-HT) on the voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels in RB and RC neurons of
Aplysia
ganglia under voltage clamp. An outward current response was induced by voltage change of the cell membrane from -60 mV to +10 mV. Application of 5-HT significantly augmented the outward current response to the voltage change. Both the outward current and the augmenting effect of 5-HT markedly decreased when examined in either Ca(2+)-free, 10 mM tetraethylammonium, or 0.3 mM Cd(2+)-solution, indicating the current to be Ca(2+)-activated K(+) current produced by Ca(2+) entry. Intracellular application of either guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) or cholera toxin (CTX), reagents for G-proteins, irreversibly blocked the augmenting effect of 5-HT. Application of phorbol dibutylate (PDBu), an activator of
PKC
, augmented the outward current and the effect of 5-HT was occluded after PDBu application. Staurosporine, a specific inhibitor of
PKC
, markedly suppressed the augmenting effects of both 5-HT and PDBu on the outward current. However, either 5-HT or PDBu did not augment the Ca(2+)-activated K(+) current induced by intracellular injection of Ca(2+) but rather depressed it. These results suggest that stimulation of 5-HT receptor may activate a novel type of CTX-sensitive G-protein and subsequent
PKC
, and that phosphorylation of voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channels may result in the increase in Ca(2+) entry and subsequent Ca(2+)-activated K(+) current. The mechanism may contribute to retain the long-lasting activation without broadening of the spike width during the excitatory response to 5-HT in these neurons.
...
PMID:Augmenting effect of serotonin on the voltage-dependent Ca2+ current and subsequently activated K+ current in Aplysia neurons. 1720 70
According to current concepts, long-term memory is based on structural-functional changes in particular synaptic connections between neurons in the brain (synapse-specific plasticity), which depend on the processes of translation and transcription. Studies on neurons in the mollusk
Aplysia
and the mammalian hippocampus have addressed a mechanism of synapse-specific plasticity which does not require synapse-specific molecular genetic processes. Stimulation of a synapse has been shown to lead to activation of intracellular second messengers in the synapse as well as "synaptic tagging"--the formation of mechanisms "recognizing" transcription products. In the neuron body, second messengers induce the synthesis of RNA and protein molecules which are widely distributed in neuron processes and which are inserted selectively only into stimulation-tagged synapses, evoking long-term changes in their functional and morphological characteristics. The results of our studies on common snail defensive behavior command neurons LPl1 and RPl1 suggest the existence of another mechanism controlling synapse-specific plasticity. On acquisition of sensitization, a number of second messengers and the genes controlled by them are involved in supporting the plasticity of defined synaptic inputs of these neurons in snails. The processes of induction of long-term facilitation in the sensory inputs of neurons from chemoreceptors on the head have been shown to involve cAMP and cAMP-dependent transcription factors of the immediate early gene C/EBP (CAAT/enhancer binding protein), while the mechanisms controlling the other sensory input of neurons LPl1 and RPl1--from mechanoreceptors on the head--involve
protein kinase C
and
protein kinase C
-dependent transcription factor SRF (serum response factor). The immediate early gene zif268 is involved in controlling the inputs from both chemo-and mechanoreceptors on the head. These results are regarded as experimental support for the hypothesis that the molecular mechanisms of synapse-specific plasticity during learning may form on the basis of a selective neurochemical "projection" of the synaptic connections onto defined genes in the neuron.
...
PMID:A new mechanism of synapse-specific neuronal plasticity. 1765 26
Long-term facilitation (LTF) of sensory neuron synapses in
Aplysia
is produced by either nonassociative or associative stimuli. Nonassociative LTF can be produced by five spaced applications of serotonin (5-HT) and requires a phosphoinosotide 3-kinase (PI3K)-dependent and rapamycin-sensitive increase in the local synthesis of the sensory neuron neuropeptide sensorin and a protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent increase in the secretion of the newly synthesized sensorin. We report here that associative LTF produced by a single pairing of a brief tetanus with one application of 5-HT requires a rapid
protein kinase C
(
PKC
)-dependent and rapamycin-sensitive increase in local sensorin synthesis. This rapid increase in sensorin synthesis does not require PI3K activity or the presence of the sensory neuron cell body but does require the presence of the motor neuron. The secretion of newly synthesized sensorin by 2 h after stimulation requires both PKA and
PKC
activities to produce associative LTF because incubation with exogenous anti-sensorin antibody or the kinase inhibitors after tetanus plus 5-HT blocked LTF. The secreted sensorin leads to phosphorylation and translocation of p42/44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) into the nuclei of the sensory neurons. Thus, different stimuli activating different signaling pathways converge by regulating the synthesis and release of a neuropeptide to produce long-term synaptic plasticity.
...
PMID:Protein kinase C regulates local synthesis and secretion of a neuropeptide required for activity-dependent long-term synaptic plasticity. 1769 74
Target-dependent increases in axon growth and varicosities accompany the formation of functional synapses between
Aplysia
sensory neurons and specific postsynaptic neurons (L7 and not L11). The enhanced growth is regulated in part by a target-dependent increase in the secretion of sensorin, the sensory neuron neuropeptide. We report here that
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) activity is required for synapse formation by sensory neurons with L7 and for the target-dependent increases in sensorin synthesis and secretion. Blocking
PKC
activity reversibly blocked synapse formation and axon growth of sensory neurons contacting L7, but did not affect axon growth of sensory neurons contacting L11 or axon growth of the postsynaptic targets. Blocking
PKC
activity also blocked the target-induced increase in sensorin synthesis and secretion. Sensorin then activates additional signaling pathways required for synapse maturation and synapse-associated growth. Exogenous anti-sensorin antibody blocked target-induced activation and translocation into sensory neuron nuclei of p42/44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), attenuated synapse maturation, and curtailed growth of sensory neurons contacting L7, but not the growth of sensory neurons contacting L11. Inhibitors of MAPK or phosphoinositide 3-kinase also attenuated synapse maturation and curtailed growth and varicosity formation of sensory neurons contacting L7, but not growth of sensory neurons contacting L11. These results suggest that
PKC
activity regulated by specific cell-cell interactions initiates the formation of specific synapses and the subsequent synthesis and release of a neuropeptide to activate additional signaling pathways required for synapse maturation.
...
PMID:Multifunctional role of protein kinase C in regulating the formation and maturation of specific synapses. 1795 13
Activation of
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) potentiates secretion in
Aplysia
peptidergic neurons, in part by inducing new sites for peptide release at growth cone terminals. The mechanisms by which ion channels are trafficked to such sites are, however, not well understood. We now show that
PKC
activation rapidly recruits new Ca(V)2 subunits to the plasma membrane, and that recruitment is blocked by latrunculin B, an inhibitor of actin polymerization. In contrast, inhibition of microtubule polymerization selectively prevents the appearance of Ca(V)2 subunits only at the distal edge of the growth cone. In resting neurons, Ca(V)2-containing organelles reside in the central region of growth cones, but are absent from distal lamellipodia. After activation of
PKC
, these organelles are transported on microtubules to the lamellipodium. The ability to traffic to the most distal sites of channel insertion inside the lamellipodium does, therefore, not require intact actin but requires intact microtubules. Only after activation of
PKC
do Ca(V)2 channels associate with actin and undergo insertion into the plasma membrane.
...
PMID:PKC-induced intracellular trafficking of Ca(V)2 precedes its rapid recruitment to the plasma membrane. 1832 3
Intracellular Ca2+ is influenced by both Ca2+ influx and release. We examined intracellular Ca2+ following action potential firing in the bag cell neurons of
Aplysia
californica. Following brief synaptic input, these neuroendocrine cells undergo an afterdischarge, resulting in elevated Ca2+ and the secretion of neuropeptides to initiate reproduction. Cultured bag cell neurons were injected with the Ca2+ indicator, fura-PE3, and subjected to simultaneous imaging and electrophysiology. Delivery of a 5-Hz, 1-min train of action potentials (mimicking the fast phase of the afterdischarge) produced a Ca2+ rise that markedly outlasted the initial influx, consistent with Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR). This response was attenuated by about half with ryanodine or depletion of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by cyclopiazonic acid. However, depletion of the mitochondria, with carbonyl cyanide 4-(trifluoromethoxy) phenylhydrazone, essentially eliminated CICR. Dual depletion of the ER and mitochondria did not reduce CICR further than depletion of the mitochondria alone. Moreover, tetraphenylphosphonium, a blocker of mitochondrial Ca2+ release, largely prevented CICR. The Ca2+ elevation during and subsequent to a stimulus mimicking the full afterdischarge was prominent and enhanced by
protein kinase C
activation. Traditionally, the ER is seen as the primary Ca2+ source for CICR. However, bag cell neuron CICR represents a departure from this view in that it relies on store interaction, where Ca2+ released from the mitochondria may in turn liberate Ca2+ from the ER. This unique form of CICR may be used by both bag cell neurons, and other neurons, to initiate secretion, activate channels, or induce gene expression.
...
PMID:Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release in Aplysia bag cell neurons requires interaction between mitochondrial and endoplasmic reticulum stores. 1846 80
In
Aplysia
californica, the serotonin-mediated translocation of
protein kinase C
(
PKC
) Apl II to neuronal membranes is important for synaptic plasticity. The orthologue of
PKC
Apl II,
PKCepsilon
, has been reported to require phosphatidic acid (PA) in conjunction with diacylglycerol (DAG) for translocation. We find that
PKC
Apl II can be synergistically translocated to membranes by the combination of DAG and PA. We identify a mutation in the C1b domain (arginine 273 to histidine;
PKC
Apl II-R273H) that removes the effects of exogenous PA. In
Aplysia
neurons, the inhibition of endogenous PA production by 1-butanol inhibited the physiological translocation of
PKC
Apl II by serotonin in the cell body and at the synapse but not the translocation of
PKC
Apl II-R273H. The translocation of
PKC
Apl II-R273H in the absence of PA was explained by two additional effects of this mutation: (i) the mutation removed C2 domain-mediated inhibition, and (ii) the mutation decreased the concentration of DAG required for
PKC
Apl II translocation. We present a model in which, under physiological conditions, PA is important to activate the novel
PKC
Apl II both by synergizing with DAG and removing C2 domain-mediated inhibition.
...
PMID:Physiological role for phosphatidic acid in the translocation of the novel protein kinase C Apl II in Aplysia neurons. 1850 19
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