Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.22 (cdc2)
8,319 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In a previous study (Am. J. Pathol. 1994, 145: 1265-1270) we found rat coronary vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation and apoptosis to be regulated by protein kinase C (PKC). In the present study we analysed whether selective depletion of alpha isozyme of PKC would affect SMC proliferation and/or apoptosis. First, using Western blot technique, it was determined that the rat SMC express alpha, delta, epsilon and zeta isozymes of PKC. The selective depletion of PKC-alpha in SMC was achieved by exposing cells to antisense oligodeoxynucleotide to mRNA for PKC-alpha (AS-PKC-alpha). The effect of AS-PKC-alpha on SMC proliferation was analysed by measurement of 3H-thymidine incorporation. The results indicated that a single dose of AS-PKC-alpha at a concentration of 10-100microM caused long-lasting (for at least 4 days) inhibition (up to 55%) of 3H-thymidine incorporation by SMC. This observation indirectly demonstrates that PKC-alpha regulates SMC proliferation. However, it was not possible to induce a significant level of apoptosis in SMC exposed even to the highest dose of AS-PKC-alpha. These data, in conjunction with the previously shown induction of apoptosis in SMC by calphostin C, suggests that another isozyme of PKC is likely to be involved in regulation of SMC apoptosis. Finally, we observed that induction of apoptosis via PKC-dependent mechanism is prevented by supplementing the culture medium with serum. This shows striking similarity with the regulation of apoptosis by the c-myc-dependent pathway. In conclusion, PKC-alpha joins the group of proteins such as c-myc, proliferating-cell nuclear antigen and cdc2 kinase which may be therapeutical targets, for antisense oligodeoxynucleotides, in order to prevent SMC hyperplasia.
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PMID:Protein kinase C-alpha regulates proliferation but not apoptosis in rat coronary vascular smooth muscle cells. 863 13

Methylselenocysteine (MSC), an organic selenium compound is an effective chemopreventive agent against mammary cell growth both in vivo and in vitro but its mechanism of action is still not understood. We have previously demonstrated that MSC is able to inhibit growth in a synchronized TM6 mouse mammary epithelial tumor cell line at 16 h time point followed by apoptosis at 48 h. The decrease in cdk2 kinase activity was coincident with prolonged arrest of cells in S-phase. The present set of experiments showed that cdk2 phosphorylation was reduced by 72% in the MSC-treated cells at 16 h time point. Expression for gadd34, 45 and 153 was elevated 2.5 to 7 fold following MSC treatment only after 16 h time point. In order to investigate a possible upstream target for MSC, we analyzed protein kinase C (PKC) in this model. Total PKC activity was reduced in TM6 cells by MSC (50 microM) within 30 min of treatment, both in cytosolic (55.4 and 77.6%) and membrane (35.2 and 34.1%) fractions for calcium-dependent and independent PKCs, respectively. PMA significantly elevated the PKC activity in membrane fraction (P < 0.01) and MSC inhibited this activation by more than 57%. The effect of MSC was selenium specific as selenomethionine and sulfurmethyl-L-cysteine (SMC) did not alter PKC activity either in cytosolic or membrane fraction. Immunoblot analysis showed that PKC-alpha was translocated to the membrane by PMA and MSC did not alter this translocation. PKC-delta was faintly detectable in membrane fractions of control and MSC-treated cells. MSC treatment slightly reduced levels of PKC-e (in cytosolic and membrane fractions) and PKC-zeta (cytosolic fractions). The data presented herein suggest that PKC is a potential upstream target for MSC that may trigger one or all of the downstream effects; i.e. the decrease of cdk2 kinase activity, decreased DNA synthesis, elevation of gadd gene expression and finally apoptosis.
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PMID:Effects of methylselenocysteine on PKC activity, cdk2 phosphorylation and gadd gene expression in synchronized mouse mammary epithelial tumor cells. 1065 18

The role of protein kinase C-beta(II) (PKC-beta(II)) in etoposide (VP-16)-induced apoptosis was studied using polyomavirus-transformed pyF111 rat fibroblasts in which PKC-beta(II) specific activity in the nuclear membrane (NM) doubled and the enzyme was cleaved into catalytic fragments. No PKC-beta(II) complexes with lamin B1 and/or active caspases were immunoprecipitable from the NM of proliferating untreated cells, but large complexes of PKC-beta(II) holoprotein and its catalytic fragments with lamin B1, active caspase-3 and -6, and inactive phospho-CDK-1, but not PKC-beta(I) or PKC-delta, could be immunoprecipitated from the NM of VP-16-treated cells, suggesting that PKC-beta(II) is an apoptotic lamin kinase. By 30 min after normal nuclei were mixed with cytoplasms from VP-16-treated, but not untreated, cells, PKC-beta(II) holoprotein had moved from the apoptotic cytoplasm to the normal NM, and lamin B1 was phosphorylated before cleavage by caspase-6. Lamin B1 phosphorylation was partly reduced, but its cleavage was completely prevented, despite the presence of active caspase-6, by adding a selective PKC-betas inhibitor, hispidin, to the apoptotic cytoplasms. Thus, a PKC-beta(II) response to VP-16 seems necessary for lamin B1 cleavage by caspase-6 and nuclear lamina dissolution in apoptosing pyF111 fibroblasts. The possibility of PKC-beta(II) being an apoptotic lamin kinase in these cells was further suggested by lamin B1-bound PKC-delta being inactive or only slightly active and by PKC-alpha not combining with the lamin.
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PMID:Protein kinase C-beta II Is an apoptotic lamin kinase in polyomavirus-transformed, etoposide-treated pyF111 rat fibroblasts. 1190 Nov 53

Glucose concentration may be an important factor in breast cancer cell proliferation, and the prevalence of breast cancer is high in diabetic patients. Leptin may also be an important factor since plasma levels of leptin correlated with TNM staging for breast cancer patients. The effects of glucose and leptin on breast cancer cell proliferation were evaluated by examining cell doubling time, DNA synthesis, levels of cell cycle related proteins, protein kinase C (PKC) isozyme expression, and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) subtypes were determined following glucose exposure at normal (5.5 mM) and high (25 mM) concentrations with/without leptin in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells. In MCF-7 cells, leptin and high glucose stimulated cell proliferation as demonstrated by the increases in DNA synthesis and expression of cdk2 and cyclin D1. PKC-alpha, PPARgamma, and PPARalpha protein levels were up-regulated following leptin and high glucose treatment in drug-sensitive MCF-7 cells. However, there was no significant effect of leptin and high glucose on cell proliferation, DNA synthesis, levels of cell cycle proteins, PKC isozymes, or PPAR subtypes in multidrug-resistant human breast cancer NCI/ADR-RES cells. These results suggested that hyperglycemia and hyperleptinemia increase breast cancer cell proliferation through accelerated cell cycle progression with up-regulation of cdk2 and cyclin D1 levels. This suggests the involvement of PKC-alpha, PPARalpha, and PPARgamma.
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PMID:Leptin and high glucose stimulate cell proliferation in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells: reciprocal involvement of PKC-alpha and PPAR expression. 1237 72