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Query: EC:2.7.11.24 (
mitogen-activated protein kinase
)
95,810
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clam oocytes are arrested naturally at the G2/M border in meiosis and contain an inactive 42 kDa
ERK
/
MAP kinase
, p42MAPK. Following fertilization, p42MAPK is rapidly phosphorylated on tyrosine residues and concomitantly activated. Both tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of p42MAPK begin within 2-3 min of fertilization, peak at approximately 15 min, then rapidly decline and disappear around the end of meiosis I. Neither the tyrosine phosphorylated form of p42MAPK nor p42MAPK activity reappears during meiosis II or the succeeding mitotic cell cycles. High doses of molybdate, a potent PTPase inhibitor, block the phosphorylation of p42MAPK and entry into the cell cycle. Lower doses of molybdate delay both p42MAPK phosphorylation and the release from cell cycle arrest, but once cells have re-entered the cell cycle, they continue with near-normal timing. These results argue that the transient activation of p42MAPK at fertilization is a one-time event linked to release from cell cycle arrest. In trying to reconcile this one-time activation of p42MAPK in clam embryos with the recurring, M-phase specific activation of MBP/MAP kinases reported in other systems, we show that cdc2 kinase contributes a major portion of the MBP kinase activity in mitotic extracts. Furthermore, a small fraction of p42MAPK and other related kinases are present in p13suc1-bound material, cautioning against the use of p13suc1 beads for experiments where, in addition to cdc2, the unaccounted presence of other kinase activities could be misleading.
...
PMID:Activation of p42 MAP kinase and the release of oocytes from cell cycle arrest. 132 52
Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) is phosphorylated at four sites in situ and in vivo, and the protein kinases that phosphorylate three of these sites (Ser8,Ser19,Ser40) have been identified. In intact cells, the phosphorylation of the fourth site (Ser31) is increased in response to phorbol esters or nerve growth factor (NGF). Here, we show that Ser31 is phosphorylated by
ERK1
and
ERK2
, two myelin basic protein and microtubule-associated protein kinases. Extracts of NGF- or bradykinin-treated PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cells were fractionated on Mono Q columns. Protein kinase activity toward Ser31 in TH was present in two peaks corresponding to
myelin basic protein kinase
activities previously identified as
ERK1
and
ERK2
. Phosphorylation of purified TH in vitro by both kinases was selective for Ser31 up to at least 0.6 mol of phosphate per mol of TH subunit. Treatment of intact PC12 cells with bradykinin or NGF increased both the phosphorylation of TH-Ser31 in situ and the catalytic activity of ERKs (measured subsequently in vitro with myelin basic protein as substrate). Pretreatment of the cells with genistein (a protein-tyrosine kinase inhibitor) decreased the bradykinin- but not the NGF-induced changes in both TH-Ser31 phosphorylation and
ERK
activity. Genistein also inhibited the increases in Ser31 phosphorylation produced by phorbol dibutyrate, muscarine, and Ba2+. The data indicate that
ERK
activity is responsible for phosphorylating TH at Ser31 in intact cells and suggest that TH-Ser31 phosphorylation may be regulated by multiple signaling pathways that converge at or prior to the activation of the ERKs.
...
PMID:ERK1 and ERK2, two microtubule-associated protein 2 kinases, mediate the phosphorylation of tyrosine hydroxylase at serine-31 in situ. 134 49
To examine signal transduction events activated by oncogenic p21ras, we have studied kinases that are activated following the scrape loading of p21ras into quiescent cells. We observe rapid activation of 42 kDa and 46 kDa protein kinases. The 42 kDa kinase is the mitogen and extracellular-signal regulated kinase
ERK2
, (MAP2 kinase), which is activated by phosphorylation on tyrosine and threonine in response to oncogenic p21ras, while the 46 kDa kinase is likely to be another member of the
ERK
family. Stimulation of these kinases by oncogenic p21ras does not require the presence of growth factors, showing that oncogenic p21ras uncouples kinase activation from external signals. In ras transformed cell lines, these kinases are constitutively activated. We propose that the kinases are important components of the signal transduction pathway activated by p21ras oncoprotein.
...
PMID:Activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase, ERK2, by p21ras oncoprotein. 137 63
As detected by coimmunoprecipitation from PC12 cells, NGF induces rapid association between
ERK1
(a growth factor-activated serine/threonine protein kinase) and gp140prototrk NGF receptors. In contrast, no such association is found with the closely related
ERK2
. Anti-trk immunocomplexes generated from NGF-treated cells also contain protein kinase activity that shares many properties with soluble
ERK1
. The association of both
ERK1
protein and
ERK
-like kinase activity with gp140prototrk is maximal by 5 min of NGF treatment, persists for approximately 1 hr, and subsequently declines by 18 hr. Treatment with either basic fibroblast growth factor, epidermal growth factor, or orthovanadate also leads to association of
ERK1
with gp140prototrk without tyrosine phosphorylation of the latter. The interaction between
ERK1
and gp140prototrk may prove relevant to the NGF mechanism.
...
PMID:NGF and other growth factors induce an association between ERK1 and the NGF receptor, gp140prototrk. 146 7
The small GTP-binding protein Ras appears to be required for transformation and differentiation induced by tyrosine kinases. The Ras requirement may be limited to a few tyrosine kinase-regulated signaling pathways or may be universal for all tyrosine kinase actions. Because both Ras and the microtubule-associated protein 2 kinases
ERK1
and
ERK2
have been implicated in events that lead to neurite outgrowth, we explored the possibility that Ras and ERKs may lie on the same signaling pathway. Utilizing PC-12 rat adrenal pheochromocytoma cell lines that contain a dominant inhibitory Ras mutant (S17N-Ras(H)), we found that Ras was required for stimulation of the
ERK
cascade by nerve growth factor but apparently not by the heterotrimeric G protein activator AlF4-. Within this cascade, Ras appears to be upstream of an
ERK
activator, raising the intriguing possibility that Ras may directly regulate a serine/threonine protein kinase.
...
PMID:Evidence for a Ras-dependent extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK) cascade. 149 81
Growth hormone (GH) influences a number of tissue-specific biological activities in diverse cell types. However, little is known about the biochemical pathway by which the signal initiated by GH binding to its cell-surface receptor is transduced. The GH receptor has been reported to be phosphorylated on tyrosine in 3T3-F442A cells, a cell line in which GH promotes differentiation and inhibits mitogen-stimulated growth; however, it is not known whether tyrosine phosphorylation plays a role in GH signal transduction. We report that GH treatment of 3T3-F442A cells resulted in the rapid tyrosine phosphorylation of at least four proteins. These included 42- (pp42) and 45-kDa (pp45) proteins immunologically related to
ERK1
(extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1), a member of a family of serine/threonine protein kinases that are phosphorylated on tyrosine in response to mitogens. Prolonged phorbol ester pretreatment attenuated the tyrosine phosphorylation of pp42 and pp45 in platelet-derived growth factor-treated cells, but not in GH-treated cells. Maximal GH-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of pp42 and pp45 coincided with peak levels of a 42-kDa renaturable MBP kinase activity in lysates of GH-treated cells resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The observation that multiple cellular proteins are rapidly phosphorylated on tyrosine in response to physiological concentrations of GH suggests that tyrosine phosphorylation plays a role in GH signal transduction. Moreover, the stimulation of tyrosine phosphorylation of
ERK
-related proteins by GH suggests that mitogens and nonmitogens may employ common phosphotyrosyl proteins in the activation of ultimately distinct cellular programs.
...
PMID:Growth hormone stimulates the tyrosine phosphorylation of 42- and 45-kDa ERK-related proteins. 153 56
A protein kinase characterized by its ability to phosphorylate microtubule-associated protein-2 (MAP2) and myelin basic protein (MBP) is thought to play a pivotal role in the transduction of signals from many receptors in response to their ligands. A kinase with such activity, named extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1), is activated rapidly by numerous extracellular signals, requires phosphorylation on tyrosine to be fully active, and in vitro can activate a kinase (a ribosomal S6 protein kinase) that is downstream in phosphorylation cascades. From the protein sequence predicted by the rat ERK1 cDNA, peptides were synthesized and used to elicit antibodies. The antibodies recognize both ERK1; a closely related kinase,
ERK2
; and a third novel
ERK
-related protein. Using these antibodies we have determined that ERK1 and
ERK2
are ubiquitously distributed in rat tissues. Both enzymes are expressed most highly in brain and spinal cord as are their mRNAs. The third
ERK
protein was found in spinal cord and in testes. The antibodies detect ERKs in cell lines from multiple species, including human, mouse, dog, chicken, and frog, in addition to rat, indicating that the kinases are conserved across species. ERK1 and
ERK2
have been separated by chromatography on Mono Q. Stimulation by insulin increases the phosphorylation of both kinases on tyrosine residues, as assessed by immunoblotting with phosphotyrosine antibodies, and retards their elution from Mono Q. Each of these ERKs appears to account for a distinct peak of MBP kinase activity. The activity in each peak is diminished by incubation with either phosphatase 2a or CD45. Therefore, both enzymes have similar modes of regulation and appear to contribute to the growth factor-stimulated MAP2/MBP kinase activity measured in cell extracts.
...
PMID:Identification of multiple extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) with antipeptide antibodies. 165 26
We recently described the purification and cloning of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1), which appears to play a pivotal role in converting tyrosine phosphorylation into the serine/threonine phosphorylations that regulate downstream events. We now describe cloning and characterization of two ERK1-related kinases,
ERK2
and ERK3, and provide evidence suggesting that there are additional
ERK
family members. At least two of the ERKs are activated in response to growth factors; their activations correlate with tyrosine phophorylation, but also depend on additional modifications. Transcripts corresponding to the three cloned ERKs are distinctly regulated both in vivo and in a differentiating cell line. Thus, this family of kinases may serve as intermediates that depend on tyrosine phosphorylation to activate serine/threonine phosphorylation cascades. Individual family members may mediate responses in different developmental stages, in different cell types, or following exposure to different extracellular signals.
...
PMID:ERKs: a family of protein-serine/threonine kinases that are activated and tyrosine phosphorylated in response to insulin and NGF. 203 90
Eukaryotic cells respond to different extracellular stimuli by recruiting homologous signalling pathways that use members of the MEKK, MEK and
ERK
families of protein kinases. The MEKK-->MEK-->
ERK
core pathways of Saccharomyces cerevisiae may themselves be regulated by members of the STE20 family of protein kinases. Here we report specific activation of the mammalian
stress-activated protein kinase
(
SAPK
) pathway by germinal centre kinase (GCK), a human STE20 homologue. SAPKs, members of the
ERK
family, are activated in situ by inflammatory stimuli, including tumour-necrosis factor (TNF) and interleukin-1, and phosphorylate and probably stimulate the transactivation function of c-Jun. Although GCK is found in many tissues, its expression in lymphoid follicles is restricted to the cells of the germinal centre, where it may participate in B-cell differentiation. Activation of the
SAPK
pathway by GCK illustrates further the striking conservation of eukaryotic signalling mechanisms and defines the first physiological function of a mammalian Ste20.
...
PMID:Activation of the SAPK pathway by the human STE20 homologue germinal centre kinase. 747 68
Exposure to solar ultraviolet (UV) light is a major cause of skin cancer, the most common human neoplasm. The earth's upper atmosphere absorbs the high energy UV-C wavelengths (100-280 nm), while allowing transmission of UV-B (280-320 nm) and UV-A (320-400 nm). It is therefore UV-B and to some extent UV-A, that contributes to most human skin malignancies. We report that the exposure of cultured keratinocytes or skin to UV-C radiation causes activation of MAP kinases (
ERK
and
JNK
). In contrast, the solar radiation associated with skin cancer (UV-B) was an ineffective activator of the
ERK
and
JNK
signal transduction pathways. Therefore, while exposure of epidermal cells to UV-C radiation under laboratory conditions causes marked activation of
MAP kinase
signal transduction pathways, only a low level of
MAP kinase
signaling is involved in the response of skin to biologically relevant solar radiation.
...
PMID:Differential effects of UV-B and UV-C components of solar radiation on MAP kinase signal transduction pathways in epidermal keratinocytes. 747 12
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