Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.24 (mitogen-activated protein kinase)
95,810 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Figure 2 summarizes our current interpretation of data concerning signals from the activated PDGF receptor involved in directed migration and proliferation of human arterial SMC. Binding of PDGF (PDGF-BB or PDGF-AA) causes PDGF-receptor dimerization, tyrosine autophosphorylation, and subsequent binding of several molecules containing SH2 domains to the activated receptor. Binding and activation of PLC gamma by the PDGF receptor leads to PIP2 hydrolysis, resulting in generation of diacylglycerol (DAG) and IP3. Subsequently, intracellular levels of calcium are elevated as a result of IP3-mediated calcium release from intracellular compartments. The decreased levels of PIP2 and increased levels of calcium both favor actin-filament disassembly by inducing capping of actin-filament barbed ends and actin-monomer sequestration. A localized, and transient, actin-filament disassembly enables the cell to extend filopodia towards PDGF, thereby enabling chemotaxis to take place. At a later time and/or in a different compartment, actin-filament assembly is promoted by PDGF by a mechanism that is not completely understood, but that may involve small GTP-binding proteins, such as Rho, and formation of DAG. Migration on collagen requires functional alpha 2 beta 1 integrins, which may either constitute a permissive state required for a cell to migrate, or which may be actively involved in intracellular signals leading to migration. PDGF-induced DNA synthesis and proliferation involves activation of Ras, MAP kinase kinase, and MAP kinase. Cross-talk between PKA signaling and tyrosine-kinase receptor signaling results in PKA inhibition of the MAP kinase cascade, probably at the level of Raf. Activation of PI 3-kinase, or a PI 3-kinase-like enzyme, is also likely to contribute to the mitogenic effects of PDGF in these cells (Bornfeldt, unpublished observation). What determines if a SMC will migrate and/or proliferate in response to PDGF? Results are starting to emerge that show regulation of expression of molecules involved in intracellular signaling with different phenotypic states of SMC. For example, expression of PLC gamma is very low in intact vascular wall (where SMC show a "contractile phenotype"), and induced when SMC are converted to a "synthetic phenotype" in culture. Proliferation and expression of MAP kinase, but not calcium signaling, appear to be regulated by the extracellular matrix, and the profile of integrin expression is different in SMC in culture compared to SMC in the vascular wall. Thus, the relation between expression of signaling molecules involved in migration and signaling molecules involved in proliferation, as well as cross-talk between different signal-transduction pathways, may determine the net effect of PDGF.
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PMID:Platelet-derived growth factor. Distinct signal transduction pathways associated with migration versus proliferation. 748 87

Inhibitors of the production of endogenous angiotensin II (A-II) can diminish the hyperplastic response produced by arterial injury in animals; however, a similar effect in humans has not been observed. To explain this discrepancy, we compared the effect of A-II on rat aortic smooth muscle cells (R-SMC) and smooth muscle cells derived from human saphenous veins (H-SMC). A-II (10-1000 nM) significantly increased the proliferative rate of R-SMC incubated in 10% serum, but a similar effect was not observed with H-SMC. Incubation of R-SMC for 24 hr with A-II (1 microM) produced a significant increase in cell size (7%) and protein production (18%), whereas no hypertrophic response was noted in H-SMC exposed to A-II. In neither R-SMC nor H-SMC did A-II, in any concentration, induce cell migration. Stimulation of R-SMC with A-II resulted in tyrosine phosphorylation of five proteins (approximately 120, approximately 108, approximately 68, 45, 42 kDa). The 42- and 45-kDa proteins, which we have previously identified as mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAP-K), remained phosphorylated for 1 hr. In H-SMC, only MAP kinases were tyrosine phosphorylated, but with less intensity than in R-SMC, and only for 20 min. In protein kinase C-depleted SMC, tyrosine phosphorylation of MAP kinase was inhibited in both cell types. A-II produced hypertrophy and hyperplasia of R-SMC, but not H-SMC. Differences in intracellular signaling might account for these disparate effects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of angiotensin II on human vascular smooth muscle cell growth. 804 Nov 34

PD 089828, a novel protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor of a new structural class, the 6-aryl-pyrido-[2,3-d]pyrimidines, was identified by screening a compound library with assays that measured protein tyrosine kinase activity. PD 089828 was found to inhibit human full-length fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptor-1 (FGFR-1), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptor beta subunit (PDGFR-beta), Src nonreceptor tyrosine kinase (c-Src) and epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinases with half-maximal inhibitory potencies (IC50 values) of 0.15 +/- 0.02 (n = 4), 0.18 +/- 0.04 (n = 3), 1.76 +/- 0.28 (n = 4) and 5.47 +/- 0.78 (n = 6) microM, respectively. PD 089828 was further characterized as an ATP competitive inhibitor of the growth factor receptor tyrosine kinases (FGFR-1, PDGFR-beta and EGFR) but a noncompetitive inhibitor of c-Src tyrosine kinase with respect to ATP. In addition, PD 089828 inhibited PDGF- and EGF-stimulated receptor autophosphorylation in vascular SMC (VSMC) and basic FGF-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation in A121 cells with IC50 values similar to the potencies observed for inhibition of receptor tyrosine kinase activity. The inhibition of PDGF receptor autophosphorylation in VSMC by PD 089828 occurred rapidly, with maximal effects reached within 5 min of drug exposure. Inhibition after single exposure was long lasting but also rapidly reversible, occurring within 5 min after drug removal. The PDGF-induced association of downstream signaling proteins, including phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI-3K), growth factor receptor binding protein-2 (GRB2), SH-2 domain and collagen like (Shc) and phospholipase Cgamma (PLCgamma), with VSMC PDGF receptors was also blocked as a result of the inhibition of PDGF-stimulated receptor autophosphorylation by PD 089828. PD 089828 also inhibited the PDGF-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the 44- and 42-kDa mitogen-activated protein kinase isoforms. Moreover, the effects of PD 089828 were demonstrated in functional assays in which PDGF-stimulated DNA synthesis, PDGF-directed migration and serum-stimulated growth of VSMC were all inhibited to the same extent as PDGF receptor autophosphorylation (IC50 = 0.8, 4.5 and 1.8 microM, respectively). These results highlight the biological characteristics of PD 089828 as a novel, broadly active protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor with long-lasting but reversible cellular effects. The potential therapeutic use of these broadly acting, nonselective inhibitors as antiproliferative and antimigratory agents could extend to such diseases as cancer, atherosclerosis and restenosis in which redundancies in growth-signaling pathways are known to exist.
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PMID:Inhibition of growth factor-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation in vascular smooth muscle by PD 089828, a new synthetic protein tyrosine kinase inhibitor. 919 Aug 82

We investigated the effects of PDGF on DNA synthesis and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase activity, and demonstrated that the adult intimal SMC was concentration-dependently stimulated by all PDGF isoforms in terms of both [3H]thymidine incorporation and MAP kinase activation, with PDGF-BB and -AB being more potent than PDGF-AA. The intimal SMCs and the neonatal SMCs showed a similar response with regard to MAP kinase activation. On the other hand, the intimal SMCs expressed many more PDGF receptors than the adult medial SMCs, which expressed a greater amount of PDGF-A chain mRNA and showed a lesser response to PDGFs. These results suggest that the intimal SMCs have a relatively high potential to react to exogenous PDGFs, whereas the adult medial SMCs depend on endogenous or autocrine secretion of PDGF-AA.
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PMID:Response to platelet-derived growth factor by phenotypically different cultured human aortic smooth muscle cells. 958 95

Expression of both basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and FGF receptors (FGFR) by vascular smooth muscle cells suggests that autocrine FGF signaling mechanisms may have important functions. Inhibition of smooth muscle cell bFGF expression provokes apoptosis, suggesting that endogenous bFGF generates an anti-apoptotic signal. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the survival function of endogenous bFGF requires signaling through FGFR. A recombinant adenovirus encoding a truncated murine FGFR-1 lacking the kinase domain (DN-FGFR) efficiently expressed the transgene in cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells. The truncated receptor acted in a dominant negative fashion to effectively prevent receptor-mediated signaling, assessed by phosphorylation of p42/p44 MAP kinase. Expression of DN-FGFR provoked apoptosis of SMC in a dose-dependent fashion that was insensitive to recombinant bFGF but could be rescued by platelet derived growth factor or epidermal growth factor. Heterologous growth factor rescue was inhibited by PD98059, an inhibitor of MEK (MAP kinase-kinase). These data demonstrate that inhibition of FGF receptor activation results in apoptosis and suggest that an intact autocrine FGF signaling loop is required for vascular smooth muscle cell survival in vitro. These findings also implicate the Ras/Raf/MEK/MAP kinase cascade in generating or sustaining the survival signal. The functional significance of an autocrine FGF signaling loop in non-transformed cells has important implications for cardiovascular development, remodeling and disease.
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PMID:Autocrine FGF signaling is required for vascular smooth muscle cell survival in vitro. 973 45

Studies on the mode of action of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) identified an essential role of heparan sulfate and heparin-like molecules in the formation of distinct bFGF-heparan sulfate-bFGF-receptor complexes that are required for bFGF-induced signal transduction. In coronary smooth muscle cells that express 6-8 ng bFGF mg(-1) cell protein, the heparan sulfate chains of membrane-associated proteoheparan sulfate are implicated in bFGF signaling and thus are involved in the regulation of proliferation and differentiation of vascular smooth muscle cells. We studied the mode of action of a synthetic non-sulfated heparin-mimicking compound termed RG-13,577 (poly-4-hydroxyphenoxy acetic acid, Mr approximately 5 kD) and found a dose-dependent antiproliferative effect that was characterized by a block of G(1)/S-phase transition indicated by a marked (80%) reduction of [3H]thymidine incorporation at a concentration of 5 microg ml(-1) RG-13,577. Cell cycle analysis showed a block of cell division in the G(1)-phase. In response to RG-13,577 the cells were converted into a hypertrophic growth status within 72 h as judged from a doubling of the cellular protein content and measurement of cell and nucleus size. The increased cell protein content resulted from a de novo synthesis and was also associated with an increase in the incorporation of [35S]sulfate into cell-associated proteoglycans, including the proteoheparan sulfate coreceptor of bFGF. In contrast, the compound-induced G(1)-phase arrest was associated with an extensive downregulation of the cellular and pericellular bFGF level. The reduced bFGF content was accompanied by downregulation of the bFGF signaling-involved protein kinase C-alpha and MAP kinase, abrogation of MAP kinase phosphorylation and overexpression of protein kinase C-gamma. RG-13,577 failed to elicit apoptotic reactions at a concentration range of 0.5-10 microg ml(-1) and its effect was reversible upon removal of the compound. It appears that RG-13,577 induces a phenotype transformation of coronary SMC into a metabolically active hypertrophic status that could promote repair processes after balloon angioplasty (PTCA) without stimulating cell proliferation. Development of non-toxic polyanionic compounds may provide an effective strategy to inhibit cell proliferation associated with restenosis following balloon angioplasty and coronary artery bypass surgery.
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PMID:Differentiation of coronary smooth muscle cells to a cell cycle-arrested hypertrophic growth status by a synthetic non-toxic heparin-mimicking compound. 1055 25

The phenotypic modulation of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) from the differentiated state to the dedifferentiated one is critically involved in the development and progression of atherosclerosis. Although many cytokines and growth factors have been reported as atherogenic factors, the critical pathogens for inducing atherosclerosis remain unknown, largely because proper examining systems of them have not been developed. We recently established primary culture systems for visceral SMCs and VSMCs in which both SMCs, when cultured on laminin with insulin-like growth factor-I, show a differentiated phenotype, as indicated by a spindle-like shape, ligand-induced contractility, and a high level of SMC differentiation marker gene expression. In this study, we searched for critical dedifferentiation factors for these SMCs using our culture system. We found that polar lipids extracted from human serum markedly induced VSMC dedifferentiation, and this activity was solely present in the lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) fraction. Among several LPA species detected in human serum lipids, unsaturated LPAs were identified as major contributors to the induction of VSMC dedifferentiation. Signaling and phenotype analyses revealed that unsaturated LPA-induced VSMC dedifferentiation is mediated through the coordinated activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase. Thus, this report demonstrates the first finding that unsaturated LPAs, but not saturated LPAs, specifically induce VSMC phenotypic modulation, suggesting that these molecules could function as atherogenic factors.
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PMID:Phenotypic modulation of vascular smooth muscle cells induced by unsaturated lysophosphatidic acids. 1148 75

Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) migration and proliferation play a key role in the pathophysiology of cardiovascular disease. However, the transcription factors that regulate VSMC activation are not completely characterized. By a mRNA-differential display approach, we have identified neuron-derived orphan receptor-1 (NOR-1), a transcription factor within the NGFI-B subfamily of nuclear receptors, as a immediate-early gene in VSMCs. Two NOR-1 isoforms (alpha and beta) were identified and cloned from serum-induced porcine VSMC that shared high homology with the human isoforms. Northern blot analysis revealed a strong and transient (1 to 6 hours) upregulation of NOR-1 in both porcine and human coronary SMCs by growth factors (serum, platelet-derived growth factor-BB, and epidermal growth factor) and alpha-thrombin but not by cytokines. NOR-1 upregulation is processed through G protein-coupled receptors and tyrosine kinase receptors, and involves Ca2+ mobilization, protein kinase C activation, and the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. This induction was closely dependent of the cAMP response elements present in NOR-1 promoter as transfection assays indicate. Human coronary atherosclerotic lesions overexpress NOR-1, and balloon angioplasty transiently induces NOR-1 in porcine coronary arteries with a pattern similar to that observed in VSMCs in culture. Antisense oligonucleotides against NOR-1 inhibited human coronary SMC proliferation (reduced de novo DNA synthesis, cell cycle progression, and VSMC wound repair) as efficiently as antisense against the protooncogene c-fos. These results show that NOR-1 modulates VSMC proliferation, and suggest that this transcription factor may play a role in both spontaneous and accelerated atherosclerosis.
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PMID:Neuron-derived orphan receptor-1 (NOR-1) modulates vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation. 1252 26

Anandamide triggers various cellular activities by binding to cannabinoid (CB1/CB2) receptors or vanilloid receptor 1 (VR1). However, the role of these receptors in anandamide-induced apoptosis remains largely unknown. Here, we show that SR141716A, a specific inhibitor of cannabinoid receptor (CB1-R), did not block anandamide-induced cell death in endogenously CB1-R expressing cells. In addition, CB1-R-lacking Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells underwent cell death after anandamide treatment. SR144528, a specific inhibitor of CB2-R also failed to block anandamide-induced cell death in HL-60 cells. Capsazepine, a specific antagonist of VR1 could not prevent anandamide-induced cell death in constitutively and endogenously VR1 expressing PC12 cells. Moreover, anandamide noticeably triggered cell death in VR1-lacking human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells. In contrast, methyl-beta cyclodextrin (MCD), a membrane cholesterol depletor, completely blocked anandamide-induced cell death in a variety of cells, including PC12, C6, Neuro-2a, CHO, HEK, SMC, Jurkat and HL-60 cells. MCD also blocked anandamide-induced superoxide generation, phosphatidyl serine exposure and p38 MAPK/JNK activation. Thus, our data imply a novel role for of membrane lipid rafts in anandamide-induced cell death.
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PMID:Anandamide induces cell death independently of cannabinoid receptors or vanilloid receptor 1: possible involvement of lipid rafts. 1286 85

Human brain vascular smooth muscle cell (HBVSMC) migration contributes to angiogenesis and several pathological processes in the brain. However, the molecular mechanism of angiogenesis, in which smooth muscle cell contributes, remains unclear. Our study investigates the role of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in the HBVSMC migration and elucidates the chemotactic signaling pathway mediating this action. We used the in vitro 'scratch' wound method to detect the HBVSMC migration. VEGF(165) (1-40ng/ml) induced the HBVSMC migration in a dose-dependent manner (P<0.05). VEGF(165) does not induce HBVSMC proliferation. Wortmannin, a specific phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitor, significantly inhibited serine/threonine kinase Akt/protein kinase B (PKB) phosphorylation and reduced HBVSMC migration into the wound edge following VEGF(165) stimulation (P<0.05). PD98059, an extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) inhibitor, also significantly inhibited ERK1/2 phosphorylation and reduced the numbers of SMC migration. Parallel distance measurement showed that VEGF(165) induced HBVSMC migration significantly reduced due to inhibition of PI3K or ERK1/2 phosphorylation (P<0.05). Our results demonstrate that VEGF(165) could induce HBVSMC migration but not proliferation in vitro. Inhibiting Akt/PKB or ERK1/2 phosphorylation could reduce VEGF(165) induced HBVSMC migration. We provide the first evidence that activation of PI3K or ERK1/2 pathways are a crucial event in VEGF(165) mediated signal transduction leading to HBVSMC migration.
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PMID:Participation of PI3K and ERK1/2 pathways are required for human brain vascular smooth muscle cell migration. 1468 9


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