Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

The MAP kinase Hog1 transiently accumulates in the nucleus upon activation. Although Hog1 nuclear export correlates with its dephosphorylation, we find that dephosphorylation is not necessary for export. Unexpectedly, a strain lacking the nuclear protein tyrosine phosphatase, Ptp2, showed decreased Hog1 nuclear retention, while a strain lacking the cytoplasmic Ptp3 showed prolonged Hog1 nuclear accumulation, consistent with Ptp2 being a nuclear tether for Hog1 and Ptp3 being a cytoplasmic anchor. In support of this result PTP2 overexpression sequestered Hog1 in the nucleus while PTP3 overexpression restricted Hog1 to the cytoplasm. Thus, Ptp2 and Ptp3 regulate Hog1 localization by binding Hog1.
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PMID:Two protein tyrosine phosphatases, Ptp2 and Ptp3, modulate the subcellular localization of the Hog1 MAP kinase in yeast. 1081 57

Evi-1 encodes a nuclear protein involved in leukemic transformation of hematopoietic cells. Evi-1 possesses two sets of zinc finger motifs separated into two domains, and its characteristics as a transcriptional regulator have been described. Here we show that Evi-1 acts as an inhibitor of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), a class of mitogen-activated protein kinases implicated in stress responses of cells. Evi-1 physically interacts with JNK, although it does not affect its phosphorylation. This interaction is required for inhibition of JNK. Evi-1 protects cells from stress-induced cell death with dependence on the ability to inhibit JNK. These results reveal a novel function of Evi-1, which provides evidence for inhibition of JNK by a nuclear oncogene product. Evi-1 blocks cell death by selectively inhibiting JNK, thereby contributing to oncogenic transformation of cells.
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PMID:The evi-1 oncoprotein inhibits c-Jun N-terminal kinase and prevents stress-induced cell death. 1085 40

CARP, a cardiac doxorubicin (adriamycin)-responsive protein, has been identified as a nuclear protein whose expression is downregulated in response to doxorubicin. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that CARP serves as a reliable genetic marker of cardiac hypertrophy in vivo and in vitro. CARP expression was markedly increased in 3 distinct models of cardiac hypertrophy in rats: constriction of abdominal aorta, spontaneously hypertensive rats, and Dahl salt-sensitive rats. In addition, we found that CARP mRNA levels correlate very strongly with the brain natriuretic peptide mRNA levels in Dahl rats. Transient transfection assays into primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes indicate that transcription from the CARP and brain natriuretic peptide promoters is stimulated by overexpression of p38 and Rac1, components of the stress-activated mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways. Mutation analysis and electrophoretic mobility shift assays indicated that the M-CAT element can serve as a binding site for nuclear factors, and this element is important for the induction of CARP promoter activity by p38 and Rac1. Thus, our data suggest that M-CAT element is responsible for the regulation of the CARP gene in response to the activation of stress-responsive mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways. Moreover, given that activation of these pathways is associated with cardiac hypertrophy, we propose that CARP represents a novel genetic marker of cardiac hypertrophy.
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PMID:Cardiac ankyrin repeat protein is a novel marker of cardiac hypertrophy: role of M-CAT element within the promoter. 1090 11

Mesangial cells (MC) grown on extracellular matrix protein-coated plates and exposed to cyclic strain/relaxation proliferate and produce extracellular matrix protein, providing an in vitro model of signaling in stretched MC. Intracellular transduction of mechanical strain involves mitogen-activated protein kinases, and we have shown that p42/44 mitogen-activated protein kinase (extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)) is activated by cyclic strain in MC. In vivo studies show that increased production of nitric oxide (NO) in the remnant kidney limits glomerular injury without reducing glomerular capillary pressure, and we have observed that NO attenuates stretch-induced ERK activity in MC via generation of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP). Accordingly, we sought to determine whether NO affects strain-induced ERK activity after strain and how this is mediated. Strain-induced ERK activity was dependent on time and magnitude of stretch and was maximal after 10 min at -27 kilopascals. Actin cytoskeleton disruption with cytochalasin D abrogated this. The non-metabolizable cGMP analogue 8-bromo cyclic GMP (8-Br-cGMP) dose-dependently attenuated strain-induced ERK activity. Cytoskeletal stabilization with jasplakinolide prevented this inhibitory effect of 8-Br-cGMP. Cyclic strain increased nuclear translocation of phospho-ERK by immunofluorescent microscopy, again attenuated by 8-Br-cGMP. Jasplakinolide prevented the inhibitory effect of 8-Br-cGMP on activated ERK nuclear translocation after strain. Strain increased ERK-dependent AP-1 nuclear protein binding, which was attenuated by cytochalasin D and 8-Br-cGMP. These data indicate that cGMP can inhibit cyclic strain-induced ERK activity, nuclear translocation, and AP-1 nuclear protein binding. Cytoskeletal disruption leads to the same effect, whereas cytoskeleton stabilization reverses the effect of 8-Br-cGMP. Thus, NO inhibits strain-induced ERK activity by cytoskeletal destabilization.
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PMID:NO inhibits stretch-induced MAPK activity by cytoskeletal disruption. 1098 94

Members of the AF4/FMR2 family of nuclear proteins are involved in human diseases such as acute lymphoblastic leukemia and mental retardation. Here we report the identification and characterization of the Drosophila lilliputian (lilli) gene, which encodes a nuclear protein related to mammalian AF4 and FMR2. Mutations in lilli suppress excessive neuronal differentiation in response to a constitutively active form of Raf in the eye. In the wild type, Lilli has a partially redundant function in the Ras/MAPK pathway in differentiation but it is essential for normal growth. Loss of Lilli function causes an autonomous reduction in cell size and partially suppresses the increased growth associated with loss of PTEN function. These results suggest that Lilli acts in parallel with the Ras/MAPK and the PI3K/PKB pathways in the control of cell identity and cellular growth.
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PMID:Lilliputian: an AF4/FMR2-related protein that controls cell identity and cell growth. 1117 3

We reported previously that the production of urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) protein is greater in high-grade glioblastomas than in low-grade gliomas. Transcriptional activation of the uPAR gene or increased stability of the uPAR mRNA that encodes this protein could cause the increased production of this protein in cell lines of different grades of gliomas. We found similar half-life of uPAR mRNA of 10-12 h in glioblastoma multiforme (UWR3) and anaplastic astrocytoma (SW1783) cells. However, the human uPAR promoter was up-regulated 6-8-fold in SW1783 cells and 11-13-fold in UWR3 cells as compared with its activity in low-grade gliomas, a finding that correlates well with previous findings of increases in uPAR mRNA and protein levels in higher-grade gliomas. uPAR mRNA level was increased 11-fold over a 24-h period in low-grade glioma cell lines after treatment with phorbol myristate acetate. The region spanning -144 to -123 bp of the human uPAR promoter that contains the Sp-1 site and a PEA-3 element and an AP-1 site at -184 plays major roles in uPAR promoter activity in glioblastoma cells. Specific antibodies used in an electrophoretic mobility shift assay identified fra-1, fra-2, Jun D, and c-Jun proteins in the nuclear protein complex that bind a 51-mer containing the AP-1 consensus sequence at -184 and its flanking sequences in the uPAR promoter. We further studied the inhibition of uPAR promoter by coexpression of a transactivation domain lacking C-Jun; a dominant-negative ERK1 and ERK2 mutant and a dominant-negative C-raf in glioblastoma cell lines showed the repressed uPAR promoter activity compared with the effect of the empty expression vector. We conclude from our findings that increased transcription is the more likely mechanism underlying the increase in uPAR production in high-grade gliomas.
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PMID:Regulation of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor gene in different grades of human glioma cell lines. 1123 78

We identified two temperature-sensitive (ts) mutations in the essential gene, YRB1, which encodes the yeast homolog of Ran-binding-protein-1 (RanBP1), a known coregulator of the Ran GTPase cycle. Both mutations result in single amino acid substitutions of evolutionarily conserved residues (A91D and R127K, respectively) in the Ran-binding domain of Yrb1. The altered proteins have reduced affinity for Ran (Gsp1) in vivo. After shift to restrictive temperature, both mutants display impaired nuclear protein import and one also reduces poly(A)+ RNA export, suggesting a primary defect in nucleocytoplasmic trafficking. Consistent with this conclusion, both yrb1ts mutations display deleterious genetic interactions with mutations in many other genes involved in nucleocytoplasmic transport, including SRP1 (alpha-importin) and several beta-importin family members. These yrb1ts alleles were isolated by their ability to suppress two different types of mating-defective mutants (respectively, fus1Delta and ste5ts), indicating that reduction in nucleocytoplasmic transport enhances mating proficiency. Indeed, in both yrb1ts mutants, Ste5 (scaffold protein for the pheromone response MAPK cascade) is mislocalized to the cytosol, even in the absence of pheromone. Also, both yrb1ts mutations suppress the mating defect of a null mutation in MSN5, which encodes the receptor for pheromone-stimulated nuclear export of Ste5. Our results suggest that reimport of Ste5 into the nucleus is important in downregulating mating response.
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PMID:Mutations in the YRB1 gene encoding yeast ran-binding-protein-1 that impair nucleocytoplasmic transport and suppress yeast mating defects. 1123 97

Exon trapping and cDNA selection procedures were used to search for novel genes at human chromosome 11p13, a region previously associated with loss of heterozygosity in epithelial carcinomas. Using these approaches, we found the ESE-2 and ESE-3 genes, coding for ETS domain-containing transcription factors. These genes lie in close proximity to the catalase gene within a approximately 200-kilobase genomic interval. ESE-3 mRNA is widely expressed in human tissues with high epithelial content, and immunohistochemical analysis with a newly generated monoclonal antibody revealed that ESE-3 is a nuclear protein expressed exclusively in differentiated epithelial cells and that it is absent in the epithelial carcinomas tested. In transient transfections, ESE-3 behaves as a repressor of the Ras- or phorbol ester-induced transcriptional activation of a subset of promoters that contain ETS and AP-1 binding sites. ESE-3-mediated repression is sequence- and context-dependent and depends both on the presence of high affinity ESE-3 binding sites in combination with AP-1 cis-elements and the arrangement of these sites within a given promoter. We propose that ESE-3 might be an important determinant in the control of epithelial differentiation, as a modulator of the nuclear response to mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling cascades.
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PMID:The epithelium-specific ETS protein EHF/ESE-3 is a context-dependent transcriptional repressor downstream of MAPK signaling cascades. 1125 7

We previously demonstrated that high glucose activates angiotensinogen (ANG) expression and that insulin inhibits this activation. The present studies aim to investigate whether insulin regulates ANG gene expression in kidney proximal tubular cells at the transcription level via interaction of the putative insulin-response element (IRE) with its binding protein(s) in the 5'-flanking region of the ANG gene. Fusion genes containing various lengths of the 5'-flanking region of the rat ANG gene fused to a human GH (hGH) gene as reporter were constructed and transiently introduced into rat immortalized renal proximal tubular cells (IRPTCs). The expression of the fusion genes was monitored by the amount of immunoreactive hGH secreted into the medium as assayed by a specific RIA for hGH. Insulin inhibited the expression of pOGH (rANG N-1498/+18), pOGH (rANG N-1120/+18) and pOGH (rANG N-882/+18) but not pOGH (rANG N-854/+18), pOGH (rANG N-820/+18), pOGH (rANG N-688/+18) and pOGH (rANG N-53/+18) in high-glucose (i.e. 25 mM) medium. Site-directed mutagenesis of nucleotides N-874 to N-867 (5' CCC GCC CT 3') in the 5'-flanking region of the rat ANG gene abolished the response to insulin. Insulin also inhibited the expression of the fusion gene containing the DNA fragment ANG N-882 to N-855 inserted upstream of the ANG gene promoter (N-53/+18), but had no effect on a mutant of N-882 to N-855. Gel mobility shift assays revealed that the labeled putative rat ANG-IRE motif (N-878 to N-864, 5' CCT TCC CGC CCT TCA 3') was bound to the nuclear proteins of IRPTCS: This binding was displaced by unlabeled ANG-IRE and IRE of human glyceraldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase but not by mutants of ANG-IRE and IRE of the rat glucagon gene. Southwestern blotting analysis revealed that the labeled putative ANG-IRE motif bound to a major nuclear protein with an apparent molecular mass of 48 kDA: Finally, high glucose levels enhanced 48-kDa nuclear protein expression and induced an additional 70-kDa nuclear protein expression in IRPTCs, as revealed by Southwestern blotting. Insulin inhibited both 48- and 70-kDa nuclear proteins expression induced by high glucose levels. Its inhibitory effect was reversed by the presence of PD98059 (an inhibitor of mitogen-activated protein kinase, MAPK) but not by wortmannin (an inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol 3- kinase). These studies demonstrate that insulin action on ANG gene expression is at the transcriptional level. The molecular mechanism (s) of insulin action is mediated, at least in part, via interaction of the functional IRE with unidentified 48- and 70- kDa nuclear proteins in the rat ANG gene and is MAPK dependent.
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PMID:Characterization of a putative insulin-responsive element and its binding protein(s) in rat angiotensinogen gene promoter: regulation by glucose and insulin. 1135 7

The current studies were designed to examine the mechanisms of acute effects of ethanol on cerebellar granule neurons (CGNs) during neurodevelopment, with specific reference to activator protein-1 (AP-1). CGNs, isolated from 3-day-old Sprague-Dawley rats and cultured for 3 days, were exposed to 0, 22.5, and 100 mM ethanol for 1 h. Gel shift assays performed on the nuclear protein extracts showed increased AP-1 and heat shock factor-1 (HSF-1) transcriptional activation in response to ethanol. Western blots and RT-PCR showed increased c-JUN and phosphorylated c-JUN (serine 73) protein, as well as c-jun mRNA. Ethanol paradoxically decreased the activity of stress-activated protein kinase-1 (SAPK-1) while increasing p44 and p42 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activity. The protein synthesis-inhibiting and SAPK-1 activity-inducing antibiotic, anisomycin (30 and 500 microM) decreased AP-1 transcriptional activation to 47 and 23% of control values, respectively. The anisomycin effect was enhanced in the presence of 100 mM ethanol. Similarly, cycloheximide decreased ethanol-induced AP-1 transcriptional activation. Pretreatment with the MAPK kinase (MEK) pathway inhibitor PD98059 resulted in decreases in both ethanol-induced and control AP-1 DNA binding. Thus this acute ethanol-induced increased AP-1 transcriptional activation requires protein synthesis and involves MEK-independent increased MAPK phosphorylation, on the one hand, and decreased SAPK-1 activity on the other. The ethanol effect is thus ascribed to the activities of alternate kinase pathways and/or the inhibition of (a) protein phosphatase(s). Exposure of CGNs to ethanol for 24 h resulted in decreased AP-1 DNA binding, an observation that could have consequences for overall neuronal function under chronic exposure conditions.
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PMID:Acute exposure of cerebellar granule neurons to ethanol suppresses stress-activated protein kinase-1 and concomitantly induces AP-1. 1150 22


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