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)

Recent studies suggest that prostaglandin E may have the ability to suppress cytokine responsiveness. We examined the effects of prostaglandin E administration on several parameters of the acute and chronic hepatic injury induced by bile duct ligation. Enisoprost, a prostaglandin E(1) analog was found to suppress early hepatic and Ito cell type I collagen gene expression without diminishing the induction of the fibrogenic cytokine, transforming growth factor beta. Overall hepatic inflammation and cell proliferation were not altered, suggesting that prostaglandin E acts distal to the initial injurious event(s). During the later phases, drug administration reduced total collagen accumulation as well as type I collagen periductular infiltration associated with early nodule formation. Ito cell mitogenesis occurs during liver injury and fibrogenesis in vivo coincident with the de novo expression of Ito cell platelet-derived growth factor beta (PDGFbeta) receptor messenger RNA. PDGF-induced mitogenesis was studied in cultured rat hepatic Ito cells which resemble the myofibroblast associated with liver injury. Pretreatment with prostaglandin E markedly suppressed the PDGF response in a dose-dependent fashion. The PDGF-induced cascade was studied plus minus PGE to determine the level of regulation which induced the observed suppression. PGE caused no apparent diminution in the abundance of the surface PDGFbeta receptor nor its subsequent activation and tyrosine phosphorylation following PDGF stimulation. The cytoplasmic "secondary messengers" mitogen-activated protein kinase pp42--44 and raf kinase appeared to be comparably induced and therefore unaffected by PGE. Raf perinuclear translocation was also intact, and comparable degrees of nuclear egr, fos, and jun expression occurred. Because other studies have suggested that many of these features of the PDGF cascade may be causally and sequentially linked, the data collectively suggest that the dominant PGE mitogenic suppressive effect resides at a Raf-MAP parallel pathway or at a nuclear level distal to the induction of these early growth response genes.
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PMID:Prostaglandin E Suppresses Hepatic Fibrosis: Section I. The In Vivo Approach; Section II. The In Vitro Approach. 1185 47