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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)
Kinase suppressor of Ras (KSR) is a recently identified component of Ras-dependent signaling pathways. In this report, we show that murine KSR1 (mKSR1) cooperates with activated Ras to promote Xenopus oocyte maturation and cellular transformation and provide evidence that this cooperation occurs by accelerating mitogen and extracellular regulated kinase (MEK) and
mitogen-activated protein kinase
(
MAPK
) activation. We also find that mKSR1 associates with Raf-1 at the plasma membrane in a Ras-dependent manner, indicating the presence of a membrane-bound kinase signaling complex. Although mKSR1 is related structurally to Raf-1, our findings reveal striking functional differences between these proteins. In marked contrast to the isolated amino- and carboxy-terminal domains of Raf-1, the KSR amino terminus also cooperates with Ras, whereas the carboxy-terminal kinase domain blocks Ras signaling as well as MEK and
MAPK
activation. The isolated KSR kinase domain suppressed Xenopus oocyte maturation, cellular transformation, and Drosophila eye development, suggesting that separation of the amino- and carboxy-terminal domains has uncoupled the normal regulation of KSR as a positive effector of Ras signaling. Together, our findings indicate that mKSR1 is an integral component of the
MAPK
module functioning via a novel mechanism to modulate signal propagation between Raf-1,
MEK1
, and
MAPK
.
...
PMID:KSR modulates signal propagation within the MAPK cascade. 894 10
Mechanisms of neutrophil activation in response to chemoattractants remain incompletely understood. We have recently reported a Ras-mediated c-Raf pathway leading to the activation of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase in human neutrophils stimulated with the chemoattractant formyl-Met-Leu-Phe (FMLP). However, concern that Raf activation may not fully account for the early FMLP-mediated human neutrophil responses prompted us to investigate the activation of
MAP kinase
/ERK kinase (MEK) by MEK kinase (MEKK). In cell lysates we identified protein species at 180, 160, 110, 72, and 54 kDa with a monoclonal antibody to MEKK. Activation of MEKK was determined on immunoprecipitates from FMLP-stimulated neutrophils by in vitro kinase assay, which utilized both
MEK1
and MEK2 as substrates. It was rapid, detectable at 30 s and reaching a plateau at 5 min, and it was inhibited in a dose-dependent fashion by a specific phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor, wortmannin. Partial inhibition by pertussis toxin was observed. We were unable to show inhibition of the MEKK response by GF 109203X, a protein kinase C-specific inhibitor. These data indicate that in neutrophils activation of MEKK in addition to Raf may underlie stimulation of
MAP kinase
and other
MAP kinase
homologues by FMLP.
...
PMID:Activation of MEKK by formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine in human neutrophils. Mapping pathways for mitogen-activated protein kinase activation. 896 28
Nerve growth factor (NGF)-stimulated neurite outgrowth in the rat PC12 tumor cell line recently has been shown to depend on the activation of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase kinase 1 (
MEK1
) (Pang et al.: J Biol Chem 270:13585-13588, 1995). In this study we have analyzed whether or not function of the
MAP kinase
pathway is necessary for NGF-stimulated neurite outgrowth in two subtypes of primary neurons derived from the embryonic chick peripheral nervous system (PNS). Treatment of p21ras-dependent dorsal root ganglion (DRG) sensory neurons (E9) with the
MEK1
inhibitor PD98059 at concentrations up to 100 microM did not prevent NGF-stimulated neurite outgrowth. At this concentration NGF-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of
MAP kinase
p42 as well as
MAP kinase
activity both were decreased by approximately 80%. Essentially the same results were obtained with p21ras-independent sympathetic neurons (E12). We conclude that, in contrast to the PC12 tumor cell line, NGF-stimulated
MAP kinase
activity is not necessary for neurite outgrowth of DRG sensory and sympathetic neurons derived from the chick PNS.
...
PMID:Nerve growth factor-stimulated mitogen-activated protein kinase activity is not necessary for neurite outgrowth of chick dorsal root ganglion sensory and sympathetic neurons. 897 6
The
mitogen-activated protein kinase
(
MAP kinase
) is a key participant in growth factor-stimulated intracellular events such as proliferation and differentiation. We and others have previously described a cross-talk between the
MAP kinase
pathway and the cAMP pathway. Indeed, in several cell lines and, in particular in fibroblasts, an increase in the level of cAMP produced an inhibition of
MAP kinase
together with decreased cell proliferation. In contrast, in PC12 cells, cAMP induced an increase in the NGF-induced activation of
MAP kinase
concomitantly with augmented NGF-induced differentiation. Therefore, it has been proposed that the cellular context is important for the nature of the cAMP effects on growth factor-stimulated
MAP kinase
activity. Here we show that the type of tyrosine kinase receptor stimulated also participates in the nature of the cAMP effect. Thus, in NIH3T3 fibroblasts expressing NGF receptors (NIH3T3/trk cells) we found that cAMP potentiates NGF-stimulated
ERK1
and
MEK1
activities, whereas in NIH3T3 fibroblasts expressing insulin receptors (NIH3T3/IR cells) we saw no effect of cAMP on the activation of insulin-stimulated
ERK1
and
MEK1
. In PC12 cells and in Rat1 fibroblasts expressing insulin receptors (PC12/IR and Rat1/IR cells) we observed, respectively, a potentiation and an inhibition of insulin-stimulated
ERK1
activity. In addition, cAMP does not seem to modify the basal nor growth factor-stimulated She or IRS-1 tyrosine phosphorylation in the different cell lines studied. Finally, we observed that cAMP inhibited serum- and insulin-induced, but not NGF-induced, cell proliferation in NIH3T3 cells. However, cAMP potentiated insulin-stimulated cell differentiation in PC12/IR cells. These results led us to conclude that the cAMP effect on cell proliferation in NIH3T3 fibroblasts and PC12/IR cells appears to be correlated, in part, with the effect of cAMP on the
MAP kinase
pathway, but by itself this pathway cannot fully account for these observations.
...
PMID:The effect of cyclic adenosine monophosphate on the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway depends on both the cell type and the type of tyrosine kinase-receptor. 904 17
Tyrphostins are synthetic compounds that have been described as in vitro inhibitors of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R) tyrosine kinase activity. The inhibitory effect of tyrphostins in intact cells has been shown only after prolonged treatment. However, these compounds appear to be readily incorporated, which suggests that tyrphostin acts indirectly on EGF-R. We studied the effects of a tyrphostin derivative, RG 50864, without preincubation in intact epithelial cells. We selected two human cell lines differing in degree of expression of the p185erbB2 protein, which is closely related to EGF-R. We showed that tyrphostin (RG 50864) had no effect on EGF-dependent EGF-R tyrosine phosphorylation in the parental cell line. On the contrary, it prolonged the EGF-dependent EGF-R and p185erbB2(V-E) tyrosine phosphorylation in p185erbB2(V-E)-expressing cells. Because tyrphostin has been shown to be an inhibitor of p185erbB2 and EGF-R in vitro, this finding indicates that the tyrphostin effect on p185erbB2(V-E) and EGF-R was the result of an indirect mechanism in transfected cells. Tyrphostin treatment alone led to the activation of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase kinase or
MAP kinase
or
extracellular signal-regulated kinase
kinase (MEK), suggesting that one of the tyrphostin targets was upstream of
MEK1
.
MAP kinase
, however, was not activated after tyrphostin treatment. This finding indicates that tyrphostin had another target in intact cells because
MEK1
activation by tyrphostin alone did not correlate with
MAP kinase
activation. In the two cell lines, tyrphostin modified the time course of EGF-dependent MEK and
MAP kinase
activation. We conclude that whereas tyrphostins were designed to inhibit EGF-R tyrosine kinase activity, under our conditions EGF-R is not a physiological target for tyrphostin, nor is one of its related protein tyrosine kinases, p185erbB2(V-E). On the contrary, our results show that tyrphostin targets are multiple, leading to complex effects on receptor signaling in these epithelial cells.
...
PMID:Epidermal growth factor receptor signaling cascade as target for tyrphostin (RG 50864) in epithelial cells. Paradoxical effects on mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase and mitogen-activated protein kinase activities. 906 32
Depolarizing concentrations of potassium promote the survival of many neuronal cell types including cerebellar granule cells. To begin to understand the intracellular mediators of neuronal survival, we have tested whether the survival-promoting effect of potassium depolarization on cerebellar granule cells is dependent on either mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase or phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI-3-K) activity. In 7-day cerebellar granule cell cultures, potassium depolarization activated both
MAP kinase
and PI-3-K. Preventing the activation of
MAP kinase
with the
MEK1
inhibitor PD98059 did not affect potassium saving. In contrast, the survival-promoting effect of 25 mM potassium was negated by the addition of 30 microM LY 294002 or 1 microM wortmannin, two distinct inhibitors of PI-3-K. The cell death induced by PI-3-K inhibition was indistinguishable from the cell death caused by potassium deprivation; LY 294002-induced death included nuclear condensation, was blocked by cycloheximide, and had the same time course as potassium deprivation-induced cell death. Cerebellar granule cells can also be maintained in serum-free medium containing either 100 ng/ml insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) or 800 microM cAMP. PI-3-K inhibition completely blocked the survival-promoting activity of IGF-I, but had no effect on cAMP-mediated survival. These data indicate that the survival-promoting effects of depolarization and IGF-I, but not cAMP, require PI-3-K activity.
...
PMID:Inhibition of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity blocks depolarization- and insulin-like growth factor I-mediated survival of cerebellar granule cells. 909 20
Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathways include a three-kinase cascade terminating in a
MAP kinase
family member. The middle kinase in the cascade is a MAP/
extracellular signal-regulated kinase
(
ERK
) kinase or MEK family member and is highly specific for its
MAP kinase
target. The first kinase in the cascade, a MEK kinase (MEKK), is characterized by its ability to activate one or more MEK family members. A two-plasmid bacterial expression system was employed to express active forms of the following MEK and
MAP kinase
family members:
ERK1
,
ERK2
, alpha-
SAPK
, and p38 and their upstream activators,
MEK1
, -2, -3, and -4. In each kinase module, the upstream activator, a constitutively active mutant of
MEK1
or MEKK1, was expressed from a low copy plasmid, while one or two downstream effector kinases were expressed from a high copy plasmid with different antibiotic resistance genes and origins of replication. Consistent with their high activity,
ERK1
and
ERK2
were doubly phosphorylated on Tyr and Thr, were recognized by an antibody specific to the doubly phosphorylated forms, and were inactivated by either phosphoprotein phosphatase 2A or phosphotyrosine phosphatase type 1. Likewise, activated p38 and alpha-
stress-activated protein kinase
could also be inactivated by either phosphatase, and alpha-
stress-activated protein kinase
was recognized by an antibody specific to the doubly phosphorylated forms. These three purified, active MAP kinases have specific activities in the range of 0.6-2.3 micromol/min/mg. Coexpression of protein kinases with their substrates in bacteria is of great value in the preparation of numerous phosphoproteins, heretofore not possible in procaryotic expression systems.
...
PMID:Reconstitution of mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphorylation cascades in bacteria. Efficient synthesis of active protein kinases. 911 Sep 99
Overexpression of a constitutively active mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MAPKK or MEK) induces neuronal differentiation in adrenal pheochromocytoma 12 cells but transformation in fibroblasts. In the present study, we used a constitutively active
MAPK
/
extracellular signal-regulated kinase
(
ERK
) kinase 1 (
MEK1
) mutant to investigate the function of the highly conserved
MEK1
-
ERK2
signaling module in renal epithelial cell differentiation and proliferation. Stable expression of constitutively active
MEK1
(CA-MEK1) in epithelial MDCK-C7 cells led to an increased basal and serum-stimulated
ERK1
and
ERK2
phosphorylation as well as
ERK2
activation when compared with mock-transfected cells. In both mock-transfected and CA-
MEK1
-transfected MDCK-C7 cells, basal and serum-stimulated
ERK1
and
ERK2
phosphorylation was almost abolished by the synthetic MEK inhibitor PD098059. Increased
ERK2
activation due to stable expression of CA-
MEK1
in MDCK-C7 cells was associated with epithelial dedifferentiation as shown by both a dramatic alteration in cell morphology and an abolished cytokeratin expression but increased vimentin expression. In addition, we obtained a delayed and reduced serum-stimulated cell proliferation in CA-
MEK1
-transfected cells (4.6-fold increase in cell number/cm2 after 5 days of serum stimulation) as compared with mock-transfected controls (12.9-fold increase in cell number/cm2 after 5 days). This result was confirmed by flow cytometric DNA analysis showing that stable expression of CA-
MEK1
decreased the proportion of MDCK-C7 cells moving from G0/G1 to G2/M as compared with both untransfected and mock-transfected cells. Taken together, our data demonstrate an association of increased basal and serum-stimulated activity of the
MEK1
-
ERK2
signaling module with epithelial dedifferentiation and growth inhibition in MDCK-C7 cells. Thus, the
MEK1
-
ERK2
signaling pathway could act as a negative regulator of epithelial differentiation thereby leading to an attenuation of MDCK-C7 cell proliferation.
...
PMID:Constitutively active mutant of the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase MEK1 induces epithelial dedifferentiation and growth inhibition in madin-darby canine kidney-C7 cells. 911 Oct 53
The deposition of amyloid beta protein (A beta) in the cerebral cortex is the pathological characteristic of Alzheimer's disease (AD), and patients with AD suffer from progressive memory loss. Transgenic experiments have revealed that long-term memory is dependent on cyclic AMP-response element binding protein, CREB. CREB phosphorylation at serine-133 is essential for its transcriptional activity. Here we demonstrated that A beta(1-40), at a concentration more than 1 microM, induced CREB phosphorylation at serine-133 in rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells. A beta(1-40) induced phosphorylation of p44 and p42 MAP kinases (Erk1 and Erk2) at tyrosine-204, and PD98059, a
MEK1
inhibitor, inhibited A beta(1-40)-induced CREB phosphorylation at serine-133. We conclude that elevated A beta(1-40) level induces CREB phosphorylation at serine-133 via p44/42
MAP kinase
-dependent pathway.
...
PMID:Elevated amyloid beta protein(1-40) level induces CREB phosphorylation at serine-133 via p44/42 MAP kinase (Erk1/2)-dependent pathway in rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells. 912 27
The 92 kDa type IV collagenase (MMP-9), which degrades type IV collagen, has been implicated in tissue remodeling. The purpose of the current study was to determine the role of Jun amino-terminal kinase (JNK)- and
extracellular signal-regulated kinase
- (ERK)-dependent signaling cascades in the regulation of MMP-9 expression. Towards this end, we first determined the transcriptional requirements for MMP-9 promoter activity in a cell line (UM-SCC-1) which is an avid secretor of this collagenase. Transfection of these cells with a CAT reporter driven by progressive 5' deleted fragments of the MMP-9 promoter indicated the requirement of a region spanning -144 to -73 for optimal promoter activity. DNase I footprinting revealed a protected region of the promoter spanning nucleotides -91 to -68 and containing a consensus AP-1 motif at -79. Mutation of this AP-1 motif practically abolished the activity of the MMP-9 promoter-driven CAT reporter. Mobility shift assays indicated c-Fos and Jun-D bound to this motif and transfection of the cells with a mutated c-Jun, which quenches the function of endogenous Jun and Fos proteins, decreased MMP-9 promoter activity by 80%. UM-SCC-1 cells contained a constitutively activated JNK and the expression of a kinase-deficient JNK1 reduced the activity of a CAT reporter driven either by the MMP-9 promoter or by three tandem AP-1 repeats upstream of a thymidine kinase minimal promoter. Conditioned medium collected from UM-SCC-1 cells transfected with the dominant negative JNK1 expression vector diminished 92 kDa gelatinolysis. Similarly, interfering with MEKK, which lies upstream of JNK1, using a dominant negative expression vector reduced MMP-9 promoter activity over the same concentration range which repressed the AP-1-thymidine kinase CAT reporter construct. UM-SCC-1 cells also contained a constitutively activated
ERK1
. MMP-9 expression, as determined by CAT assays and by zymography, was reduced by the co-expression of a kinase-deficient
ERK1
. Interfering with
MEK1
, which is an upstream activator of
ERK1
, either with PD 098059, which prevents the activation of
MEK1
, or with a dominant negative expression construct, reduced 92 kDa gelatinolysis and MMP-9 promoter activity respectively. c-Raf-1 is an upstream activator of
MEK1
and a kinase-deficient c-Raf-1 expression construct decreased the activity of a promoter driven by either the MMP-9 promoter or three tandem AP-1 repeats. Conversely, treatment of UM-SCC-1 cells with PMA, which activates c-Raf-1, increased 92 kDa gelatinolysis. These data suggest that MMP-9 expression in UM-SCC-1 cells, is regulated by JNK- and ERK-dependent signaling pathways.
...
PMID:Regulation of 92 kDa type IV collagenase expression by the jun aminoterminal kinase- and the extracellular signal-regulated kinase-dependent signaling cascades. 913 92
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