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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)
Adhesion molecules such as VLA-4 are important not only for monocyte adhesion to extracellular matrix proteins, but also for subsequent cell activation. Monocyte adherence to fibronectin or engagement of VLA-4 has been demonstrated to stimulate production of potent inflammatory mediators such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-1, and the procoagulant
tissue factor
protein. However, the intracellular signaling cascades leading to gene expression have not been elucidated. Using the human monocytic THP-1 cell line, VLA-4 cross-linking by monoclonal antibodies directed against its alpha4 and beta1 subunits produced a time-dependent increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of a broad range of cellular proteins. Using Western blot analysis directed against the phosphorylated form of the extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK) mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase proteins, as well as immunoprecipitation and in vitro kinase assays, we found that VLA-4 cross-linking increased
ERK1
/
ERK2
tyrosine phosphorylation and activity. In conjunction, integrin cross-linking also increased NF-kappaB nuclear translocation and 4-h expression of
tissue factor
. Inhibition of tyrosine kinase activity with genistein (10 microg/ml) as well as selective
MAP kinase
inhibition with the MEK-1 inhibitor PD98059 abolished the VLA-4-dependent ERK tyrosine phosphorylation, inhibited NF kappaB nuclear binding, and abrogated
tissue factor
expression induced by both VLA-4 cross-linking and adhesion to fibronectin in THP-1 cells and human peripheral blood monocytes. These studies point to the involvement of the
MAP kinase
pathway in the activation of monocytic cells during transmigration to inflammatory sites.
...
PMID:VLA-4 integrin cross-linking on human monocytic THP-1 cells induces tissue factor expression by a mechanism involving mitogen-activated protein kinase. 909 80
The putative role of
tissue factor
(TF) as a receptor involved in signal transduction is indicated by its sequence homology to cytokine receptors (Bazan, J. F. (1990) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 87, 6934-6938). Signal transduction induced by binding of FVIIa to cells expressing TF was studied with baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells stably transfected with TF and with a reporter gene construct encoding a luciferase gene under transcriptional control of tandem cassettes of signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) elements and one serum response element (SRE). FVIIa induced a significant luciferase response in cells expressing TF, BHK(+TF), but not in cells without TF. The BHK(+TF) cells responded to the addition of FVIIa in a dose-dependent manner, whereas no response was observed with active site-inhibited FVIIa, which also worked as an antagonist to FVIIa-induced signaling. Activation of the p44/42
MAPK
pathway upon binding of FVIIa to TF was demonstrated by suppression of signaling with the specific kinase inhibitor PD98059 and demonstration of a transient p44/42
MAPK
phosphorylation. No stimulation of p44/42
MAPK
phosphorylation was observed with catalytically inactive FVIIa derivatives suggesting that the catalytic activity of FVIIa was obligatory for activation of the
MAPK
pathway. Signal transduction caused by a putative generation of FXa activity was excluded by experiments showing that FVIIa/TF-induced signaling was not quenched by tick anticoagulant protein, just as addition of FXa could not induce phosphorylation of p44/42
MAPK
in BHK(+TF) cells. These results suggest a specific mechanism by which binding of FVIIa to cell surface TF independent of coagulation can modulate cellular functions and possibly play a role in angiogenesis and tumor metastasis as indicated by several recent observations.
...
PMID:Signal transduction via the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway induced by binding of coagulation factor VIIa to tissue factor. 949 47
Tissue factor
(TF) is a cell-surface glycoprotein responsible for initiating the extrinsic pathway of coagulation. The overexpression of TF in human malignancy has been correlated with the angiogenic phenotype, poor prognosis, and thromboembolic complications. The mechanisms underlying constitutive expression of TF in cancer cells are poorly defined. We cloned TF cDNA on the basis of its strong expression in metastatic MDA-MB-231 breast carcinoma cells in contrast to its weak expression in non-metastatic MCF-7 cells. Transient transfection analysis showed that TF promoter activity in MCF-7 cells could be stimulated by expression of a membrane-targeted raf kinase (raf-CAAX). raf-induced activity was dependent on the presence of an AP-1/NF-kappaB motif in the TF promoter and was inhibited by dominant-negative mutants of jun and by I-kappaB alpha. MDA-MB-231 cells were found to contain higher levels of
ERK1
/2 kinase activity than did MCF-7 cells. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays showed that MDA-MB-231 nuclear proteins bound strongly to an oligonucleotide corresponding to the AP-1/NF-kappaB sequence, whereas MCF-7 nuclear extracts showed weak binding to this element. Finally, we showed that TF mRNA levels in MDA-MB-231 cells declined after addition of the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase inhibitor PD98059. Our data showed that activation of the raf-ERK pathway led to activation of TF expression in breast carcinoma cells and suggested that constitutive activation of this pathway leads to high TF expression in MDA-MB-231 cells.
...
PMID:Activation of tissue-factor gene expression in breast carcinoma cells by stimulation of the RAF-ERK signaling pathway. 958 53
The primary response transcription factor, early growth response-1 (Egr-1), is rapidly activated by a variety of extracellular stimuli. Egr-1 binds to a sequence found in the promoters of genes involved in vascular injury, such as PDGF-A and
tissue factor
, and trans-activates their expression in endothelial cells in response to fluid shear stress. Here we show that egr-1 mRNA is increased after 30 min of flow in human aortic endothelial cell and HeLa cell cultures. Transient transfection of HeLa cells with reporter gene constructs driven by the murine or human egr-1 5' flanking sequence revealed a five- and ninefold induction, respectively, in transcriptional activity after exposure to a shear stress of 5 dynes/cm2 for 3 h. Deletion of sequences in the murine promoter containing two AP1 sites and an inhibitory Egr-1 binding sequence, did not reduce shear stress inducibility. However, progressive deletion of five serum response elements, reduced both the basal promoter activity and its capacity to be activated by shear stress. Further examination indicated that the three upstream serum response elements are predominantly responsible for shear stress activation of the egr-1 promoter. Treatment of cells with PD98059, a specific inhibitor of
mitogen-activated protein kinase
-1 inhibited shear stress activation of egr-1. We suggest that egr-1 activation by shear stress involves activation of Elk-1 but not c-jun activity. These data, which are consistent with previous findings for shear mediated signaling via the
mitogen-activated protein kinase
cascade, now implicate shear modulation of the Egr-1 transcription factor in this pathway.
...
PMID:Fluid shear stress activation of egr-1 transcription in cultured human endothelial and epithelial cells is mediated via the extracellular signal-related kinase 1/2 mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. 961 25
Endothelial cells form a multifunctional cell lining that covers all of the inner surface of blood vessels and regulates several important physiological and pathological reactions. These include inflammation/immune reaction, blood vessel tonus, hemostasis/thrombosis, angiogenesis and so on. Thus, abnormalities of endothelial function may play crucial roles in the development of angitis syndrome, thrombosis/embolism, bleeding disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), and neovascularization in some pathological states including tumor growth and diabetic retinopathy. Research on endothelial cells now forms a new frontier termed 'Endotheliology'. Recent advances of the functional and structural aspects of endothelial cells are reviewed here mainly from the viewpoint of endothelial regulation of coagulation and the fibrinolytic system. First we show that the natural endothelial membrane protein thrombomodulin is localized not only on apical endothelial surface but also in caveolae. Since it has been reported that such factors involved in coagulation/fibrinolysis as
tissue factor
, tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI), thrombin receptor and urokinase receptor are also localized in the caveolae, this membrane structure may act as a special component to regulate coagulation/fibrinolysis on the endothelial membrane surface. Next we demonstrate the signaling pathway of the thrombin receptor. Thrombin cleaves the N-terminus of the receptor as a substrate, exposing a new N-terminus. This newly exposed N-terminus acts as a ligand and activates platelets, endothelial cells and vascular smooth-muscle cells. We have identified that the signal from the thrombin receptor activates NF-kappaB through the activation of protein C kinase, tyrosine kinase and
MAP kinase
, and results in proliferation of the cells. We have also shown that the receptor is over-expressed on platelets from diabetes patients.
...
PMID:Biology of endothelium. 981 71
The paradigm for the response to hypoxia is erythropoietin gene expression; activation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) results in erythropoietin production. Previously, we found that oxygen deprivation induced
tissue factor
, especially in mononuclear phagocytes, by an early growth response (Egr-1)-dependent pathway without involvement of HIF-1 (Yan, S.-F., Zou, Y.-S., Gao, Y., Zhai, C., Mackman, N., Lee, S., Milbrandt, J., Pinsky, D., Kisiel, W., and Stern, D. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 95, 8298-8303). Now, we show that cultured monocytes subjected to hypoxia (pO2 approximately 12 torr) displayed increased Egr-1 expression because of de novo biosynthesis, with a approximately 10-fold increased rate of transcription. Transfection of monocytes with Egr-1 promoter-luciferase constructs localized elements responsible for hypoxia-enhanced expression to -424/-65, a region including EBS (ets binding site)-SRE (serum response element)-EBS and SRE-EBS-SRE sites. Further studies with each of these regions ligated to the basal thymidine kinase promoter and luciferase demonstrated that EBS sites in the element spanning -424/-375 were critical for hypoxia-enhanceable gene expression. These data suggested that an activated ets factor, such as Elk-1, in complex with serum response factor, was the likely proximal trigger of Egr-1 transcription. Indeed, hypoxia induced activation of Elk-1, and suppression of Elk-1 blocked up-regulation of Egr-1 transcription. The signaling cascade preceding Elk-1 activation in response to oxygen deprivation was traced to activation of protein kinase C-betaII, Raf,
mitogen-activated protein kinase
/extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase kinase and mitogen-activated protein kinases. Comparable hypoxia-mediated Egr-1 induction and activation were observed in cultured hepatoma-derived cells deficient in HIF-1beta and wild-type hepatoma cells, indicating that the HIF-1 and Egr-1 pathways are initiated independently in response to oxygen deprivation. We propose that activation of Egr-1 in response to hypoxia induces a different facet of the adaptive response than HIF-1, one component of which causes expression of
tissue factor
, resulting in fibrin deposition.
...
PMID:Hypoxia-associated induction of early growth response-1 gene expression. 1032 6
A role of membrane microparticles (MP) released by vascular cells in endothelial cell (EC) activation was investigated. Flow cytofluorimetric analysis of blood samples from normal volunteers revealed the presence of an heterogeneous MP population, which increased by approximately 2-fold after inflammatory stimulation with the chemotactic peptide, N-formyl-Met-Leu-Phe (2,799 +/- 360 versus 5241 +/- 640, p < 0.001). Blood-derived MP stimulated release of EC cytokines interleukin (IL)-6 (377 +/- 68 pg/ml) and MCP-1 (1, 282 +/- 79) and up-regulated de novo expression of
tissue factor
on the EC surface. This was associated with generation of a factor Xa-dependent procoagulant response (2.28 +/- 0.56 nM factor Xa/min/10(4) cells), in a reaction inhibited by a monoclonal antibody to
tissue factor
. Fluorescent labeling with antibodies to platelet GPIbalpha or leukocyte lactoferrin demonstrated that circulating MP originated from both platelets and leukocytes. However, depletion of platelet MP with an antibody to GPIbalpha did not reduce EC IL-6 release, and, similarly, MP from thrombin-stimulated platelets did not induce IL-6 release from endothelium. EC stimulation with leukocyte MP did not result in activation of the transcription factor NF-kappaB and was not associated with tyrosine phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase,
ERK1
. In contrast, leukocyte MP stimulated a sustained, time-dependent increased tyrosine phosphorylation of approximately 46-kDa c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK1) in EC. These findings demonstrate that circulating leukocyte MP are up-regulated by inflammatory stimulation in vivo and activate a stress signaling pathway in EC, leading to increased procoagulant and proinflammatory activity. This may provide an alternative mechanism of EC activation, potentially contributing to dysregulation of endothelial functions during vascular injury.
...
PMID:Leukocyte microparticles stimulate endothelial cell cytokine release and tissue factor induction in a JNK1 signaling pathway. 1043 80
Intracellular signaling induced by the coagulation factors (F) VIIa and Xa is poorly understood. We report here studies on these processes in a human keratinocyte line (HaCaT), which is a constitutive producer of
tissue factor
(TF) and responds to both FVIIa and FXa with elevation of cytosolic Ca(2+), phosphorylation of
extracellular signal-regulated kinase
(Erk) 1/2, p38(
MAPK
), and
c-Jun N-terminal kinase
, and up-regulation of transcription of the early growth response gene-1 (egr-1). Using egr-1 as end point, we observed with both agonists that phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C and the
mitogen-activated protein kinase
/Erk kinase/Erk pathway were mediators of the responses. The responses to FVIIa were TF-dependent and up-regulation of egr-1 mRNA did not require presence of the TF cytoplasmic domain. Antibodies to EPR-1 and factor V had no effect on the response to FXa. We have provided evidence that TF is not the sole component of the FVIIa receptor. The requirement for proteolytic activity of both FVIIa and FXa suggests that protease-activated receptors may be involved. We now report evidence suggesting that protease-activated receptor 2 or a close homologue may be a necessary but not sufficient component of this particular signal transduction pathway. The up-regulation of egr-1 describes one way by which the initiation of blood coagulation may influence gene transcription. The ability of these coagulation proteases to induce intracellular signals at concentrations at or below the plasma concentrations of their zymogen precursors suggests that these processes may occur also in vivo.
...
PMID:Coagulation factors VIIa and Xa induce cell signaling leading to up-regulation of the egr-1 gene. 1054 60
Tissue factor
(TF) assembled with activated factor VII (FVIIa) initiates the coagulation cascade. We recently showed that TF was essential for FVIIa-induced vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) production by human fibroblasts. We investigated whether this production resulted from TF activation by its binding to FVIIa or from the production of clotting factors activated downstream. Incubation of fibroblasts with a plasma-derived FVIIa concentrate induced the generation of activated factor X (FXa) and thrombin and the secretion of VEGF, which was inhibited by hirudin and FXa inhibitors. By contrast, the addition of recombinant FVIIa to fibroblasts did not induce VEGF secretion unless factor X was present. Moreover, thrombin and FXa induced VEGF secretion and VEGF mRNA accumulation, which were blocked by hirudin and FXa inhibitors, respectively. The effect of thrombin was mediated by its specific receptor, protease-activated receptor-1; in contrast, the effect of FXa did not appear to involve effector cell protease receptor-1, because it was not affected by an anti-effector cell protease receptor-1 antibody. An increase in intracellular calcium with the calcium ionophore A23187 or intracellular calcium chelation by BAPTA-AM had no effect on either basal or FXa-induced VEGF secretion, suggesting that the calcium signaling pathway was not sufficient to induce VEGF secretion. Finally, FVIIa, by itself, had no effect on mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase activation, contrary to thrombin and FXa, which activate the p44/p42
MAP kinase
pathway, as shown by the blocking effect of PD 98059 and by Western blotting of activated MAP kinases. These findings indicate that FVIIa protease induction of VEGF expression is mediated by thrombin and FXa generated in response to FVIIa binding to TF-expressing fibroblasts; they also exclude a direct signaling involving
MAP kinase
activation via the intracellular domain of TF when expressed by these cells.
...
PMID:Vascular endothelial growth factor production by fibroblasts in response to factor VIIa binding to tissue factor involves thrombin and factor Xa. 1080 56
Tissue factor
(TF), apart from activating the extrinsic pathway of the blood coagulation, is a principal regulator of embryonic angiogenesis and oncogenic neoangiogenesis, but also influences inflammation, leukocyte diapedesis and tumor progression. The intracellular domain of TF lacks homology to other classes of receptors and hence the signaling mechanism is poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that factor VIIa (the natural ligand for TF) induces the activation of the Src family members c-Src, Lyn, and Yes, and subsequently phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K), followed by stimulation of c-Akt/protein kinase B as well as the small GTPases Rac and Cdc42. In turn Rac mediates p38 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase activation and cytoskeletal reorganization, whereas factor VIIa-induced p42/p44
MAP kinase
stimulation required PI3K enzymatic activity but was not inhibited by dominant negative Rac proteins. We propose that this Src family member/PI3K/Rac-dependent signaling pathway is a major mediator of factor VIIa/TF effects in pathophysiology.
...
PMID:Factor VIIa/tissue factor-induced signaling via activation of Src-like kinases, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, and Rac. 1084 1
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