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)

Thrombin treatment causes a dose-dependent rounding of 1321N1 astrocytoma cells. This cytoskeletal response is rapid, peaking 2 h after thrombin stimulation, and reverses by 50% after 24 h. The thrombin receptor peptide SFLLRNP also induces cell rounding, whereas other G protein-linked receptor agonists such as carbachol, lysophosphatidic acid, or bradykinin fail to do so. Results of studies using pharmacological inhibitors do not support a requirement for phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, mitogen-activated protein kinase, or Ca2+ mobilization in this response. Inhibition of protein kinase C or tyrosine kinase produces minimal blockade. Pertussis toxin treatment is also without effect. However, thrombin-induced rounding is fully blocked by the C3 toxin from Clostridium botulinum, which specifically ADP-ribosylates and inactivates the small G protein Rho. Thrombin also leads to a rapid, 2.4-fold increase in 32P incorporation into myosin light chain while carbachol does not. Myosin phosphorylation, like cell rounding is inhibited by inactivation of Rho with C3 exoenzyme, suggesting that myosin phosphorylation is necessary for this cytoskeletal response. This is supported by the observation that thrombin-induced rounding is also blocked by the myosin light chain kinase inhibitor KT5926. However, treatment with KT5926 fails to inhibit mitogenesis. Thus, cell rounding is not prerequisite to thrombin-induced DNA synthesis. We conclude that stimulation of the heterotrimeric G protein-coupled thrombin receptor in 1321N1 cells activates Rho-dependent pathways for both DNA synthesis and cell rounding, the cytoskeletal response being mediated in part through increases in myosin phosphorylation.
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PMID:Requirement for Rho-mediated myosin light chain phosphorylation in thrombin-stimulated cell rounding and its dissociation from mitogenesis. 955 56

Nitric oxide (NO) induction through the inducible NO synthase has been demonstrated to cause cell death in macrophages. We demonstrate that, in macrophages that have been rendered resistant to apoptosis induced by inducible NO synthase (RES cells), exposure to exogenous NO donors results in a hypersensitive apoptosis reaction when compared with the parental RAW 264.7 cells. The apoptosis induced via exogenous NO donors was found to be caspase 3-independent. Although caspase 3 activity was stimulated in the apoptotic macrophages, inhibition of caspase 3 by the inhibitor DEVD-CHO (N-acetyl-Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-aldehyde) did not reverse the apoptosis induced by the NO donor S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO). This suggests that although caspase 3 activity is stimulated during apoptosis in macrophages, this signal is not sufficient to induce apoptosis. Cleavage of the enzyme poly(ADP ribose) polymerase mirrors our results of the caspase activity. Interestingly, we show that exogenous NO donation results in an accumulation of cells at the G2/M-phase border. Here, we demonstrate that the mitogen activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitor PD 098059 can be used to reverse the G2/M-phase block and show that this treatment also inhibits the observed apoptosis in RES macrophages. Treatment with the MEK inhibitor also reversed both the caspase 3 activity and poly(ADP ribose) polymerase cleavage in cells treated with GSNO. This result indicates that the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway may be involved in regulation of the caspase cascade. Alternatively, it may suggest an activity for the MEK inhibitor heretofore not observed, that of a cyclin kinase inhibitor. Our results suggest that selection of macrophages by resistance to endogenously generated NO may cause hypersensitivity to exogenous NO donors. These findings have relevant implications for the treatment of apoptotic-resistant cell populations that may occur in both cancer and atheroma.
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PMID:Macrophages resistant to endogenously generated nitric oxide-mediated apoptosis are hypersensitive to exogenously added nitric oxide donors: dichotomous apoptotic response independent of caspase 3 and reversal by the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitor PD 098059. 956 Feb 25

Oxytocin (OT) induces PG synthesis by both uterine endometrial and amnion cells. We showed previously that CHO cells stably transfected with the rat oxytocin receptor (CHO-OTR cells) also synthesize PGE2 in response to OT. In the present work we have demonstrated that OTRs are coupled to both Gi and Gq/11, using immunoprecipitation of solubilized OTR complexes and ADP ribosylation. OT treatment caused the rapid phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase 2 (ERK2 or p42MAPK), which was partially inhibited by pertussis toxin (PTX), consistent with OTR-Gi coupling. The PTX-insensitive portion of ERK2 phosphorylation was linked to Gq, as inhibitors of both phospholipase C (U-73122) and protein kinase C (GF-109203X) blocked OT-induced ERK2 phosphorylation. OT-stimulated c-fos expression was also mediated by ERK2 phosphorylation. The ERK-c-fos pathway has been shown to be associated with cell proliferation, but OT had no effect on [3H]thymidine uptake by CHO-OTR cells. However, inhibition of OT-induced ERK2 phosphorylation with an ERK kinase inhibitor (PD-98059) markedly reduced OT-stimulated PGE2 synthesis, pointing to the importance of ERK2 activation in OT action.
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PMID:ERK2 mediates oxytocin-stimulated PGE2 synthesis. 957 24

1. Extracellular adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is mitogenic for vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) and stimulates several events that are important for cell proliferation: DNA synthesis, protein synthesis, increase of cell number, immediate early genes, cell-cycle progression, and tyrosine phosphorylation. 2. Receptor characterization indicates mitogenic effects of both P2U and P2Y receptors. The P2X receptor is lost in cultured VSMC and is not involved. Several related biological substances such as UTP, ITP, GTP, AP4A, ADP, and UDP are also mitogenic. 3. Signal transduction is mediated via Gq-proteins, phospholipase C beta, phospholipase D, diacyl glycerol, protein kinase C alpha, delta, Raf-1, MEK, and MAPK. 4. ATP acts synergistically with polypeptide growth factors (PDGF, bFGF, IGF-1, EGF, insulin) and growth factors acting via G-protein-coupled receptors (noradrenaline, neuropeptide Y, 5-hydroxytryptamine, angiotensin II, endothelin-1). 5. The mitogenic effects have been demonstrated in rat, porcine, and bovine VSMC and cells from human coronary arteries, aorta, and subcutaneous arteries and veins. 6. The trophic effects on VSMC and the abundant sources for extracellular ATP in the vessel wall make a pathophysiological role probable in the development of atherosclerosis, neointima-formation after angioplasty, and possibly hypertension.
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PMID:Extracellular ATP: a growth factor for vascular smooth muscle cells. 959 70

In preadipocytes, alpha2-adrenergic receptor (alpha2-AR) stimulation leads to a Gi/Go-dependent rearrangement of actin cytoskeleton. This is characterized by a rapid cell spreading, the formation of actin stress fibers, and the increase in tyrosyl phosphorylation of the focal adhesion kinase (pp125(FAK)). These cellular events being tightly controlled by the small GTPase p21(rhoA), the existence of a Gi/Go-dependent coupling of alpha2-AR to p21(rhoA) in preadipocytes was proposed. In alpha2AF2 preadipocytes (a cell clone derived from the 3T3F442A preadipose cell line and which stably expresses the human alpha2C10-adrenergic receptor) alpha2-adrenergic-dependent induction of cell spreading, formation of actin stress fibers, and increase in tyrosyl phosphorylation of pp125(FAK) were abolished by pretreatment of the preadipocytes with the C3 exoenzyme, a toxin which impairs p21(rhoA) activity by ADP-ribosylation. Conversely, C3 exoenzyme had no effect on the alpha2-adrenergic-dependent increase in tyrosyl phosphorylation and shift of ERK2 mitogen-activated protein kinase. alpha2-Adrenergic stimulation also led to an increase in GDP/GTP exchange on p21(rhoA), as well as to an increase in the amount of p21(rhoA) in the particulate fraction of alpha2AF2 preadipocytes. Stable transfection of alpha2AF2 preadipocytes with the COOH-terminal domain of betaARK1 (betaARK-CT) (a blocker of Gbeta gamma-action), strongly inhibited the alpha2-adrenergic-dependent increase in tyrosyl phos- phorylation and shift of ERK2, without modification of the tyrosyl phosphorylation of pp125(FAK) and spreading of preadipocytes. These results show that alpha2-adrenergic-dependent reorganization of actin cytoskeleton requires the activation of p21(rhoA) in preadipocytes. Conversely to the activation of the p21(ras)/mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway, the alpha2-adrenergic activation of p21(rhoA)-dependent pathways are independent of the beta gamma-subunits of heterotrimeric G proteins.
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PMID:Gbeta gamma-independent coupling of alpha2-adrenergic receptor to p21(rhoA) in preadipocytes. 962 80

Extracellular purine nucleotides elicit a diverse range of biological responses through binding to specific cell surface receptors. The ionotrophic P2X subclass of purinoreceptors respond to ATP by stimulation of calcium ion permeability; however, it is unknown how P2X purinoreceptor activation is linked to intracellular signaling pathways. We report that stimulation of PC12 cells with ATP results in the activation of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases ERK1 and ERK2 and was wholly dependent upon extracellular calcium ions. Treatment of the cells with adenosine, AMP, ADP, UTP, or alpha,beta-methylene ATP was without effect; however, MAP kinase activation was abolished by pretreatment with suramin and reactive blue 2. The calcium-activated tyrosine kinase, Pyk2, acts as an upstream regulator of the MAP kinases and became tyrosine phosphorylated following treatment of the cells with ATP. We have ruled out the involvement of depolarization-mediated calcium influx because specific blockers of voltage-gated calcium channels did not affect MAP kinase activation. These data provide direct evidence that calcium influx through P2X2 receptors results in the activation of the MAP kinase cascade. Finally, we demonstrate that a different line of PC12 cells respond to ATP through P2Y2 purinoreceptors, providing an explanation for the conflicting findings of purine nucleotide responsiveness in PC12 cells.
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PMID:ATP-stimulated activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinases through ionotrophic P2X2 purinoreceptors in PC12 cells. Difference in purinoreceptor sensitivity in two PC12 cell lines. 968 31

Terminal differentiation of skeletal muscle cells in culture is inhibited by a number of different growth factors whose subsequent intracellular signaling events are poorly understood. In this study, we have investigated the role of heterotrimeric G proteins in mediating fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-dependent signals that regulate myogenic differentiation. Pertussis toxin, which ADP-ribosylates and inactivates susceptible G proteins, promotes terminal differentiation in the presence of FGF-2, suggesting that Galpha or Gbeta gamma subunits or both are involved in transducing the FGF-dependent signal(s) that inhibits myogenesis. We found that Gbetagamma subunits are likely to be involved since the expression of the C terminus of beta-adrenergic receptor kinase 1, a Gbetagamma subunit-sequestering agent, promotes differentiation in the presence of FGF-2, and expression of the free Gbeta gamma dimer can replace FGF-2, rescuing cells from pertussis toxin-induced differentiation. Addition of pertussis toxin also blocked FGF-2-mediated activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs). Ectopic expression of dominant active mutants in the Ras/MAPK pathway rescued cells from pertussis toxin-induced terminal differentiation, suggesting that the Gbeta gamma subunits act upstream of the Ras/MAPK pathway. It is unlikely that the pertussis toxin-sensitive pathway is activated by other, as yet unidentified FGF receptors since PDGF (platelet-derived growth factor)-stimulated MM14 cells expressing a chimeric receptor containing the FGF receptor-1 intracellular domain and the PDGF receptor extracellular domain were sensitive to pertussis toxin. Our data suggest that FGF-mediated signals involved in repression of myogenic differentiation are transduced by a pertussis toxin-sensitive G-protein-coupled mechanism. This signaling pathway requires the action of Gbeta gamma subunits and activation of MAPKs to repress skeletal muscle differentiation.
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PMID:Regulation of myogenesis by fibroblast growth factors requires beta-gamma subunits of pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins. 974 95

Ascidian oocytes are blocked in metaphase (M) of the first meiotic division. Fertilization triggers the completion of meiosis without any further arrest. In this review, we have analyzed the mechanisms that regulate the progression through meiosis in these oocytes. A primary signal from the fertilizing spermatozoon, probably soluble sperm factor(s), induces intracellular calcium release by activating the IP3 and CICR pathways and gates the fertilization current by triggering the generation of ADP ribose (ADPr). The calcium oscillations are not required for the inactivation of MPF observed at M-I release; however, ADPr may be indirectly involved in the activity of MPF associated kinase, Cdc2. MPF activity reaches a second peak at M-II followed by subsequent inactivation. Progression to M-II is dependent on the intracellular calcium oscillations. MAP kinase (MAPK) activity decreases at M-I exit and remains low during the completion of meiosis. Finally, although Cdc2, Cyclin B and MAPK-like proteins have been identified in ascidian oocytes, components of CSF still remain to be identified.
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PMID:Ins and outs of meiosis in ascidians. 983 41

The ras-related protein Rho p21 regulates various actin-dependent functions, including smooth muscle contraction. However, the precise mechanism of action of Rho p21 is still not clear. We report here that Rho A is a key regulator of agonist-induced contractile effects in rabbit colonic smooth muscle. Endothelin-1 and C2 ceramide were used. Both seem to activate phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) through G protein and pp60(src), respectively. Immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting revealed one form of 21-kDa Rho A that translocated from the cytosol to the membrane in response to stimulation by either endothelin (10(-7) M) or ceramide (10(-7) M) ( approximately 30% increase at 30 s that was sustained at 4 min). The translocation of Rho A to the membrane was confirmed by immunostaining. The translocation of Rho A was inhibited by Clostridium botulinum C3 exoenzyme, which ADP ribosylated Rho A, but was not inhibited by the pp60(src) inhibitor herbimycin A or by the protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor calphostin C, suggesting that Rho A may be upstream of pp60(src) and PKC or may belong to a different pathway than these proteins. Both ceramide- and endothelin-induced PI 3-kinase activation was inhibited by C3 exoenzyme pretreatment. However, the C3 exoenzyme inhibited endothelin- but not ceramide-induced mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphorylation, indicating that Rho regulates ceramide- and endothelin-induced contraction through different pathways. Furthermore, the dominant negative form of Rho (N19Rho) inhibited the actin binding protein, 27-kDa heat shock protein (HSP27), reorganization in response to ceramide and endothelin observed under confocal microscopy.
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PMID:Rho A regulates sustained smooth muscle contraction through cytoskeletal reorganization of HSP27. 984 84

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is associated with increased expression and function of inhibitory guanine nucleotide regulatory proteins (Gi-proteins). This study addresses the effects of chronic ethanol exposure on the expression and function of adenylyl cyclase (AC)-linked G-proteins (Gs and Gi) and growth in experimental HCC. G-protein expression and function was determined by immunoblot in the hepatic tumorigenic H4IIE cell line and isolated cultured hepatocytes in the absence or presence of ethanol (5-100 mmol/L). Chronic exposure (24 hours) to ethanol dose-dependently increased Gialpha1/2 expression in the H4IIE cell line, but not in cultured hepatocytes. Gsalpha-protein expression remained unchanged in both H4IIE cells and cultured hepatocytes following ethanol treatment. In addition, ethanol directly activated a Gi-protein, because pertussis toxin (PTx)-catalyzed, adenosine diphosphate (ADP)-dependent ribosylation of Gialpha substrates decreased following ethanol treatment. The increased functional activity of Gialpha1/2-protein expression was confirmed by demonstrating that ethanol dose-dependently inhibited basal and stimulated AC activity in H4IIE cells, while not significantly altering basal AC activity in isolated cultured hepatocytes. Furthermore, while ethanol had no significant effect on basal mitogenesis in H4IIE cells or hepatocytes, increased mitogenesis caused by direct Gialpha-protein stimulation (mastoparan M7; 10-5,000 nmol/L) was further enhanced in the presence of ethanol, an effect that was completely blocked following Gi-protein inhibition (PTx; 100 ng/mL). In contrast, activation of Gi-proteins using M7 failed to alter cellular mitogenesis in isolated cultured hepatocytes, whether in the absence or presence of ethanol. Finally, analysis of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activity demonstrated that chronic ethanol treatment further enhanced Gi-protein-stimulated MAPK activity in hepatic tumorigenic cells. In conclusion, these data demonstrate that ethanol enhances cellular mitogenesis in experimental HCC as a result of, at least in part, a Gi-MAPK-dependent pathway. Furthermore, this effect may be caused by ethanol's direct up-regulation of the expression and activity of Gi-proteins in HCC.
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PMID:Enhanced Gi-protein-mediated mitogenesis following chronic ethanol exposure in a rat model of experimental hepatocellular carcinoma. 991 17


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