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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)
Signal transduction pathways regulated by G12 and G13 heterotrimeric G proteins are largely unknown. Expression of activated, GTPase-deficient mutants of alpha 12 and alpha 13 alter physiological responses such as
Na+
/H+ exchanger activity, but the effector pathways controlling these responses have not been defined. We have found that the expression of GTPase-deficient mutants of alpha 12 (alpha 12Q229L) or alpha 13 (alpha 13Q226L) leads to robust activation of the Jun kinase/
stress-activated protein kinase
(
JNK
/
SAPK
) pathway. Inducible alpha 12Q229L and alpha 13Q226L expression vectors stably transfected in NIH 3T3 cells demonstrated
JNK
/
SAPK
activation but not extracellular response/
mitogen-activated protein kinase
activation. Transient transfection of alpha 12Q229L and alpha 13Q226L also activated the
JNK
/
SAPK
pathway in COS-1 cells. Expression of the GTPase-deficient mutant of alpha q (alpha qQ209L) but not alpha i (alpha iQ205L) or alpha s (alpha sQ227L) was also able to activate the
JNK
/
SAPK
pathway. Functional Ras signaling was required for alpha 12Q229L and alpha 13Q226L activation of the
JNK
/
SAPK
pathway; expression of competitive inhibitory N17Ras inhibited
JNK
/
SAPK
activation in response to both alpha 12Q229L and alpha 13Q226L. The results describe for the first time a Ras-dependent signal transduction pathway involving
JNK
/
SAPK
regulated by alpha 12 and alpha 13.
...
PMID:Activation of Jun kinase/stress-activated protein kinase by GTPase-deficient mutants of G alpha 12 and G alpha 13. 762 96
The diverse biological effects of somatostatin (SST) are mediated through a family of G protein coupled receptors of which 5 members have been recently identified by molecular cloning. This review focuses on the molecular biology, pharmacology, expression, and function of these receptors with particular emphasis on the human (h) homologs. hSSTRs are encoded by a family of 5 genes which map to separate chromosomes and which, with one exception, are intronless. SSTR2 gives rise to spliced variants, SSTR2A and 2B. hSSTR1-4 display weak selectivity for SST-14 binding whereas hSSTR5 is SST-28 selective. Based on structural similarity and reactivity for octapeptide and hexapeptide SST analogs, hSSTR2,3, and 5 belong to a similar SSTR subclass. hSSTR1 and 4 react poorly with these analogs and belong to a separate subclass. All 5 hSSTRs are functionally coupled to inhibition of adenylyl cyclase via pertussis toxin sensitive GTP binding proteins. Some of the subtypes are also coupled to tyrosine phosphatase (SSTR1,2), Ca2+ channels (SSTR2),
Na+
/H+ exchanger (SSTR1), PLA-2 (SSTR4), and
MAP kinase
(SSTR4). mRNA for SSTR1-5 is widely expressed in brain and peripheral organs and displays an overlapping but characteristic pattern that is subtype-selective, and tissue- and species-specific. Pituitary and islet tumors express several SSTR genes suggesting that multiple SSTR subtypes are coexpressed in the same cell. Structure-function studies indicate that the core residues in SST-14 ligand Phe6-Phe11 dock within a ligand binding pocket located in TMDs 3-7 which is lined by hydrophobic and charged amino acid residues.
...
PMID:The somatostatin receptor family. 767 17
The molecular mechanisms by which overloaded cardiac myocytes increase the cell size (hypertrophy) remain unknown. We have previously shown that mechanical loading increased the protein synthesis and the expression of proto-oncogene c-fos mRNA (Komuro, I., Kaida, T., Shibazaki, Y., Kurabayashi, M., Katoh, Y. Hoh, E., Takaku, F., and Yazaki, Y. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 3595-3598; Komuro, I., Katoh, Y., Kaida, T., Shibazaki, Y., Kurabayashi, M., Hoh, E., Takaku, F., and Yazaki, Y. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 1265-1268). It has been known that both mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase and S6 kinase can be activated by many kinds of growth factors. To clarify whether
MAP kinase
(s) and S6 kinase(s) are associated with the intracellular signaling of cardiac hypertrophy induced by mechanical loading, we cultured neonatal rat cardiac myocytes in deformable dishes and imposed an in vitro mechanical loading by stretching the adherent myocytes. In this study, we demonstrated that 1) myocyte stretching maximally activated a kinase activity toward myelin basic protein (MBP) at 10 min after stretching, and the kinase activity returned to the control level at 30 min after stretching; 2) kinase assays in MBP-containing gel, after
sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, revealed that stretch-induced MBP kinase activity mainly migrated at 42 kDa in the immunoprecipitated fraction of anti-
MAP kinase
antibody, suggesting that the stretching mainly increased the 42-kDa
MAP kinase
activity in cardiac myocytes; 3) phosphorylation of
MAP kinase
was induced after stretching cardiac myocytes; 4) when protein kinase C was depleted by preincubating myocytes with 100 nM 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate for 24 h or 2 nM staurosporine for 30 min, stretch-induced MBP kinase activity was decreased by approximately 60-70% as compared with the kinase activity in myocytes without protein kinase C depletion; 5) although the receptor tyrosine kinases were depleted by preincubating myocytes with 50 microM tyrphostin or 20 microM genistein for 30 min, there was no change in the stretch-induced MBP kinase activity; 6) stretch-induced MBP kinase activity was partially dependent on transsarcolemmal influx of Ca2+; 7) myocyte stretching also increased S6 peptide (RRLSSLRA) kinase activity in the anti-S6 kinase II antibody immunoprecipitates. From these results, we conclude that myocyte stretching increases the activities of
MAP kinase
and S6 peptide kinase, which may play an important role in the induction of the specific genes and the increase in the protein synthesis.
...
PMID:Mechanical loading activates mitogen-activated protein kinase and S6 peptide kinase in cultured rat cardiac myocytes. 768 31
Using the human Intestine 407 cell line as a model, we investigated a possible role for tyrosine kinase(s) in regulating the ion efflux pathways induced by hyposmotic stimulation (regulatory volume decrease, RVD). Pretreatment of 125I(-)-and 86Rb(+)-loaded cells with the phosphotyrosine phosphatase inhibitor
sodium
orthovanadate (200 microM) potentiated isotope efflux triggered by mild hypotonicity (10-20%) but did not further increase the efflux in response to more vigorous osmotic stimulation (30% hypotonicity). The tyrosine kinase inhibitors herbimycin A and genistein largely reduced the osmoshock-induced efflux in both control and vanadate-pretreated cells, while not affecting calcium-activated 86Rb+ efflux. Potentiation of the RVD response by vanadate was confirmed by direct measurements of hypotonicity-induced changes in cell volume. Hypotonic shock alone triggered a rapid and transient increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of several proteins as well as phosphorylation of
mitogen-activated protein kinase
. Furthermore, the potentiating effects of vanadate on hypotonicity-induced ion efflux and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase phosphorylation were mimicked by epidermal growth factor. Neither vanadate nor epidermal growth factor provoked a RVD-like ionic response under isotonic conditions. These results indicate that tyrosine phosphorylation is an essential step in the RVD response and suggest a novel role of growth factors in the cellular defense against osmotic stress.
...
PMID:Protein tyrosine phosphorylation is involved in osmoregulation of ionic conductances. 769 Jul 49
Insulin stimulation of differentiated 3T3-L1 adipocytes or Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing high levels of the insulin receptor resulted in a time-dependent decrease in the electrophoretic mobility of SOS on
sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. The reduction in SOS mobility was completely reversed by alkaline phosphatase treatment, and the in vitro phosphorylation of SOS by
mitogen-activated protein kinase
resulted in a decrease of electrophoretic mobility identical to that following in vivo insulin stimulation. Immunoprecipitation of Grb2 followed by SOS immunoblotting demonstrated a disassociation of the SOS-Grb2 complex that paralleled the decrease in SOS electrophoretic mobility. Similarly, SOS immunoprecipitation followed by Grb2 immunoblotting also indicated an uncoupling of the SOS-Grb2 complex. Further, incubation of whole-cell extracts with glutathione-S-transferase-Grb2 fusion proteins demonstrated that insulin stimulation resulted in a decreased affinity of SOS for Grb2. In contrast, the dissociation of SOS from Grb2 did not affect the interactions between Grb2 and tyrosine-phosphorylated Shc. In addition to insulin, several other agents which activate the
mitogen-activated protein kinase
pathway (platelet-derived growth factor, serum, and phorbol ester) also resulted in the uncoupling of the SOS-Grb2 complex. Consistent with these results, expression of v-ras and v-raf resulted in a constitutive decrease in the association between SOS and Grb2. Together, these data suggest a molecular mechanism accounting for the transient activation of ras due to the uncoupling of the SOS-Grb2 complex following SOS phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Insulin-stimulated disassociation of the SOS-Grb2 complex. 773 60
We previously purified a protein factor, named REKS (Ras-dependent Extracellular Signal-regulated Kinase (ERK)/
mitogen-activated protein kinase
Kinase (MEK) Stimulator), from Xenopus eggs by use of a cell-free assay system in which recombinant GTP gamma S (guanosine 5'-(3-O-thio)triphosphate)-Ki-Ras activates recombinant MEK. By use of this assay system, we purified here bovine REKS to near homogeneity from the cytosol fraction of bovine brain by successive chromatographies of Mono S, Mono Q, GTP gamma S-glutathione S-transferase-Ha-Ras-coupled glutathione-agarose, and Mono Q columns. It was composed of three proteins with masses of about 95, 32, and 30 kDa as estimated by
sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The 95-, 32-, and 30-kDa proteins were identified by immunoblot analysis to be B-Raf protein kinase, 14-3-3 protein, and 14-3-3 protein, respectively. Moreover, the REKS activity was specifically immunoprecipitated by an anti-B-Raf antibody. Bovine REKS was activated by lipid-modified GTP gamma S-Ki-Ras far more effectively than by a lipid-unmodified one. Lipid-modified GDP-Ki-Ras was inactive. Exogenous addition of 14-3-3 proteins stimulated further the REKS activity both in the presence and absence of GTP gamma S-Ki-Ras. These results indicate that at least one of the direct targets of Ras is B-Raf complexed with 14-3-3 proteins in bovine brain.
...
PMID:Purification of a Ras-dependent mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase from bovine brain cytosol and its identification as a complex of B-Raf and 14-3-3 proteins. 774 15
In response to heat-shock and chemical treatments, cells undergo profound biochemical changes such as modifications in protein phosphorylation in order to resist the new, unfavorable growth conditions. We have previously shown that in HeLa cells a protein kinase (HS-CTD kinase) activity is induced rapidly after a heat or
sodium
arsenite shock. This kinase activity is able to phosphorylate a synthetic peptide composed of four repeats of the motif Ser-Pro-Thr-Ser-Pro-Ser-Tyr, a motif highly repeated in the carboxyl-terminal domain (CTD) of the largest subunit of eukaryotic RNA polymerase II. In this paper, we designed a new experimental procedure to characterize the substrate specificity of this kinase activity. We show that HS-CTD kinase activity phosphorylates a consensus sequence (-P-X-S/T-P-) which is similar to the sequence phosphorylated by extracellular regulated protein kinases (also called mitogen-activated protein kinases). However, there is a slight but reproducible difference between these kinases in their use of serine or threonine as the phosphate acceptor. Mono Q chromatography allows the separation of five stress-induced CTD kinase activities, two of which coelute with active
mitogen-activated protein kinase
forms revealed by Western blotting with anti
ERK1
-
ERK2
antibodies. The other three CTD kinase activities induced after a stress are distinct from
ERK1
and
ERK2
and have different enzymatic properties. The molecular nature of these HS-CTD kinases and the physiological significance of their activation during stress remain to be determined.
...
PMID:Different carboxyl-terminal domain kinase activities are induced by heat-shock and arsenite. Characterization of their substrate specificity, separation by Mono Q chromatography, and comparison with the mitogen-activated protein kinases. 776 4
In the MM14 mouse myoblast cell line, fibroblast growth factor (FGF) stimulates proliferation and represses differentiation. However, the intracellular signaling pathways used by FGF to affect these cellular processes are unknown. The predominant FGF receptor present on MM14 cells, FGFR1, is a receptor tyrosine kinase capable of activating the
mitogen-activated protein kinase
(
MAPK
) cascade in fibroblast and neuronal cell lines. To determine whether the FGF signal is mediated via the
MAPK
cascade in myoblasts, MM14 cells were stimulated with basic FGF (bFGF) and activities of the various kinases were measured. After withdrawal from serum and bFGF for 3 hr, bFGF stimulated
MAPK
kinase (MAPKK) activity, but
MAPK
and S6 peptide kinase activities were not detected. In contrast, when serum and bFGF were withdrawn for 10 hr, the activities of MAPKK,
MAPK
, and S6 peptide kinase were all stimulated by bFGF treatment. The inability of bFGF to stimulate
MAPK
after 3 hr of withdrawal may be due, in part, to the presence of a
MAPK
phosphatase activity that was detected in MM14 cell extracts. This dephosphorylating activity diminishes during commitment to terminal differentiation and is inhibited by
sodium
orthovanadate. Thus, the ability of bFGF to stimulate
MAPK
in MM14 cells is correlated with the loss of a
MAPK
phosphatase activity. These results show that although bFGF activates MAPKK in proliferating myoblasts, the mitogenic signal does not progress to the downstream kinases, providing a physiological example of an uncoupling of the
MAPK
cascade.
...
PMID:Differential activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase in response to basic fibroblast growth factor in skeletal muscle cells. 784 69
Treatment of human diploid FS-4 fibroblasts with TNF or IL-1 led to a rapid increase in the phosphorylation of a approximately 28-kDa protein. Increased phosphorylation was seen after 5 min of TNF treatment, it reached a plateau between 10 and 30 min, and decreased thereafter. Immunoprecipitation with specific antibodies identified the 28-kDa protein as a member of the family of small heat shock proteins (Hsp28). Treatment of cells with different kinase inhibitors (staurosporine, H7, H8, HA-1004, or chelerythrine chloride) failed to inhibit TNF-induced Hsp28 phosphorylation, suggesting that neither protein kinase C nor other common protein kinases were involved. Treatment of FS-4 cells with
sodium
arsenite led to a very strong increase in the phosphorylation of Hsp28 demonstrable after 5 min and persisting for at least 4 h. Tyrosine phosphorylation of
pp42
and pp44 MAP kinases was increased by TNF treatment, whereas arsenite produced a modest increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of pp44 while decreasing that of
pp42
MAP kinase
. The finding that
sodium
arsenite strongly increased Hsp28 phosphorylation, together with the resistance of TNF-induced phosphorylation to kinase inhibitors, supports the notion that increased serine phosphorylation of Hsp28 in this system involves inhibition of protein phosphatase activity.
...
PMID:Pathways of heat shock protein 28 phosphorylation by TNF in human fibroblasts. 785 64
MAPK-activated protein kinase-2 (MAPKAP kinase-2) is activated in vitro by the p42 and p44 isoforms of
MAPK
(p42/p44MAPK). In several cell lines, however, MAPKAP kinase-2 is activated by
sodium
arsenite, heat shock, or osmotic stress and not by agonists that activate p42/p44MAPK. We have identified a
MAPK
-like enzyme that acts as a MAPKAP kinase-2 reactivating kinase (RK). RK is recognized by an antiserum raised against a Xenopus
MAPK
(Mpk2), which is most similar to HOG1 from S. cerevisiae. We also identified a RK kinase (RKK) on the basis of its ability to activate either RK or a GST-Mpk2 fusion protein. The RKK, RK, and MAPKAP kinase-2 constitute a new stress-activated signal transduction pathway in vertebrates that is distinct from the classical
MAPK
cascade.
...
PMID:A novel kinase cascade triggered by stress and heat shock that stimulates MAPKAP kinase-2 and phosphorylation of the small heat shock proteins. 792 53
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