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)

Stimulation of T cells via the T cell receptor (TCR) activates a number of signaling pathways that are potentially involved in the elicitation of physiological responses, such as the production of cytokines. The extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK) are a group of molecules activated in response to TCR ligation, whose role in T cell cytokine production is controversial. In this study, we have asked whether ERK activation is coupled to the production of a number of T cell-derived cytokines, and whether particular cytokines are differentially affected by ERK activation. To address these questions, we have utilized a constitutively active version of the immediate upstream activator of both ERK1 and ERK2, mitogen-activated/extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (MEK1), to activate ERK signaling selectively in the absence of other TCR-activated signaling pathways. The effect of constitutive MEK/ERK activation on T cell cytokine production was measured by transiently co-transfecting newly activated mouse T cells with DNA encoding constitutively active MEK1 (CA-MEK1) and the human interleukin-2 (IL-2) receptor alpha chain (hCD25), purifying hCD25+ transfectants by flow-cytometric cell sorting, and measuring the production of IL-3, IL-4, interferon (IFN)-gamma and granulocyte/macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) either in the presence or absence of ionomycin stimulation. Newly activated T cells were used in these experiments as they more closely resemble T cells activated in vivo than do transformed T cells or long-term established T cell clones. CA-MEK1 expression led to constitutive ERK activation, which acted synergystically with ionomycin treatment to stimulate cytokine production. Furthermore, these experiments revealed a hierarchy of cytokine responsiveness to MEK/ERK activation, such that the production of IL-3 was most affected, followed by GM-CSF, IFN-gamma, and IL-4.
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PMID:Differential activation of T cell cytokine production by the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signaling pathway. 889 34

Engagement of the T cell receptor induces the activation of several mitogen-activated protein kinase modules, including the extracellular signal-regulated kinase and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) cascades. Whereas extracellular signal-regulated kinase is activated by T cell receptor/CD3 ligation alone, activation of JNK requires co-stimulation by the CD28 receptor. Activation of MEKK-1, which acts as a mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase in the JNK pathway, was also induced by CD3 plus CD28 (CD3/CD28) ligation in Jurkat cells. To study the significance of the JNK cascade in T lymphocytes, we established stable Jurkat cell lines that inducibly express dominant active (DA) or dominant negative (DN) MEKK-1. Whereas expression of DA-MEKK-1 resulted in the constitutive activation of JNK along with the transcriptional activation of the minimal interleukin-2 (IL-2) promoter, DN-MEKK-1 inhibited JNK responsiveness during CD3/CD28 co-stimulation. In addition to inhibiting CD3/CD28-induced IL-2 mRNA expression, DN-MEKK-1 abrogated the transcriptional activation of the IL-2 promoter and the distal nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT)-activating protein 1 (AP-1) response element in that promoter. A c-Jun mutant lacking activation sites for JNK also interfered with the activation of the distal NFAT/AP-1 complex, suggesting that the JNK pathway functions by controlling AP-1 response elements in the IL-2 promoter. Using inducible stable expression of DA- and DN-Ras in Jurkat cells, we found that Ras regulates JNK activation in these cells. Our results suggest that the dual ligation of CD3 and CD28 in T cells triggers a cascade of events that involve Ras, the JNK cascade, and one or more AP-1 response elements in the IL-2 promoter.
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PMID:Regulation of interleukin-2 transcription by inducible stable expression of dominant negative and dominant active mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase in jurkat T cells. Evidence for the importance of Ras in a pathway that is controlled by dual receptor stimulation. 891 Mar 14

Interleukin-2 (IL-2) is a potent T cell mitogen. However, the signaling pathways by which IL-2 mediates its mitogenic effect are not fully understood. One of the members of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) family, p42/44MAPK (ERK2/1), is known to be activated by IL-2. We have now investigated the response to IL-2 of two other members of the MAP kinase family, p54MAP kinase (stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK)/Jun-N-terminal kinase (JNK)) and p38MAP kinase (p38/Mpk2/CSBP/RK), which respond primarily to stressful and inflammatory stimuli (e.g. tumor necrosis factor-alpha, IL-1, and lipopolysaccharide). Here we show that IL-2, and another T cell growth factor, IL-7, activate both SAPK/JNK and p38MAP kinase. Furthermore, inhibition of p38MAP kinase activity with a specific pyrinidyl imidazole inhibitor SB203580 that prevents activation of its downstream effector, MAPK-activating protein kinase-2, correlated with suppression of IL-2- and IL-7-driven T cell proliferation. These data indicate that in T cells p38MAP kinase has a role in transducing the mitogenic signal.
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PMID:T cell proliferation in response to interleukins 2 and 7 requires p38MAP kinase activation. 916 78

Many cytokines, hormones, and growth factors activate Janus kinases to tyrosine phosphorylate select members of the Stat transcription factors. For full transcriptional activation, Stat1 and Stat3 also require phosphorylation of a conserved serine residue within a mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphorylation consensus site. On the other hand, two recently identified and highly homologous Stat5a and Stat5b proteins lack this putative mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphorylation site. The present study set out to establish whether Stat5a and Stat5b are under the control of an interleukin-2 (IL2)-activated Stat5 serine kinase. We now report that IL2 stimulated marked phosphorylation of serine and tyrosine residues of both Stat5a and Stat5b in human T lymphocytes and in several IL2-responsive lymphocytic cell lines. No Stat5a/b phosphothreonine was detected. Phosphoamino acid analysis also revealed that Stat5a/b phosphotyrosine levels were maximized within 1-5 min of IL2 stimulation, whereas serine phosphorylation kinetics were slower. Interestingly, IL2-induced serine phosphorylation of Stat5a differed quantitatively and temporally from that of Stat5b with Stat5a serine phosphorylation leveling off after 10 min and the more pronounced Stat5b response continuing to rise for at least 60 min of IL2 stimulation. Furthermore, we identified two discrete domains of IL2 receptor beta (IL2Rbeta) that could independently restore the ability of a truncated IL2Rbeta mutant to mediate Stat5a/b phosphorylation and DNA binding to the gamma-activated site of the beta-casein gene promoter. These observations demonstrated that there is no strict requirement for one particular IL2Rbeta region for Stat5 phosphorylation. Finally, we established that the IL2-activated Stat5a/b serine kinase is insensitive to several selective inhibitors of known IL2-stimulated kinases including MEK1/MEK2 (PD98059), mTOR (rapamycin), and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (wortmannin) as determined by phosphoamino acid and DNA binding analysis, thus suggesting that a yet-to-be-identified serine kinase mediates Stat5a/b activation.
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PMID:Two discrete regions of interleukin-2 (IL2) receptor beta independently mediate IL2 activation of a PD98059/rapamycin/wortmannin-insensitive Stat5a/b serine kinase. 918 78

The immunodeficiency present in patients with lepromatous leprosy is characterized by the limited proliferation of T lymphocytes, and is explained in part by the impaired synthesis of interleukin-2 (IL-2). Diacylglycerol (DAG) and calcium produce the activation of PKC, ERK and JNK kinases, implying a normal IL-2 response. Phorbol esters, such as PMA, can substitute for DAG and are mitogenic to human T and B cells activating several cytokine-encoding genes. Ionophore A23187 increases calcium permeability across the cellular membrane to the cytosol of lymphoid cells and is considered a co-mitogen of T lymphocytes. Here we report that: 1) PHA-activated T lymphocytes from LL patients can be separated in vitro into two groups: a) responders (R) with a stimulation index (SI) of > 10 and (b) nonresponders (NR) with a SI of < 10. 2) The proliferative responses of cells from LL(R), LL(NR) and normal subjects were measured after being stimulated with: I, PHA, PMA, PMA + I PHA + PMA and PHA + PMA + ionophore (PPI). The most important result occurs in LL(NR) patients whose cells did not respond to PHA stimulation but increased to normal levels of proliferation when they were stimulated with PMA. Furthermore, the three groups, (NR, R and normals) strongly increased their responses when they were incubated with PPi. 3) Finally, Il-2 concentrations in the supernatants of cultures of T lymphocytes from LL(NR), LL(R) and controls were relatively low when they were incubated with PHA or PMA, but the addition of ionophore to PMA and the combination of PHA + PMA strongly increased the production of IL-2 in all of them, reaching the optimum IL-2 concentration when PPI is used. It can be concluded that the use of PMA, analogous to DAG, and ionophore A23187 (calcium increaser) in cultures of mitogen-activated T lymphocytes from LL patients induced the expression of the IL-2 gene, thus correcting the inadequate proliferation of T cells from LL patients.
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PMID:Effect of phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) and ionophore A23187 on interleukin-2 levels and proliferation of activated T lymphocytes from patients with lepromatous leprosy. 920 56

Phorbol ester-sensitive EL4 murine thymoma cells respond to phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate with activation of ERK mitogen-activated protein kinases, synthesis of interleukin-2, and death, whereas phorbol ester-resistant variants of this cell line do not exhibit these responses. Additional aspects of the resistant phenotype were examined, using a newly-established resistant cell line. Phorbol ester induced morphological changes, ERK activation, calcium-dependent activation of the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), interleukin-2 synthesis, and growth inhibition in sensitive but not resistant cells. A series of protein kinase C activators caused membrane translocation of protein kinase C's (PKCs) alpha, eta, and theta in both cell lines. While PKC eta was expressed at higher levels in sensitive than in resistant cells, overexpression of PKC eta did not restore phorbol ester-induced ERK activation to resistant cells. In sensitive cells, PKC activators had similar effects on cell viability and ERK activation, but differed in their abilities to induce JNK activation and interleukin-2 synthesis. PD 098059, an inhibitor of the mitogen activated protein (MAP)/ERK kinase kinase MEK, partially inhibited ERK activation and completely blocked phorbol ester-induced cell death in sensitive cells. Thus MEK and/or ERK activation, but not JNK activation or interleukin-2 synthesis, appears to be required for phorbol ester-induced toxicity. Alterations in phorbol ester response pathways, rather than altered expression of PKC isoforms, appear to confer phorbol ester resistance to EL4 cells.
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PMID:Effects of protein kinase C activators on phorbol ester-sensitive and -resistant EL4 thymoma cells. 932 80

The CD5 receptor on T lymphocytes is involved in T cell activation and T-B cell interactions. In the present study, we have characterized the signaling pathways induced by anti-CD5 stimulation in human T lymphocytes. In T lymphocytes, anti-CD5 co-stimulation enhances the phytohemagglutinin/anti-CD28-induced interleukin-2 (IL-2) mRNA accumulation 1.6-fold and IL-2 protein secretion 2. 2-fold, whereby the up-regulation is mediated at both the transcriptional and post-transcriptional level. The CD5 signaling pathway up-regulates the IL-2 gene expression by increasing the DNA binding and transactivation activity of activator protein 1 but affects none of the other transcription factors like nuclear factor of activated T cells, nuclear factor kappaB, Oct, and CD28-responsive complex/nuclear factor of mitogen-activated T cells involved in the regulation of the IL-2 promoter activity. The CD5-induced increase of the activator protein 1 activity is mediated through the activation of calcium/calmodulin-dependent (CaM) kinase type IV, and is independent of the activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases Jun N-terminal kinase, extracellular signal-regulated kinase, and p38/Mpk2, and calcium/calmodul-independent kinase type II. The expression of a dominant negative mutant of CaM kinase IV in T lymphocytes transfected with an IL-2 promoter-driven reporter construct completely abrogates the response to CD5 stimulation, indicating that CaM kinase IV is essential to the CD5 signaling pathway. In addition, it is demonstrated that calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase type IV is also involved in the stabilization of the IL-2 transcripts, which is observed after co-stimulation of phytohemagglutinin/anti-CD28 activated T lymphocytes with anti-CD5.
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PMID:The Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase type IV is involved in the CD5-mediated signaling pathway in human T lymphocytes. 939 27

Biological effects of many hormones and cytokines are mediated through receptor-associated Jak tyrosine kinases and cytoplasmic Stat transcription factors, including critical physiological processes such as immunity, reproduction, and cell growth and differentiation. Pharmaceuticals that control Jak-Stat pathways are therefore of considerable interest. Here we demonstrate that a single Jak-Stat pathway can be activated by aurintricarboxylic acid (ATA), a negatively charged triphenylmethane derivative (475 Da) with anti-apoptotic properties. In prolactin (PRL)-dependent Nb2 lymphocytes, ATA sustained cell growth in the absence of hormone and mimicked rapid PRL-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of Jak2 and activation of Stat5a and Stat5b with tyrosine phosphorylation, heterodimerization, DNA binding, and induction of the Stat5-regulated pim-1 protooncogene. ATA also mimicked PRL activation of serine kinases ERK1 and ERK2. However, unlike PRL, ATA did not regulate Stat1 or Stat3. ATA also did not affect Jak3, which is activated in these cells by interleukin-2 family cytokines. Although the mechanism and specificity by which ATA activates Jak2, Stat5, and ERKs in Nb2 cells are still unclear, the present study demonstrates that certain hormone or cytokine effects on Jak-Stat pathways can be discretely imitated by a low molecular weight, non-peptide pharmaceutical. The results are also consistent with Stat5 involvement in lymphocyte growth and survival.
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PMID:Activation of the Jak2-Stat5 signaling pathway in Nb2 lymphoma cells by an anti-apoptotic agent, aurintricarboxylic acid. 941 42

Caloric restriction has been the subject of intensive research and is known to be the most efficacious means of increasing longevity and reducing pathology. Caloric restriction has been found to influence a wide variety of age-sensitive immunological parameters such as interleukin-2 (IL-2) gene expression, and overall, the immunological status of rodents fed a caloric restriction diet is superior to the immunological status of the non-restricted animals. IL-2 is a growth promoting cytokine that plays a critical role in immune function. The expression of IL-2 has been shown to decrease with age, and the decrease in IL-2 expression parallels the age-related decrease in immune function. The focus of this review article is to discuss the studies on the influence of caloric restriction on IL-2 expression and the recent findings on the mechanisms by which caloric restriction enhances IL-2 gene expression. A number of studies have demonstrated that caloric restriction alters the expression of the IL-2 gene at the level of transcription. The increase in IL-2 expression correlates with an increase in binding activity of the transcription factor NFAT which plays a predominant role in IL-2 transcription. In addition, preliminary results suggest that activation of the upstream signaling molecules, the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling cascade, may play a role in the enhancement of IL-2 transcription.
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PMID:Does caloric restriction alter IL-2 transcription? 942 13

Perillic acid, a major metabolite of d-limonene, substantially suppressed interleukin-2 (IL-2) and IL-10 production in mitogen-activated T lymphocytes. The effects of perillic acid on cytokine secretion were selective: IL-6 and transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1) generation were unchanged. In H9 T lymphoma cells, exposure to perillic acid resulted in a dose-dependent depletion of membrane-bound Ras proteins. Unlike hydroxymethyl-glutaryl-CoA reductase or protein farnesyltransferase inhibitors, perillic acid did not induce a shift of membrane-bound into cytosolic p21ras but depleted total cellular Ras proteins. Triggering of the T cell receptor (TCR) perturbs the guanine nucleotide binding cycle of p21ras and in turn induces phosphorylation and activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK). In perillic acid-treated cells, the levels of phosphorylated but not total MAPK were also decreased in a dose-dependent manner. Taken together, we provide evidence that perillic acid interrupts signalling via the Ras/MAP kinase pathway by depleting farnesylated Ras levels, an effect which may contribute to its inhibition of IL-2 production and T cell activation.
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PMID:Perillic acid inhibits Ras/MAP kinase-driven IL-2 production in human T lymphocytes. 943 75


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