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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)
The induction of programmed cell death, or apoptosis, involves activation of a signalling system, many elements of which remain unknown. The sphingomyelin pathway, initiated by hydrolysis of the phospholipid sphingomyelin in the cell membrane to generate the second messenger ceramide, is thought to mediate apoptosis in response to tumour-necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, to
Fas ligand
and to X-rays. It is not known whether it plays a role in the stimulation of other forms of stress-induced apoptosis. Given that environmental stresses also stimulate a
stress-activated protein kinase
(
SAPK
/
JNK
), the sphingomyelin and
SAPK
/
JNK
signalling systems may be coordinated in induction of apoptosis. Here we report that ceramide initiates apoptosis through the
SAPK
cascade and provide evidence for a signalling mechanism that integrates cytokine- and stress-activated apoptosis.
...
PMID:Requirement for ceramide-initiated SAPK/JNK signalling in stress-induced apoptosis. 859 11
Ceramide is an important regulatory participant of programmed cell death (apoptosis) induced by tumour-necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and
Fas ligand
, members of the TNF superfamily. Conversely, sphingosine and sphingosine-1-phosphate, which are metabolites of ceramide, induce mitogenesis and have been implicated as second messengers in cellular proliferation induced by platelet-derived growth factor and serum. Here we report that sphingosine-1-phosphate prevents the appearance of the key features of apoptosis, namely intranucleosomal DNA fragmentation and morphological changes, which result from increased concentrations of ceramide. Furthermore, inhibition of ceramide-mediated apoptosis by activation of protein kinase C results from stimulation of sphingosine kinase and the concomitant increase in intracellular sphingosine-1-phosphate. Finally sphingosine-1-phosphate not only stimulates the
extracellular signal-regulated kinase
(
ERK
) pathway, it counteracts the ceramide-induced activation of
stress-activated protein kinase
(
SAPK
/
JNK
). Thus, the balance between the intracellular levels of ceramide and sphingosine-1-phosphate and their regulatory effects on different family members of mitogen-activated protein kinases determines the fate of the cell.
...
PMID:Suppression of ceramide-mediated programmed cell death by sphingosine-1-phosphate. 865 85
Recent evidence suggests that branching pathways of sphingolipid metabolism may mediate either apoptotic or mitogenic responses depending on the cell type and the nature of the stimulus. While ceramide has been shown to be an important regulatory component of apoptosis induced by tumor necrosis factor alpha and the
Fas ligand
, sphingosine-1-phosphate (SPP), a further metabolite of ceramide, has been implicated as a second messenger in cellular proliferation and survival induced by platelet-derived growth factor, neuronal growth factor, and serum. SPP protects cells from apoptosis resulting from elevations of ceramide. Inflammatory cytokines stimulate sphingomyelinase, but not ceramidase, leading to accumulation of ceramide, whereas growth signals also stimulate ceramidase and sphingosine kinase leading to increased SPP levels. We propose that the dynamic balance between levels of sphingolipid metabolites, ceramide, and SPP and consequent regulation of different members of the mitogen-activated protein kinases (
JNK
versus ERK) family is an important factor that determines whether a cell survives or dies.
...
PMID:Roles of sphingosine-1-phosphate in cell growth, differentiation, and death. 952 97
T lymphocytes undergo apoptosis in response to cellular stress, including UV exposure and gamma irradiation. However, the mechanism by which stress stimuli induce apoptosis is not well understood. While stress stimuli induce the activation of the
c-Jun N-terminal kinase
(JNK) pathway, it is not clear whether the JNK cascade is activated as a result of cell death or whether the cascade participates in inducing apoptosis. Using a Jurkat T cell line transfected with dominant active (DA)-mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase (MEKK1) in a tetracycline-regulated expression system, we found that expression of DA-MEKK1 results in the apoptosis of Jurkat cells in parallel with prolonged JNK activation. Moreover, DA-MEKK1 induced
Fas ligand
(
FasL
) cell surface and mRNA expression, as well as
FasL
promoter activation. Interference with Fas/
FasL
interaction prevented DA-MEKK1-mediated apoptosis. In comparing the effect of different stress stimuli to DA-MEKK1, we found that UV, gamma irradiation, and anisomycin prolonged JNK activation in parallel with
FasL
expression and onset of cell death. In addition, these stimuli also enhance cell surface expression of
FasL
. Interference with Fas/
FasL
interactions inhibited anisomycin but not UV- or gamma irradiation-induced apoptosis. Our data show that while the JNK pathway contributes to stress-induced apoptosis in T lymphocytes by regulating
FasL
expression, not all stress stimuli use the same cell death pathway.
...
PMID:The c-Jun N-terminal kinase cascade plays a role in stress-induced apoptosis in Jurkat cells by up-regulating Fas ligand expression. 955 65
Fas ligand
and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF) bind to members of the TNF receptor superfamily. Stimulation by
Fas ligand
results in apoptosis, whereas TNF induces multiple effects including proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. Activation of the
c-Jun N-terminal kinase
(JNK) and p38 kinase pathways is common to Fas and TNF signaling; however, their role in apoptosis is controversial. Fas receptor cross-linking induces apoptosis in the absence of actinomycin D and activates JNK in a caspase-dependent manner. In contrast, TNF requires actinomycin D for apoptosis and activates JNK and p38 kinase with biphasic kinetics. The first phase is transient, precedes apoptosis, and is caspase-independent, whereas the second phase is coincident with apoptosis and is caspase-dependent. Inhibition of early TNF-induced JNK and p38 kinases using MKK4/MKK6 mutants or the p38 inhibitor SB203580 increases TNF-induced apoptosis, whereas expression of wild type MKK4/MKK6 enhances survival. In contrast, the Mek inhibitor PD098059 has no effect on survival. These results demonstrate that early activation of p38 kinase (but not Mek) are necessary to protect cells from TNF-mediated cytotoxicity. Thus, early stress kinase activation initiated by TNF plays a key role in regulating apoptosis.
...
PMID:Early activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase and p38 kinase regulate cell survival in response to tumor necrosis factor alpha. 955 74
Apoptosis induced by DNA damage and other stresses can proceed via expression of
Fas ligand
(
FasL
) and ligation of its receptor, Fas (CD95). We report that activation of the two transcription factors NF-kappa B and AP-1 is crucially involved in
FasL
expression induced by etoposide, teniposide, and UV irradiation. A nondegradable mutant of I kappa B blocked both
FasL
expression and apoptosis induced by DNA damage but not Fas ligation. These stimuli also induced the stress-activated kinase pathway (
SAPK
/
JNK
), which was required for the maximal induction of apoptosis. A 1.2 kb
FasL
promoter responded to DNA damage, as well as coexpression with p65 Rel or Fos/Jun. Mutations in the relevant NF-kappa B and AP-1 binding sites eliminated these responses. Thus, activation of NF-kappa B and AP-1 contributes to stress-induced apoptosis via the expression of
FasL
.
...
PMID:DNA damaging agents induce expression of Fas ligand and subsequent apoptosis in T lymphocytes via the activation of NF-kappa B and AP-1. 966 Sep 38
Recent evidence suggests that branching pathways of sphingolipid metabolism may mediate either apoptotic or mitogenic responses depending on the cell type and the nature of the stimulus. While ceramide has been shown to be an important regulatory component of apoptosis induced by tumor necrosis factor alpha and
Fas ligand
, sphingosine-1-phosphate (SPP), a further metabolite of ceramide, has been implicated as a second messenger in cellular proliferation and survival induced by platelet-derived growth factor, nerve growth factor, and serum. SPP protects cells from apoptosis resulting from elevations of ceramide. Inflammatory cytokines stimulate sphingomyelinase, but not ceramidase, leading to accumulation of ceramide, whereas growth signals also leading to accumulation of ceramide, whereas growth signals also stimulate ceramidase and sphingosine kinase leading to increased SPP levels. We propose that the dynamic balance between levels of sphingolipid metabolites, ceramide, and SPP, and consequent regulation of different family members of mitogen-activated protein kinases (
JNK
versus ERK), is an important factor that determines whether a cell survives or dies.
...
PMID:Sphingosine-1-phosphate in cell growth and cell death. 966 39
T lymphocytes undergo apoptosis in response to a variety of stimuli, including exposure to UV radiation and gamma-irradiation. While the mechanism by which stress stimuli induce apoptosis is not well understood, we have previously shown that the induction of
Fas ligand
(
FasL
) gene expression by environmental stress stimuli is dependent on
c-Jun N-terminal kinase
(JNK) activation. Using inducible dominant-active (DA) JNK kinase kinase (MEKK1) expression in Jurkat cells, we map a specific MEKK1-regulated response element to positions -338 to -316 of the
Fas ligand
(
FasL
) promoter. Mutation of that response element abrogated MEKK1-mediated
FasL
promoter activation and interfered in stress-induced activation of that promoter. Using electrophoretic mobility shift assays, we demonstrate that activator protein 1 (AP-1) binding proteins, namely, activating transcription factor 2 (ATF2) and c-Jun, bind to the MEKK1 response element. Transient transfection of interfering c-Jun and ATF2 mutants, which lack the consensus JNK phosphorylation sites, abrogated the transcriptional activation of the
FasL
promoter, demonstrating the involvement of these transcription factors in the regulation of the
FasL
promoter. Taken together, our data indicate that MEKK1 and transcription factors regulated by the JNK pathway play a role in committing lymphocytes to undergo apoptosis by inducing
FasL
expression via a novel response element in the promoter of that gene.
...
PMID:Stress-induced Fas ligand expression in T cells is mediated through a MEK kinase 1-regulated response element in the Fas ligand promoter. 971 Jun 25
The
JNK
pathway modulates AP-1 activity. While in some cells it may have proliferative and protective roles, in neuronal cells it is involved in apoptosis in response to stress or withdrawal of survival signals. To understand how
JNK
activation leads to apoptosis, we used PC12 cells and primary neuronal cultures. In PC12 cells, deliberate
JNK
activation is followed by induction of
Fas ligand
(
FasL
) expression and apoptosis.
JNK
activation detected by c-Jun phosphorylation and
FasL
induction are also observed after removal of either nerve growth factor from differentiated PC12 cells or KCl from primary cerebellar granule neurons (CGCs). Sequestation of
FasL
by incubation with a Fas-Fc decoy inhibits apoptosis in all three cases. CGCs derived from gld mice (defective in
FasL
) are less sensitive to apoptosis caused by KCl removal than wild-type neurons. In PC12 cells, protection is also conferred by a c-Jun mutant lacking
JNK
phosphoacceptor sites and a small molecule inhibitor of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase and
JNK
, which inhibits
FasL
induction. Hence, the
JNK
-to-c-Jun-to-
FasL
pathway is an important mediator of stress-induced neuronal apoptosis.
...
PMID:Withdrawal of survival factors results in activation of the JNK pathway in neuronal cells leading to Fas ligand induction and cell death. 985 98
Fas is expressed constitutively by colonic epithelial cells, and its ligand is expressed by intraepithelial and lamina propria lymphocytes. Fas ligation induces apoptosis in colonic epithelial cells and is implicated in the epithelial damage seen in ulcerative colitis. To understand the pleiotropic effects of Fas in the intestinal mucosa, we have examined signaling pathways activated by Fas in HT-29 colonic epithelial cells. HT-29 cells were stimulated with anti-Fas in the presence or absence of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma). Activation of
mitogen-activated protein kinase
pathways was assessed by kinase assay, Western blots, and promoter-reporter assays. Electromobility shift assays were used to assess activator protein-1 (AP-1) binding activity. IFN-gamma increases expression of Fas on HT-29 cells. Signaling via Fas receptor, as determined by induction of c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) activity and transcriptional activation of AP-1, is enhanced in IFN-gamma-primed cells. Dominant-interfering mutants of the JNK pathway do not block Fas-mediated apoptosis. Signaling through Fas results in activation of JNK and AP-1 binding activity that is increased in the presence of IFN-gamma. Inhibition of JNK does not block Fas-mediated apoptosis in these cells. Fas-
Fas ligand
interactions in the intestinal mucosa may lead to complex signal transduction cascades and gene regulation that culminate in apoptosis, cytokine secretion, or other novel functions.
...
PMID:Fas activates the JNK pathway in human colonic epithelial cells: lack of a direct role in apoptosis. 1007 35
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