Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.7.11.24 (
mitogen-activated protein kinase
)
95,810
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Granulin-epithelin precursor (GEP/progranulin) is an autocrine growth factor for ovarian cancer. We examined the production and function of GEP and report that: (1) GEP production is regulated by endothelin (ET-1), lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), and cAMP; (2) cAMP signals GEP production through exchange protein activated by cAMP (EPAC); (3) ET-1 and cAMP/EPAC induce GEP through
ERK1
/2; and (4) neutralization of GEP results in apoptosis. Exposure of HEY-A8 and OVCAR3 ovarian cancer cells to LPA and ET-1 yielded GEP production and secretion in a dose- and time-dependent fashion; neither stimulated significant concentrations of cAMP directly. Stimulation of cAMP production with pertussis and cholera toxin, or forskolin induced GEP in a PKA-independent fashion. EPAC, an intracellular cAMP receptor, is activated specifically by the cAMP analog, 8-CPT-2'-O-Me-cAMP (8-CPT); 8-CPT treatment stimulated GEP production and secretion. The MEK inhibitor, U0126, abrogated GEP production in response to ET-1 and 8-CPT, confirming involvement of
MAPK
. A partial inhibition of basal and stimulated GEP production was observed when cells were treated with a internal calcium chelator, BAPTA. Neutralizing anti-GEP antibody reversed basal as well as LPA, ET-1 and 8-CPT-induced ovarian cancer cell growth and induced apoptosis as demonstrated by caspase-3 and PARP cleavage, DNA fragmentation, and nuclear condensation. These results indicate that GEP is a growth and
survival factor
for ovarian cancer, induced by LPA and ET-1 and cAMP/EPAC through
ERK1
/2.
...
PMID:Lysophosphatidic acid and endothelin-induced proliferation of ovarian cancer cell lines is mitigated by neutralization of granulin-epithelin precursor (GEP), a prosurvival factor for ovarian cancer. 1604 62
Endocrine gland-derived vascular endothelial growth factor (EG-VEGF) or Prokineticin-1 (PK-1) is a novel cysteine-rich protein that belongs to the AVIT protein family. EG-VEGF/PK-1, described as selective angiogenic mitogen, is widely expressed in different tissues including steroidogenic endocrine glands. This review summarizes the expression and functions of EG-VEGF/PK-1 in corpus luteum (CL)-derived cells: endothelial and steroidogenic cell types. EG-VEGF/PK-1 mRNA is expressed by luteal steroidogenic cells of human, rat and bovine ovaries, but was absent from the luteal Endothelial cells CLEC. Luteal EC expressed high levels of both PK-receptors PK-R1 and PK-R2 - the two G protein-coupled PK-1 receptors. Interestingly, expression of EG-VEGF/PK-1 and VEGF were inversely regulated in human and bovine luteinized granulosa cells. EG-VEGF/PK-1 elevated [3H]-thymidine incorporation,
MAPK
activation and c-jun/fos mRNA expression and enhanced LEC proliferation. EG-VEGF/PK-1 also inhibited serum starvation-induced apoptosis in these cells. Stress conditions such as serum withdrawal, TNFalpha and chemical hypoxia markedly increase PK-R2 expression, whereas mRNA levels of PK-R1 remain unchanged, implying that the anti-apoptotic effect of PK-1 on LEC may be mediated via PK-R2. Besides its direct mitogenic and anti-apoptotic effects, EG-VEGF/PK-1 elevated VEGF mRNA expression in bovine luteal steroidogenic cells, which possesses only PK-R1. Together, these findings suggest an important role for PK-1 in luteal function by acting as a mitogen and
survival factor
in LEC. Nevertheless, the inverse regulation of EG-VEGF/PK1 and VEGF mRNA expression by ovarian cells and the distribution of its receptors may suggest that in addition to its angiogenic effects, EG-VEGF/PK-1 may also play other roles in ovary.
...
PMID:Unique expression and regulatory mechanisms of EG-VEGF/prokineticin-1 and its receptors in the corpus luteum. 1632 Aug 32
We recently showed that Hepatocyte Growth Factor (HGF), known as a
survival factor
, unexpectedly enhances apoptosis in human ovarian cancer cells treated with the front-line chemotherapeutics cisplatin (CDDP) and paclitaxel (PTX). Here we demonstrate that this effect depends on the p38 mitogen-activated kinase (
MAPK
). In fact, p38
MAPK
activity is stimulated by HGF and further increased by the combined treatment with HGF and either CDDP or PTX. The expression of a dominant negative form of p38
MAPK
abrogates apoptosis elicited by drugs, alone or in combination with HGF. HGF and drugs also activate the
ERK1
/2 MAPKs, the PI3K/AKT and the AKT substrate mTOR. However, activation of these survival pathways does not hinder the ability of HGF to enhance drug-dependent apoptosis. Altogether data show that p38
MAPK
is necessary for HGF sensitization of ovarian cancer cells to low-doses of CDDP and PTX and might be sufficient to overcome activation of survival pathways. Therefore, the p38
MAPK
pathway might be a suitable target to improve response to conventional chemotherapy in human ovarian cancer.
...
PMID:p38 MAPK turns hepatocyte growth factor to a death signal that commits ovarian cancer cells to chemotherapy-induced apoptosis. 1639 9
Prolactin hormone (PRL) is well characterized as a terminal differentiation factor for mammary epithelial cells and as an autocrine growth/
survival factor
in breast cancer cells. However, this function of PRL may not fully signify its role in breast tumorigenesis. Cancer is a complex multistep progressive disease resulting not only from defects in cell growth but also in cell differentiation. Indeed, dedifferentiation of tumor cells is now recognized as a crucial event in invasion and metastasis. PRL plays a critical role in inducing/maintaining differentiation of mammary epithelial cells, suggesting that PRL signaling could serve to inhibit tumor progression. We show here that in breast cancer cells, PRL and Janus-activated kinase 2, a major kinase involved in PRL signaling, play a critical role in regulating epithelial-mesenchymal transformation (EMT), an essential process associated with tumor metastasis. Activation of the PRL receptor (PRLR), achieved by restoring PRL/JAK2 signaling in mesenchymal-like breast cancer cells, MDA-MB-231, suppressed their mesenchymal properties and reduced their invasive behavior. While blocking PRL autocrine function in epithelial-like breast cancer cells, T47D, using pharmacologic and genetic approaches induced mesenchymal-like phenotypic changes and enhanced their invasive propensity. Moreover, our results indicate that blocking PRL signaling led to activation of
mitogen-activated protein kinase
(extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2) and transforming growth factor-beta/Smad signaling pathways, two major prometastatic pathways. Furthermore, our results indicate that following PRL/JAK2 inhibition,
ERK1
/2 activation precedes and is required for Smad2 activation and EMT induction in breast cancer cells. Together, these results highlight PRL as a critical regulator of epithelial plasticity and implicate PRL as an invasion suppressor hormone in breast cancer.
...
PMID:Defining the role of prolactin as an invasion suppressor hormone in breast cancer cells. 1645 44
Mouse mast cell development and survival are largely controlled by the cytokines IL-3 and stem cell factor (SCF). We have found that IL-3 stimulation of bone marrow cells induces the production of TNF via a PI3K- and
MAPK
kinase/ERK-dependent pathway. Specifically, Mac-1-positive cells were responsible for TNF production, which peaked on days 7-10 of culture and decreased rapidly thereafter. The importance of IL-3-induced TNF secretion was demonstrated by the failure of TNF-deficient bone marrow cells to survive for >3 wk when cultured in IL-3 and SCF, a defect that was reversed by the addition of soluble TNF. The development of human mast cells from bone marrow progenitors was similarly hampered by the addition of TNF-blocking Abs. Cell death was due to apoptosis, which occurred with changes in mitochondrial membrane potential and caspase activation. Apoptosis appeared to be due to loss of IL-3 signaling, because TNF-deficient cells were less responsive than their wild-type counterparts to IL-3-mediated survival. In vitro cultured mast cells from TNF-deficient mice also demonstrated reduced expression of the high affinity IgE receptor, which was restored to normal levels by the addition of soluble TNF. Finally, TNF-deficient mice demonstrated a 50% reduction in peritoneal mast cell numbers, indicating that TNF is an important mast cell
survival factor
both in vitro and in vivo.
...
PMID:IL-3-mediated TNF production is necessary for mast cell development. 1645 67
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-A is an autocrine
survival factor
for podocytes, which express two VEGF receptors, VEGF-R1 and VEGF-R3. As VEGF-A is not a known ligand for VEGF-R3, the aim of this investigation was to examine whether VEGF-C, a known ligand for VEGF-R3, served a function in podocyte biology and whether this was VEGF-R3 dependent. VEGF-C protein expression was localized to podocytes in contrast to VEGF-D, which was expressed in parietal epithelial cells. Intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) experiments demonstrated that VEGF-C induced a 0.74+/-0.09-fold reduction in [Ca2+]i compared with baseline in human conditionally immortalized podocytes (hCIPs; P<0.05, one sample t-test, n=8). Cytotoxicity experiments revealed that in hCIPs VEGF-C reduced cytotoxicity to 81.4+/-1.9% of serum-starved conditions (P<0.001, paired t-test, n=16), similar to VEGF-A (82.8+/-4.5% of serum-starved conditions, P<0.05, paired t-test). MAZ51 (a VEGF-R3 kinase inhibitor) inhibited the VEGF-C-induced reduction in cytotoxicity (106.2+/-2.1% of serum-starved conditions), whereas MAZ51 by itself had no cytotoxic effects on hCIPs. VEGF-C was also shown to induce a 0.5+/-0.13-fold reduction in levels of
MAPK
phosphorylation compared with VEGF-A and VEGF-A-Mab treatment (P<0.05, ANOVA, n=4), yet had no effect on Akt phosphorylation. Surprisingly, immunoprecipitation studies detected no VEGF-C-induced autophosphorylation of VEGF-R3 in hCIPs but did so in HMVECs. Moreover, SU-5416, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, blocked the VEGF-C-induced reduction in cytotoxicity (106+/-2.8% of serum-starved conditions) at concentrations specific for VEGF-R1. Together, these results suggest for the first time that VEGF-C acts in an autocrine manner in cultured podocytes to promote survival, although the receptor or receptor complex activated has yet to be elucidated.
...
PMID:VEGF-C promotes survival in podocytes. 1652 58
Disruption of the leptin signaling pathway within the heart causes left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). Because human obesity is a syndrome of leptin resistance, which is not amenable to leptin treatment, the identification of parallel signal transduction pathways is of potential therapeutic value.
Ciliary neurotrophic factor
(
CNTF
), which acts parallel to leptin in the hypothalamus, is not previously recognized to have cardiac activity. We hypothesized that
CNTF
receptors are present on cardiomyocytes and their activation reverses LVH in both leptin-deficient ob/ob and leptin-resistant db/db mice. The localization of
CNTF
receptors (CNTFRalpha) to the sarcolemma in C57BL/6, ob/ob and db/db was confirmed in situ with immunohistochemistry, and immunoblotting (60 and 40 kDa) on isolated myocytes. ob/ob mice were randomly assigned to receive s.c. recombinant
CNTF
(
CNTF
(Ax15); 0.1 mg x kg(-1) per day; n = 11) calorie-restriction (n = 9), or feeding ad libitum (n = 11). db/db mice were allocated to three similar groups (n = 8, 7, and 8, respectively) plus a leptin group (1 mg x kg(-1) per day; n = 7). Echocardiography showed that
CNTF
(Ax15) reduced cardiac hypertrophy [posterior wall thickness decreased by 29 +/- 8% (P < 0.01) in ob/ob and by 21 +/- 3% in db/db mice (P < 0.01)], which was consistent with the reduction of myocyte width. Western blotting showed that leptin and
CNTF
(Ax15) activated Stat3 and
ERK1
/2 pathway in cultured adult mice cardiomyocytes and cardiac tissue from in ob/ob and db/db mice. Together, these findings support the role of a previously undescribed signaling pathway in obesity-associated cardiac hypertrophy and have therapeutic implications for patients with obesity-related cardiovascular disease and other causes of LVH.
...
PMID:Activation of the cardiac ciliary neurotrophic factor receptor reverses left ventricular hypertrophy in leptin-deficient and leptin-resistant obesity. 1653 12
A molecular basis of survival from neuronal injury is essential for the development of therapeutic strategy to remedy neurodegenerative disorders. In this study, we demonstrate that an EF-hand Ca2+-binding protein neuronal Ca2+ sensor-1 (NCS-1), one of the key proteins for various neuronal functions, also acts as an important
survival factor
. Overexpression of NCS-1 rendered cultured neurons more tolerant to cell death caused by several kinds of stressors, whereas the dominant-negative mutant (E120Q) accelerated it. In addition, NCS-1 proteins increased upon treatment with glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) and mediated GDNF survival signal in an Akt (but not
MAPK
)-dependent manner. Furthermore, NCS-1 is significantly up-regulated in response to axotomy-induced injury in the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus neurons of adult rats in vivo, and adenoviral overexpression of E120Q resulted in a significant loss of surviving neurons, suggesting that NCS-1 is involved in an antiapoptotic mechanism in adult motor neurons. We propose that NCS-1 is a novel survival-promoting factor up-regulated in injured neurons that mediates the GDNF survival signal via the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Akt pathway.
...
PMID:Novel role of neuronal Ca2+ sensor-1 as a survival factor up-regulated in injured neurons. 1654 99
Heparin is used clinically for the prevention of pregnancy complications associated with prothrombotic disorders, especially antiphospholipid antibody syndrome. Recent studies have suggested that heparin may exert direct effects on placental trophoblast, independently of its anticoagulant activity. We now demonstrate that heparin abrogates apoptosis of primary first trimester villous trophoblast in response to treatment with the pro-inflammatory cytokines interferon (IFN)-gamma and tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha. This multifunctional glycosaminoglycan also inhibited apoptosis induced by other agents, including staurosporin, broad-spectrum kinase inhibitor and thrombin. Furthermore, heparin attenuated caspase-3 activity, a hallmark of apoptosis, in human first trimester villous and extravillous trophoblast cell lines treated with peptidoglycan, a Toll-like receptor-2 agonist isolated from Staphylococcus aureus. The ability of heparin to antagonize cell death induced by such diverse apoptotic signals suggested that it acts as a
survival factor
for human trophoblast. We demonstrate that heparin, like epidermal growth factor (EGF) and heparin-binding EGF (HB-EGF), elicits phosphorylation of the EGF receptor and activation of the phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-, the extracellular signal-related kinase 1/2 (
ERK1
/2)- and the c-Jun NH2 terminal kinase (JNK)-signal transduction pathways in primary villous trophoblast. In summary, we have demonstrated that heparin activates multiple anti-apoptotic pathways in human trophoblast. Our results suggest that heparin may be useful in the management of at-risk patients, even in the absence of an identifiable thrombophilic disorder.
...
PMID:Heparin prevents programmed cell death in human trophoblast. 1655 79
Doxorubicin is the anthracycline with the widest spectrum of antitumor activity, and it has been shown that the antitumor activity is mediated in vivo by selective triggering of apoptosis in proliferating endothelial cells. We studied cultured human endothelial cells and observed that doxorubicin-induced apoptosis was mediated by p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (
MAPK
). Doxorubicin-provoked apoptosis was significantly inhibited by expression of dominant negative p38
MAPK
or pharmacological inhibition with SB203580. Furthermore, blocking phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase/Akt signaling significantly increased doxorubicin-induced caspase-3 activity and cell death, indicating that Akt is a
survival factor
in this system. Notably, we also found that doxorubicin-provoked apoptosis included p38
MAPK
-mediated inhibition of Akt and Bad phosphorylation. Furthermore, doxorubicin-stimulated phosphorylation of Bad in cells expressing dominant negative p38
MAPK
was impeded by the inhibition of PI3-K. In addition to the impact on Bad phosphorylation, doxorubicin-treatment caused p38
MAPK
-dependent downregulation of Bcl-xL protein.
...
PMID:p38 MAPK downregulates phosphorylation of Bad in doxorubicin-induced endothelial apoptosis. 1684 35
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10