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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
urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor
(u-PAR) facilitates extracellular matrix degradation in part by accelerating plasmin formation at the cell surface. We previously reported that u-PAR expression is elevated in colon cancer cell lines characterized by their in vitro invasive capacity. Since, u-PAR expression is increased by a variety of growth factors, which signal through the extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 (
ERK1
/
ERK2
), we determined if these mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) regulate u-PAR expression in two cultured colon cancer cell lines. An in-gel kinase assay showed that
ERK1
activity was considerably higher in RKO cells, which display > or = 10(5) receptors/cell, than the GEO cells which have approximately 10(4) urokinase receptors per cell. The expression of either an ERK-inactivating phosphatase (CL100), or a kinase-defective
ERK1
, decreased the activity of a u-PAR promoter-driven CAT reporter in RKO cells. Immune complex kinase assays indicated that the constitutive
ERK1
activity in RKO cells was largely a result of an activated MEK1. Further, treatment of RKO cells with a specific inhibitor (PD 098059) of MEK1 activation, which diminished
ERK1
activity, reduced the amount of urokinase specifically bound to the cell surface and this was associated with reduced laminin degradation. The expression of a dominant negative c-Raf-1 also reduced u-PAR promoter activity suggesting that MEK1 activation involved an activator at, or upstream, of this serine-threonine kinase. Transfection of the u-PAR-deficient GEO cells with a constitutively activated MEK1 expression construct up-regulated u-PAR promoter activity. Similarly treatment of GEO cells with a phosphatase inhibitor (sodium vanadate) caused a dose-dependent increase in
ERK1
activity which paralleled increased cell surface binding of urokinase. Taken together, these data suggest that elevated u-PAR expression, in at least a sub-population of colon cancer, is partly a consequence of a constitutively activated ERK-1-dependent signaling cascade.
...
PMID:Elevated urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor expression in a colon cancer cell line is due to a constitutively activated extracellular signal-regulated kinase-1-dependent signaling cascade. 919 Oct 56
Binding of urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) to its receptor,
uPAR
, regulates cellular adhesion, migration, and tumor cell invasion. Some of these activities may reflect the ability of
uPAR
to initiate signal transduction even though this receptor is linked to the plasma membrane only by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor. In this study, we demonstrated that single-chain uPA activates extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1) and
ERK2
in MCF-7 breast cancer cells. Phosphorylation of ERK1 and
ERK2
was increased 1 min after adding uPA and returned to baseline levels by 5 min. The amino-terminal fragment (ATF) of uPA, which binds to
uPAR
but lacks proteinase activity, also activated ERK1 and
ERK2
. Responses to uPA and ATF were eliminated when the cells were pretreated with PD098059, an inhibitor of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase. uPA and ATF promoted the migration of MCF-7 cells across serum-coated Transwell membranes in vitro. Migration was increased 2.1 +/- 0.4-fold when uPA was added to the top chamber, 4. 8 +/- 0.8-fold when uPA was added to the bottom chamber, and 7.7 +/- 1.0-fold when uPA was added to both chambers. MCF-7 cells that were pulse-exposed to uPA for 30 min, and then washed to remove unbound ligand, demonstrated increased motility even though migration was allowed to occur for 24 h. PD098059 completely neutralized the effects of uPA on MCF-7 cellular motility, irrespective of whether the uPA was present for the entire motility assay or administered by pulse-exposure. These results demonstrate a novel, receptor-dependent signaling activity which is required for uPA-stimulated breast cancer cell migration.
...
PMID:Binding of urokinase-type plasminogen activator to its receptor in MCF-7 cells activates extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2 which is required for increased cellular motility. 952 64
We have investigated cellular signalling events induced by urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) independent of its proteolytic activity. Treatment of the human fibrosarcoma cell line HT 1080 with diisopropylphosphorofluoridate-inactivated uPA (Dip-F-uPA) triggers a cascade of intracellular signals which are mediated by the specific cell surface receptor for uPA (
uPAR
). We have found that anti-
uPAR
Ig precipitate the src-type protein tyrosine kinases fyn, hck and lck, which belong to a family of structurally and functionally related effectors participating in signalling from antigen and cytokine receptors. Of the three
uPAR
-associated kinases, only hck is activated by uPA, whereas no changes in the activities of either fyn or lck could be detected by an in vitro immune complex kinase assay. We identified p38 and extracellular-signal-regulated kinase 2 from the
mitogen-activated protein kinase
family as downstream components of a set of consecutive signalling molecules which teleologically alter the program of gene expression. Exposure of cells to uPA results in a significant increase in c-fos mRNA that is partially due to an elevated rate of gene transcription. Presumably, the activation of the c-fos gene leads to the subsequent formation of the transcription factor activator protein-1 (AP-1), since accumulation of c-fos mRNA is followed by induction of target genes sensitive to AP-1 such as plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2 (PAI-2). These results provide new insights into proteolysis-independent cytokine-like effects of uPA.
...
PMID:Downstream targets of urokinase-type plasminogen-activator-mediated signal transduction. 965 92
The
urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor
(u-PAR) has been implicated in tumor progression, and previous studies have shown that the expression of this gene is strongly up-regulated by PMA. Although the signaling mechanism by which PMA modulates u-PAR expression is not known, the effect of this phorbol ester on the expression of other genes has been ascribed to activation of the c-Raf-1-ERK signaling pathway. However, in the current study we examined an alternate possibility that the inductive effect of PMA on u-PAR expression also required a JNK1-dependent signaling cascade usually associated with stress-inducing stimuli. PMA treatment of the u-PAR-deficient OVCAR-3 ovarian cancer cells, which contain low
JNK
activities, resulted in a rapid (5 min) increase in
JNK
activity. Maximal
JNK
activity (12-fold induction) occurred after 30 min; this preceding the earliest detected rise in u-PAR protein (2 h). Dose-response studies with PMA also indicated that the increased
JNK
activity was tightly correlated with elevated u-PAR protein levels. The stimulation of u-PAR promoter activity by PMA required an intact upstream AP-1 motif (-184) and in PMA-treated cells this motif was bound with c-Jun as indicated from mobility shift assays. PMA up-regulated the c-Jun trans acting activity as indicated by the higher activity of a GAL4-regulated luciferase reporter in phorbol-ester-treated cells co-transfected with an expression vector encoding the c-Jun transactivation domain fused to the GAL4 DNA-binding domain. The ability of PMA to stimulate u-PAR promoter activity was effectively titrated out by the co-expression of either a kinase-defective JNK1 or a dominant negative MEKK1 the latter being an upstream activator of JNK1. Conversely, u-PAR promoter activity was stimulated by the co-expression of a constitutively active MEKK1 and this induction was antagonized by the inclusion of the kinase-defective JNK1 plasmid. We also determined the biological significance of the JNK1-dependent signaling cascade in regulating u-PAR promoter activity by c-Ha-ras since this oncogene is activated and/or overexpressed in a variety of tumors including ovarian cancer. Transfection of an activated c-Ha-ras into OVCAR-3 cells stimulated u-PAR promoter activity over 20-fold and this could be countered by the individual expression of dominant negative expression constructs to Rac-1, MEKK1 or JNK1. Taken together, these data suggest that the PMA- or c-Ha-Ras-dependent stimulation of u-PAR gene expression requires a JNK1-dependent signaling module and that, at least for PMA, the concurrent stimulation of a JNK1-independent signaling module is also required. Thus, caution should be exercised in invoking linear signaling modules to account for the regulation of inducible gene expression.
...
PMID:Stimulation of urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor expression by PMA requires JNK1-dependent and -independent signaling modules. 967 6
We review the evidence in support of the notion that, upon experimental oncogenic transformation or in spontaneous human cancers, mitogenesis and expression of urokinase (uPA) and its receptor (
uPAR
) are activated through common signaling complexes and pathways. It is well documented that uPA,
uPAR
or metalloproteinases (MMPs) are overexpressed in tumor cells of mesenchymal or epithelial origin and these molecules are required for tumor invasion and metastasis. Furthermore, oncogenic stimuli, which may render the transformed cells tumorigenic and metastatic in vivo, activate, in a constitutive fashion, the extracellular-regulated kinases (Erk 1 and 2) classical mitogenic pathway and others such as the NH(2)-Jun-kinase (Jnk). Cells from human tumors or oncogene-transformed cells overexpress uPA and
uPAR
, and also show a sustained activation of the above-mentioned signaling modules. In this paper we show that the classical mitogenic pathway involving Ras-Erk, PKC-Erk or Rac-
JNK
, among others, is activated by growth factors or endogenously by oncogenes, and constitutively activates uPA and
uPAR
expression. All the data obtained from human tumors or experimental systems, incorporated into a general model, indicate that oncogenic stimuli lead to the constitutive activation of mitogenesis and uPA and its receptor expression, through the activation of the same classical and nonclassical signaling complexes and pathways that regulate cell proliferation. We also discuss contrasting points of view. For instance, what governs the differential regulation of mitogenesis and the signal that leads to protease overexpression in a way that allows normal cells during physiological events to respond to growth factors, and proliferate without overexpressing extracellular matrix (ECM) proteases? Or how can cells remodel their microenvironment without proliferating? What restrains benign tumors from overexpressing tumor-associated proteases when they certainly have the mitogenic signal fully activated? This may occur by the differential regulation of transcriptional programs and recent reports reviewed in this paper may provide an insight into how this occurs at the signaling and transcriptional levels.
...
PMID:Deregulation of the signaling pathways controlling urokinase production. Its relationship with the invasive phenotype. 1040 35
The low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein (LRP) has been reported to regulate cellular migration. In this study, an antisense RNA expression strategy was used to reduce LRP to undetectable levels in HT 1080 fibrosarcoma cells. The LRP-deficient cells demonstrated increased levels of cell-surface
uPAR
, higher levels of uPA in conditioned medium, increased migration on vitronectin-coated surfaces, and increased invasion of Matrigel. LRP-deficient cells also demonstrated increased levels of phosphorylated
extracellular signal-regulated kinase
(
ERK
) in the absence of exogenous stimulants. Antibodies which block binding of endogenously produced uPA to
uPAR
reduced
ERK
phosphorylation and migration of LRP-deficient cells to the levels observed with control cells. Inhibitors of
ERK
activation, including PD098059 and dominant-negative MEK1, also decreased the migration of LRP-deficient but not control cells. By contrast, constitutively active MEK1 stimulated the migration of control but not LRP-deficient cells. Although Matrigel invasion by LRP-deficient cells was inhibited by the proteinase inhibitor, aprotinin, PD098059 in combination with aprotinin was necessary for an optimal effect. Expression of the VLDL receptor in LRP-deficient cells reversed the changes in cellular migration and invasion. These studies demonstrate that binding of endogenously produced uPA to
uPAR
may serve as a major determinant of basal levels of activated
ERK
and, by this mechanism, regulate cellular migration and invasion. By regulating the uPA/
uPAR
system, LRP may also regulate
ERK
activation, cellular migration, and invasion.
...
PMID:Extracellular signal-regulated kinase functions in the urokinase receptor-dependent pathway by which neutralization of low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein promotes fibrosarcoma cell migration and matrigel invasion. 1059 31
Overexpression of urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) and its receptor (
uPAR
) has been well documented in a wide variety of tumor cells. In breast cancer, expression of uPA/
uPAR
is essential for tumor cell invasion and metastasis. However, the mechanism responsible for uPA/
uPAR
expression in cancer cells remains unclear. In the studies reported here, we show that endogenous p38
MAPK
activity correlates well with breast carcinoma cell invasiveness. Treatment of highly invasive BT549 cells with a specific p38
MAPK
inhibitor SB203580 diminished both uPA/
uPAR
mRNA and protein expression and abrogated the ability of these cells to invade matrigel, suggesting that p38
MAPK
signaling pathway is involved in the regulation of uPA/
uPAR
expression and breast cancer cell invasion. We also demonstrated that SB203580-induced reduction in uPA/
uPAR
mRNA expression resulted from the de- stabilization of uPA and
uPAR
mRNA. Finally, by selectively inhibiting p38alpha or p38beta
MAPK
isoforms, we demonstrate that p38alpha, rather than p38beta,
MAPK
activity is essential for uPA/
uPAR
expression. These studies suggest that p38alpha
MAPK
signaling pathway is important for the maintenance of breast cancer invasive phenotype by promoting the stabilities of uPA and
uPAR
mRNA.
...
PMID:Urokinase plasminogen activator/urokinase-specific surface receptor expression and matrix invasion by breast cancer cells requires constitutive p38alpha mitogen-activated protein kinase activity. 1076 65
Expression of urinary-type plasminogen activator (uPA) and its receptor (
uPAR
) is correlated with matrix proteolysis, cell adhesion, motility, and invasion. To evaluate the functional link between adhesion and proteolysis in gingival keratinocytes (pp126), cells were treated with immobilized integrin antibodies to induce integrin clustering. Clustering of alpha(3) and beta(1) integrin subunits, but not alpha(2), alpha(5), alpha(6), or beta(4), enhanced uPA secretion. Bead-immobilized laminin-5 and collagen I, two major alpha(3)beta(1) ligands, also induced uPA expression. Coordinate regulation of the serpin plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 was also apparent; however, a net increase in uPA activity was predominant. alpha(3)beta(1) integrin clustering induced extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 phosphorylation, and both uPA induction and
extracellular signal-regulated kinase
activation were blocked by the
mitogen-activated protein kinase
/
extracellular signal-regulated kinase
kinase inhibitor PD98059. Integrin aggregation also promoted a dramatic redistribution of
uPAR
on the cell surface to sites of clustered alpha(3)beta(1) integrins. Co-immunoprecipitation of beta(1) integrin with
uPAR
provided further evidence that protein-protein interactions between
uPAR
and beta(1) integrin control
uPAR
distribution. As a functional consequence of uPA up-regulation and uPA-mediated plasminogen activation, the globular domain of the laminin-5 alpha(3) subunit, a major pp126 matrix protein, was proteolytically processed from a 190-kDa form to a 160-kDa species. Laminin-5 containing the 160-kDa alpha(3) subunit efficiently nucleates hemidesmosome formation and reduces cell motility. Together, these data suggest that multivalent aggregation of the alpha(3)beta(1) integrin regulates proteinase expression, matrix proteolysis, and subsequent cellular behavior.
...
PMID:Urinary-type plasminogen activator (uPA) expression and uPA receptor localization are regulated by alpha 3beta 1 integrin in oral keratinocytes. 1079 52
Vav is expressed exclusively in hematopoietic cells and becomes phosphorylated on tyrosine in response to antigen receptor ligation. Although Vav can act as a Rac-specific guanine nucleotide exchange factor in vitro and as a
c-Jun N-terminal kinase
(JNK) activator in ectopic expression systems, its physiological functions in lymphocytes remain unclear. Indirect evidence suggests that Vav interacts with the Ras/ERK pathway in T cells. Here, we analyzed the effects of Vav on three known downstream targets of Ras, i. e. activation of ERK and NFAT, and up-regulation of the
activation antigen
CD69. The MEK inhibitor PD90859 inhibited Vav-induced activation of ERK, and Vav- or anti-CD3-induced activation of NFAT, suggesting that MEK and ERK are involved in Vav-mediated NFAT activation. Similarly to Ras, Vav cooperated with constitutively active calcineurin and with ERK to activate NFAT, and was capable of up-regulating CD69 expression in T cells. Moreover, these Vav-mediated functions were all inhibited by a dominant negative Ras mutant. Conversely, however, dominant negative Vav did not inhibit NFAT and ERK activation or CD69 expression induced by an active Ras mutant. These findings indicate that Ras functions as an important downstream target of Vav in signaling pathways that lead to NFAT and ERK activation, and to CD69 expression. Moreover, the finding that Vav- (or Ras-) induced CD69 expression was not inhibited by a dominant negative Rac mutant indicates that Vav mediates some Ras-dependent, but Rac-independent, functions in T cells.
...
PMID:Vav modulation of the Ras/MEK/ERK signaling pathway plays a role in NFAT activation and CD69 up-regulation. 1089 94
We reported previously that the production of
urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor
(
uPAR
) protein is greater in high-grade glioblastomas than in low-grade gliomas. Transcriptional activation of the
uPAR
gene or increased stability of the
uPAR
mRNA that encodes this protein could cause the increased production of this protein in cell lines of different grades of gliomas. We found similar half-life of
uPAR
mRNA of 10-12 h in glioblastoma multiforme (UWR3) and anaplastic astrocytoma (SW1783) cells. However, the human
uPAR
promoter was up-regulated 6-8-fold in SW1783 cells and 11-13-fold in UWR3 cells as compared with its activity in low-grade gliomas, a finding that correlates well with previous findings of increases in
uPAR
mRNA and protein levels in higher-grade gliomas.
uPAR
mRNA level was increased 11-fold over a 24-h period in low-grade glioma cell lines after treatment with phorbol myristate acetate. The region spanning -144 to -123 bp of the human
uPAR
promoter that contains the Sp-1 site and a PEA-3 element and an AP-1 site at -184 plays major roles in
uPAR
promoter activity in glioblastoma cells. Specific antibodies used in an electrophoretic mobility shift assay identified fra-1, fra-2, Jun D, and c-Jun proteins in the nuclear protein complex that bind a 51-mer containing the AP-1 consensus sequence at -184 and its flanking sequences in the
uPAR
promoter. We further studied the inhibition of
uPAR
promoter by coexpression of a transactivation domain lacking C-Jun; a dominant-negative
ERK1
and
ERK2
mutant and a dominant-negative C-raf in glioblastoma cell lines showed the repressed
uPAR
promoter activity compared with the effect of the empty expression vector. We conclude from our findings that increased transcription is the more likely mechanism underlying the increase in
uPAR
production in high-grade gliomas.
...
PMID:Regulation of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor gene in different grades of human glioma cell lines. 1123 78
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