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:2.7.12.2 (
MEK
)
18,161
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Protein phosphorylation has evolved as the most versatile posttranslational modification widely used by cells. Signal transduction pathways mediated by activation of MAP kinases and protein kinase C trigger the exit of cells from the quiscence (Go-->G1 transition). Indeed, binding of growth factors at the cell surface triggers their receptors, usually possessing a tyrosine kinase on the cytoplasmic side, to phosphorylate other molecules passing on the information sequentially to GRB2 protein, to p21ras, to c-Raf-1, to
MAP kinase kinase
, to MAP kinase, to p90rsk, to transcription factors. Activated PKC, MAP kinase, and pp90src can translocate to the nucleus where they phosphorylate a number of protein transcription regulators in a cell cycle-dependent manner or in response to cell stimulation for exit from quiescence. The cell cycle is mainly regulated by p34cdc2 or otherwise called cdc2 in association with cyclins B at G2/M and by Cdk2 in association with cyclins A, D1, and E at G1/S checkpoints; phosphorylation of histone H1 and lamins by cdc2 triggers chromosome assembly and nuclear envelope breakdown, respectively, as a prelude to mitosis. Cdc2 activities functioning as a G2/M regulator are controlled by its phosphorylation and dephosphorylation at Ser/Thr residues. MAP kinases might be the missing link in the chain connecting the Go to G1 transition with the cell cycle regulation, whereas phosphorylation of replication protein factors,
retinoblastoma
, and p53 might link the G1 to S transition with the control of DNA synthesis. A number of transcription factors are known to stimulate DNA replication, including p53, c-Myc, AP-1, Oct-1, T-antigen; the DNA binding activities of all these proteins and their interaction with other transcription factors are controlled by phosphorylation. The nuclear import of several proteins including NF kappa B, Dorsal, glucocorticoid receptor, ISGF3, rNFIL-6, T antigen, and the kinases PKC, MAP, and p90rsk, are dependent on their phosphorylation at specific sites. Histone phosphorylation stimulated at discrete stages of the cell cycle or in response to cAMP or other stimuli might induce profound changes in chromatin organization.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of transcription factors and control of the cell cycle. 754 80
Addition of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) to quiescent breast tumor-derived MCF-7 cells causes stimulation of cyclin D1 synthesis, hyperphosphorylation of the
retinoblastoma
protein pRb, DNA synthesis, and cell division. All of these effects are independent of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway since none of them is blocked by PD098059, the specific inhibitor of the MAPK activating kinase
MEK1
. This observation is consistent with the finding that the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), a strong inducer of MAPK activity in MCF-7 cells, effectively inhibits proliferation. The anti-proliferative effect of TPA in these cells may be accounted for, at least in part, by the MAPK-dependent stimulation of the synthesis of p21(WAF1/CIP1), an inhibitor of cyclin/cyclin-dependent kinase complexes. In contrast, all of the observed stimulatory effects of IGF-I on cell cycle progression, cyclin D1 synthesis, and pRb hyperphosphorylation were blocked by the specific phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor LY294002, suggesting that phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity but not MAPK activity is required for transduction of the mitogenic IGF-I signal in MCF-7 cells.
...
PMID:Mitogenic signaling of insulin-like growth factor I in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells requires phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and is independent of mitogen-activated protein kinase. 938 70
The alpha 5 alpha 1 integrin, a fibronectin receptor, has been implicated in the control of cell growth and the regulation of gene expression. We report that disruption of ligation between alpha 5 alpha 1 and fibronectin by integrin alpha 5 subunit or fibronectin monoclonal antibodies stimulated DNA synthesis in growth-arrested FET human colon carcinoma cells. This stimulation only occurred when monoclonal antibody was added in the early G1 phase of the cell cycle after release from quiescence by fresh medium. Stimulation of DNA synthesis by alpha 5 or fibronectin antibody was concentration- and time-dependent. FET cells expressed alpha 4 beta 1 integrin (another fibronectin receptor); however, addition of anti-human integrin alpha 4 monoclonal antibody had no effect on DNA synthesis. Treatment with alpha 5 monoclonal antibody led to a marked increase in the expression of CDK4 in G1 phase of the cell cycle and consequently increased the phosphorylation of
retinoblastoma
protein. alpha 5 monoclonal antibody treatment increased both cyclin A- and cyclin E-associated kinase activity which was accompanied by increased protein levels of CDK2 and cyclin A. Western blotting of immunoprecipitates demonstrated increased CDK2-cyclin E and CDK2-cyclin A complexes in cells treated with alpha 5 monoclonal antibody. Furthermore, disruption of alpha 5 alpha 1/fibronectin ligation activated mitogen-activated protein kinase p44 and p42 (extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2). Pretreatment of the cells with a specific inhibitor of
MEK
-1, PD98059, blocked the alpha 5 monoclonal antibody-induced mitogen-activated protein kinase activity. In addition PD98059 prevented alpha 5 monoclonal antibody-induced DNA synthesis. Since alpha 5 alpha 1 ligation to fibronectin is associated with decreased growth parameters, our results indicate that ligation of alpha 5 alpha 1 integrin to fibronectin results in suppressed mitogen-activated protein kinase activity which in turn inhibits cyclin-dependent kinase activity in growth-arrested cells.
...
PMID:Disruption of fibronectin binding to the alpha 5 beta 1 integrin stimulates the expression of cyclin-dependent kinases and DNA synthesis through activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase. 943 Jul 10
A constitutively active form of
mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase
(
MEK1
) was synthesized under control of a zinc-inducible promoter in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts. Zinc treatment of serum-starved cells activated extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases (ERKs) and induced expression of cyclin D1. Newly synthesized cyclin D1 assembled with cyclin-dependent kinase-4 (CDK4) to form holoenzyme complexes that phosphorylated the
retinoblastoma
protein inefficiently. Activation of the
MEK1
/ERK pathway neither triggered degradation of the CDK inhibitor kinase inhibitory protein-1 (p27(Kip1)) nor led to activation of cyclin E- and A-dependent CDK2, and such cells did not enter the DNA synthetic (S) phase of the cell division cycle. In contrast, zinc induction of active
MEK1
in cells also engineered to ectopically overexpress cyclin D1 and CDK4 subunits generated levels of cyclin D-dependent
retinoblastoma
protein kinase activity approximating those achieved in cells stimulated by serum. In this setting, p27(Kip1) was mobilized into complexes containing cyclin D1; cyclin E- and A-dependent CDK2 complexes were activated; and serum-starved cells entered S phase. Thus, although the activity of p27(Kip1) normally is canceled through a serum-dependent degradative process, overexpressed cyclin D1-CDK complexes sequestered p27(Kip1) and reduced the effective inhibitory threshold through a stoichiometric mechanism. A fraction of these cells completed S phase and divided, but they were unable to continuously proliferate, indicating that other serum-responsive factors ultimately became rate limiting for cell cycle progression. Therefore, the
MEK
/ERK pathway not only acts transcriptionally to induce the cyclin D1 gene but functions posttranslationally to regulate cyclin D1 assembly with CDK4 and to thereby help cancel p27(Kip1)-mediated inhibition.
...
PMID:Assembly of cyclin D-dependent kinase and titration of p27Kip1 regulated by mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK1). 944 90
Members of the erbB family of receptor tyrosine kinases are commonly overexpressed in human breast cancer. However, the relative contribution of particular signalling pathways activated downstream of these receptors to the mitogenic response of transformed breast epithelial cells remains poorly characterized. Administration of heregulin-beta2 (HRG), a ligand for erbB3 and erbB4, to growth arrested T-47D human breast cancer cells leads to activation of both the PI3-kinase and MAP kinase signalling pathways and potent stimulation of cell cycle progression. Specific inhibitors were used to assess the role of these pathways in HRG-induced mitogenesis and to identify underlying mechanisms in terms of regulation of gene expression. Treatment with the
MEK
inhibitor PD98059 led to a complete block of HRG-induced entry into S-phase, whilst administration of the PI3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin resulted in only modest inhibition. In addition, administration of PD98059 8 h after HRG was equipotent with simultaneous administration in inhibiting entry into S-phase. However, delaying addition for 14-16 h after HRG, when the cells were entering S-phase, was without effect. HRG stimulation led to sequential induction of c-myc, cyclin D1, cyclin E and cyclin A gene expression and hyperphosphorylation of the
retinoblastoma
protein pRB. p21 (WAF1/CIP1/SDI1) gene expression was rapidly induced by HRG, but significant changes in p27 (KIP1) protein levels were not detected. Preincubation with PD98059 blocked the HRG-dependent induction of cyclin D1 mRNA, p21 and c-Myc protein and pRB phosphorylation. These findings demonstrate that
MEK
activation is critical to HRG-induced S-phase entry in these cells whilst PI3-kinase plays a minor role. Moreover, these data are compatible with HRG-induced activation of
MEK
being critical for a mid-G1 transition point and implicate c-myc and cyclin D1 as key targets of the MAP kinase pathway involved in this response.
...
PMID:Inhibition of the MAP kinase cascade blocks heregulin-induced cell cycle progression in T-47D human breast cancer cells. 965 48
This communication describes an extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase (
MEK
)-dependent signal transduction pathway that prevents the terminal differentiation of a hemopoietic cell line. Both PMA and the cell-permeable ceramide, C2-ceramide, caused differentiation of U937 cells, but with distinct cell morphology and CD11b/CD14 surface expression. While PMA activated extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), a downstream kinase of Raf-
MEK
signaling, C2-ceramide activated c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK), an anchor kinase of stress-induced signaling. Furthermore, only C2-ceramide stimulated an induction of cell cycle arrest that was associated with stable expression of p21CIP1 and
retinoblastoma
nuclear phosphoprotein dephosphorylation. Expression of p21CIP1 and JNK activation were also observed in sphingosine-treated cells, whereas sphingosine did not induce detectable differentiation. Concomitant stimulation with C2-ceramide and PMA resulted in the PMA phenotype, and cell cycle arrest was absent. ERK activation was enhanced by C2-ceramide plus PMA stimulation, whereas the activation of JNK was aborted. Strikingly, the inhibition of
MEK
with PD98059 altered the phenotype of C2-ceramide- and PMA-stimulated U937 cells to that of cells treated with C2-ceramide alone. Thus, ERK and JNK pathways deliver distinct signals, and the ERK pathway is dominant to the JNK cascade. Furthermore, differentiation and cell cycle arrest caused by C2-ceramide rely on independent signaling pathways, and JNK is an unlikely signaling element for this differentiation. Importantly, during C2-ceramide and PMA costimulation, the JNK pathway is not simply blocked by ERK activation; rather, cross-talk between these MAP kinase pathways acts to simultaneously augment ERK activity and down-regulate JNK activity.
...
PMID:The mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway inhibits ceramide-induced terminal differentiation of a human monoblastic leukemia cell line, U937. 968 2
Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) is a potent mitogen for osteoblasts. The primary signaling mechanism involved in mediating this proliferative effect of IGF-1 is not well defined. The roles of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1) and cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (Cdk2) kinases in the IGF-1-induced proliferative signaling pathway of human osteosarcoma MG63 cells were investigated using a selective inhibitor of
MEK
, PD98059, and a Cdk inhibitor, olomoucine. Treatment of MG63 cells with PD98059 and olomoucine inhibited IGF-1-stimulated proliferation of these cells and induced cell cycle arrest at G0/G1. PD98059 significantly abolished IGF-1-stimulated kinase activity of ERK1 in a dose-dependent manner. PD98059 also inhibited the kinase activity of Cdk2 in IGF-1 stimulated cells, although the inhibition by olomoucine was much greater. The extent of inhibition of Cdk2 activity by PD98059 and olomoucine was consistent with their effects on cell proliferation and cell cycle. Cyclin A was complexed with Cdk2 in unstimulated MG63 cells, but Cdk2 kinase activity in the complex was up-regulated only in IGF-1-treated cells. This was consistent with an observed IGF-1-stimulated hyperphosphorylation of
retinoblastoma
protein (pRb) with the possibility that the activated Cdk2 kinase is involved in phosphorylation of pRb in IGF-1-induced cell proliferation. Taken together, these results suggest that the
MEK
/ERK pathway act in a positive regulatory fashion to activate Cdk2 in IGF-1-induced mitogenesis in osteoblasts.
...
PMID:ERK pathway mediates the activation of Cdk2 in IGF-1-induced proliferation of human osteosarcoma MG-63 cells. 1023 73
We have previously shown that glucocorticoids inhibit mitogen-stimulated proliferation of human cultured airway smooth muscle (ASM) cells. The present study analyzed the effect of glucocorticoids on key regulatory pathways leading to passage of cells through the restriction point of the cell cycle, including those mediated by extracellular-regulated kinases (ERK) 1 and 2; the ERK upstream regulator MAPK kinase (
MEK1
); cyclin D1 levels; and levels and phosphorylation of
retinoblastoma
protein (pRb). Fluticasone propionate, a new inhaled glucocorticoid, was at least 10-fold more potent than dexamethasone in inhibiting thrombin-stimulated DNA synthesis and increases in cell number. Thrombin-stimulated increases in the levels and hyperphosphorylation of pRb were inhibited by glucocorticoids, which also reduced thrombin-stimulated cyclin D1 protein and messenger RNA (mRNA) levels. PD98059 (10 microM), an inhibitor of
MEK1
activation, markedly attenuated thrombin stimulation of ERK activity and phosphorylation, DNA synthesis, and cyclin D1 levels. However, glucocorticoids had no effect on ERK activity or phosphorylation at 5 min, 2 h, or 12 h after addition of thrombin. In conclusion, glucocorticoid-induced reduction of cyclin D1 mRNA and protein levels, and of pRb phosphorylation, is sufficient to account for inhibition of ASM proliferation. Furthermore, these inhibitory effects of glucocorticoids on cyclin D1 and pRb occur on a component of the mitogen signaling cascade that is either downstream of or parallel to the ERK pathway.
...
PMID:Glucocorticoids inhibit proliferation, cyclin D1 expression, and retinoblastoma protein phosphorylation, but not activity of the extracellular-regulated kinases in human cultured airway smooth muscle. 1038 95
The inner membrane-bound protein Ras integrates various extracellular signals that are subsequently communicated from the cytoplasm to the nucleus via the Raf/
MEK
/MAPK cascade. Here we show that the
retinoblastoma
protein pRb, previously reported to be a nuclear target of this pathway, can in turn influence the activation state of Ras. Rb-deficient fibroblasts display elevated levels (up to 30-fold) of activated Ras during G(1). Expression of wild-type pRb or a number of pRb mutants defective in E2F regulation reverses this effect. We provide evidence that the mid-G(1) activation of Ras in Rb-deficient cells, which occurs at the level of guanine nucleotide binding, differs from that of epidermal growth factor-induced stimulation of Ras, being dependent on protein synthesis. The aberrant levels of Ras activity associated with loss of pRb may be responsible for the differentiation defects in Rb-deficient cells, because suppression of Ras activity in Rb(-/-) fibroblasts restores the transactivation function of MyoD and the expression of a late marker of skeletal muscle differentiation. These data suggest that nuclear-cytoplasmic communication between pRb and Ras is bidirectional.
...
PMID:The retinoblastoma protein is linked to the activation of Ras. 1052 61
We have used quinazoline inhibitors of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase to study the link between EGFR signaling and G(1) to S traverse. Treatment of A431 and MDA-468 human tumor cells with 0.1-10 microM AG-1478 inhibited basal and ligand-stimulated EGFR phosphorylation without a decrease in receptor content, EGF-binding sites, or binding affinity. Incubation of A431 cells with 0.1-1 microM AG-1517 abrogated (125)I-EGF internalization. Both AG-1478 and AG-1517 markedly inhibited A431 and MDA-468 colony formation in soft agarose at concentrations between 0.01 and 1 microM. Daily injections of AG-1478 at 50 mg/kg delayed A431 tumor formation in athymic nude mice. A transient exposure of A431 cells to AG-1478 resulted in a dose-dependent up-regulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27, down-regulation of cyclin D1 and of active MAPK, and hypophosphorylation of the
retinoblastoma
protein (Rb). These changes were temporally associated with recruitment of tumor cells in G(1) phase and a marked reduction of the proportion of cells in S phase. Upon removal of the kinase inhibitor, EGFR and Rb phosphorylation and the levels of cyclin D1 protein were quickly restored, but the cells did not reenter S phase until p27 protein levels were decreased. Phosphorothioate p27 oligonucleotides decreased p27 protein in A431 cells and abrogated the quinazoline-mediated G(1) arrest. Treatment of A431 cells with PD 098509, a synthetic inhibitor of
MEK1
, inhibited MAPK activity without inducing G(1) arrest or increasing the levels of p27. However, treatment with LY 294002, an inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K), inhibited basal Akt activity, up-regulated p27, and recruited cells in G(1). These data suggest that p27 is required for the growth arrest that follows interruption of the EGFR kinase in receptor-overexpressing cells. In addition, the G(1) arrest and up-regulation of p27 resulting from EGFR blockade are not due to the interruption of MAPK, but to the interruption of constitutively active PI3K function.
...
PMID:Reversible G(1) arrest induced by inhibition of the epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase requires up-regulation of p27(KIP1) independent of MAPK activity. 1070 62
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>