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Query: EC:2.7.12.2 (
MEK
)
18,161
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Neurotrophins such as nerve growth factor (NGF) regulate neuronal survival during development and are neuroprotective in certain models of injury to both the peripheral and the central nervous system. Although many effects of neurotrophins involve long-term changes in gene expression, several recent reports have focused on rapid effects of neurotrophins that do not involve synthesis of new gene products. Because enhanced formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) represents one consequence of many insults that produce neuronal death, we hypothesized that neurotrophins might influence neuronal function and survival through acute alterations in the production of ROS. Using an oxidation-sensitive compound, dihydrorhodamine, we measured ROS formation in a central nervous system-derived neuronal cell line (
GT1
-1 trk) and in superior cervical ganglion neurons, both of which express the transmembrane NGF receptor tyrosine kinase, trkA. There was enhanced production of ROS in both cell types in the absence of NGF that was rapidly inhibited by application of NGF; complete inhibition of ROS generation in
GT1
-1 trk cells occurred within 10 min. NGF suppression of ROS formation was prevented by PD 098059, a specific inhibitor of
MEK
(mitogen/extracellular receptor kinase, which phosphorylates mitogen-activated protein kinase). The observation that NGF acutely blocks ROS formation in neurons through activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway suggests a novel mechanism for rapid neurotrophin signaling, and has implications for understanding neuroprotective and other effects of neurotrophins.
...
PMID:Rapid suppression of free radical formation by nerve growth factor involves the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. 910 9
The
GT1
-1 GnRH neuronal cell lines exhibit highly differentiated properties of GnRH neurons. We have used
GT1
-1 cells to study the roles of norepinephrine (NE), membrane depolarization, calcium influx, and phorbol esters in the regulation of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase. NE, which is known to stimulate the release of GnRH, induced MAP kinase activity, the tyrosine phosphorylation of MAP kinase, and
MAP kinase kinase
activity. Forskolin led to activation of MAP kinase comparable with that induced by NE, and a selective inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, H8, attenuated the NE-induced activation of MAP kinase. On the other hand, elimination of extracellular calcium by EGTA completely blocked NE-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of MAP kinase, and a selective inhibitor of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase, KN-62, attenuated the NE-induced activation of MAP kinase. Furthermore, depolarization of
GT1
-1 cells with 75 mM KCl, 10 microM BayK 8644, or 1 microM calcium ionophore (A23187) induced rapid tyrosine phosphorylation of MAP kinase. The omission of calcium from the extracellular medium completely abolished these effects of tyrosine phosphorylation of MAP kinase. Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) also induced MAP kinase activity, but pretreatment of the cultured cells with PMA to down-regulate protein kinase C did not abolish the activation of MAP kinase by NE. In addition, although phosphorylation of Raf-1 kinase was stimulated by PMA, this phosphorylation was not induced by either NE or A23187. These results demonstrate that NE activates MAP kinase directly in
GT1
-1 cells, and that the effect of NE is mediated by increase in the cAMP level and by calcium influx, but not by PMA-sensitive protein kinase C or Raf-1 kinase.
...
PMID:Norepinephrine stimulates mitogen-activated protein kinase activity in GT1-1 gonadotropin-releasing hormone neuronal cell lines. 938 11
Melatonin plays a significant role in the control of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. Using the
GT1
-7 cell line, an in vitro model of GnRH-secreting neurons of the hypothalamus, we examined the potential signal transduction pathways activated by melatonin directly at the level of the
GT1
-7 neuron. We found that melatonin inhibits forskolin-stimulated adenosine 3'-, 5'-cyclic monophosphate accumulation in
GT1
-7 cells through an inhibitory G protein. Melatonin induced protein kinase C activity by 1.65-fold over basal levels, increased the phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2 proteins, and activated c-fos and junB mRNA expression in
GT1
-7 cells. Using the protein kinase A inhibitor H-89, the protein kinase C inhibitor bisindolylmaleimide, and the
mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase
inhibitor PD98059, we found that the melatonin-mediated cyclical regulation of GnRH mRNA expression may involve the protein kinase C and the extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2 pathways, but not the protein kinase A pathway. We found that melatonin suppresses GnRH secretion by approximately 45% in the
GT1
-7 neurons. However, in the presence of the inhibitors H-89, bisindolylmaleimide, and PD98059 melatonin was unable to suppress GnRH secretion. These results provide insights into the potential signal transduction mechanisms involved in the control of GnRH gene expression and secretion by melatonin.
...
PMID:Melatonin receptor activation regulates GnRH gene expression and secretion in GT1-7 GnRH neurons. Signal transduction mechanisms. 1168 91
Recent studies suggest that adhesion-related kinase (Ark) plays a role in gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neuronal physiology. Ark promotes migration of GnRH neurons via Rac GTPase and concomitantly suppresses GnRH gene expression via homeodomain and myocyte enhancer factor-2 (MEF2) transcription factors. Here, we investigated the signaling cascade required for Ark inhibition of the GnRH promoter in
GT1
-7 GnRH neuronal cells. Ark repression was blocked by the
MEK
/ERK pathway inhibitor, PD98059, and dominant negative
MEK1
but was unaffected by dominant negative Ras. Inhibitors of the Rho family GTPases, Clostridium difficile toxin B (Rho/Rac/Cdc42 inhibitor) and Clostridium sordellii lethal toxin (Rac/Cdc42 inhibitor), blocked Ark inhibition of GnRH transcription. Moreover, dominant negative Rac blunted both Ark activation of ERK and repression of the GnRH promoter, demonstrating an essential role for Rac in coupling Ark to ERK activation. Like Ark, a constitutively active mutant of Rac suppressed GnRH transcription in an ERK-dependent manner. Finally, Ark-mediated repression was significantly attenuated by a dominant negative MEF2C, whereas repression induced by constitutively active Rac was unaffected, indicating that MEF2 proteins are not targets of the Ark --> Rac -->
MEK
--> ERK cascade. The data suggest that Ark suppresses GnRH gene expression via the coordinated activation of a Rac --> ERK signaling pathway and a distinct MEF2- dependent mechanism.
...
PMID:Adhesion-related kinase repression of gonadotropin-releasing hormone gene expression requires Rac activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase pathway. 1213 87
In the present study, we investigated the selective role of protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms on neurite outgrowth of the
GT1
hypothalamic neurons using several PKC isoform-selective inhibitors and transfection-based expression of enhanced green fluorescence protein (EGFP)-fused PKC isoforms. 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) induced neurite outgrowth and growth cone formation, effects that were blocked by GF 109203X (a PKC inhibitor), safingolTM(a PKCalpha-selective inhibitor), but not by rottlerinTM (a PKCdelta-selective inhibitor), indicating that PKCalpha may be selectively involved in neurite outgrowth and cytoskeletal changes of filamentous actin and beta-tubulin. To define the differential localization of PKC isoforms, EGFP-tagged PKCalpha, PKCgamma, and PKCdelta were transfected into
GT1
neuronal cells. TPA treatment induced relocalization of PKCalpha-EGFP to growth cones and cell-cell adhesion sites, PKCgamma-EGFP to the nucleus, and PKCdelta-EGFP to the membrane ruffle, respectively. An EGFP chimera of the catalytic domain of PKCalpha (PKCalpha-Cat-EGFP), the expression of which was inducible by doxycycline, was employed to directly ascertain the effect of PKCalpha enzymatic activity on neurite outgrowth of
GT1
cells. Transient transfection of PKCalpha-Cat-EGFP alone increased the neurite-outgrowth and doxycycline treatment further augmented the number of neurite-containing cells. We also examined the involvement of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) MAP kinase in TPA-induced neurite outgrowth. TPA treatment increased phosphorylated ERK MAP kinase, but not p38 MAP kinase. Specific inhibition of PKCalpha with safingol blocked the phosphorylation of ERK induced by TPA. More importantly, both neurite outgrowth and phosphorylation of ERK by TPA were blocked by PD 098059, a specific inhibitor of
MEK
(MAP kinase/ERK kinase-1), but not by SB203580, a specific inhibitor of p38 MAP kinase. These results demonstrate that PKCalpha isoform-specific activation is involved in neurite outgrowth of
GT1
hypothalamic neuronal cells via ERK, but not the p38 MAP kinase signal pathway.
...
PMID:Participation of protein kinase C alpha isoform and extracellular signal-regulated kinase in neurite outgrowth of GT1 hypothalamic neurons. 1247 95
The effects of lead on the signal transduction pathways that may be involved in the release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) from neurons in the hypothalamus have not been well defined. Using the
GT1
-7 cell line, an in vitro model for GnRH-secreting neurons, we examined signal transduction pathways directly affected by lead. We found that lead-induced phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2 (ERK1 and ERK2), as well as p90RSK and cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB), but did not induce IkappaB degradation.
MEK1
/2 inhibitor (PD98059) suppressed lead-induced ERK and p90RSK activation. Neither PKC inhibitors (Go6983, Go6976) nor CaMKII inhibitor (KN-62) had a pronounced effect on lead-induced ERK1 and ERK2 phosphorylation. However,
MEK1
/2 inhibitor, CaMKII inhibitor, and PKC inhibitor significantly suppressed lead-induced CREB phosphorylation. These results indicate that lead-activated PKC, CaMKII and
MEK
/ERK/p90RSK pathways simultaneously, all of which contributed to CREB phosphorylation. Our results also indicate that lead-induced p90RSK and CREB activation does not alter expression of early response genes like c-fos. We conclude that lead activates PKC, CaMKII or
MEK
-ERK-p90RSK pathways in
GT1
-7 cells, leading to CREB phosphorylation and modulation of gene expression.
...
PMID:Lead-induced cell signaling cascades in GT1-7 cells. 1283 8
Astrocytes have become a focal point for research in neurobiology, especially regarding their purported ability to regulate neuronal communication and survival. The present study addressed a poorly understood but important focus in this area, the mechanism(s) underlying astrocyte-induced survival of neurons. The results of the study show that soluble factors in astrocyte-conditioned media (ACM) protect murine
GT1
-7 neurons from serum deprivation-induced cell death and that this neuroprotection is correlated with enhanced activation/phosphorylation of the AP-1 transcription factor, c-JunSer-63. A parallel and correlated activation of the upstream kinases, c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and
mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase
-4 (MKK4) was also demonstrated. Furthermore, co-administration of JNK inhibitors, but not a
MEK
inhibitor, significantly attenuated ACM-induced phosphorylation of c-JunSer-63 and blocked its neuroprotective action. Gel shift analysis demonstrated that ACM enhanced AP-1 binding, an effect that appears functionally important, since an AP-1 binding inhibitor significantly attenuated the neuroprotective action of ACM. Further studies implicated transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta1 and TGF-beta2 as critical active soluble factors released by astrocytes, since both were demonstrated in ACM, and immunoneutralization of the conditioned media with a panspecific TGF-beta antibody significantly attenuated the enhanced AP-1 binding and neuroprotective action of the ACM. Furthermore, exogenous application of TGF-beta1 and TGF-beta2 was found to enhance c-JunSer-63 phosphorylation and to be neuroprotective, and co-administration of JNK inhibitors or an AP-1 binding inhibitor blocked TGF-beta-induced neuroprotection. Taken together, these studies suggest that astrocytes can protect neurons from serum deprivation-induced cell death, at least in part, by release of TGF-beta and activation of a c-Jun/AP-1 protective pathway.
...
PMID:Astrocyte protection of neurons: role of transforming growth factor-beta signaling via a c-Jun-AP-1 protective pathway. 1288 49
Prions represent a unique class of infectious agents in which the normal cellular prion protein (PrPC) is converted to an abnormal isoform (PrPSc), which accumulates in the brain and constitutes the major, if not the only, component of the infectious particle. Factors that still remain to be identified may facilitate the conversion of PrPC to PrPSc. In the present study, we first demonstrated that a growth factor of the neurotrophin family, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), stimulates the formation of PrPSc in a gonadotropin-releasing hormone-secreting neuronal cell line (
GT1
-1 cells) infected with the Rocky Mountain Laboratory (RML) strain of scrapie as determined by Western blot analysis. We then observed that the prion-infected cells can be cleared from PrPSc by treatment with three inhibitors of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1/2 (
MEK1
/2) [1,4-diamino-2,3-dicyano-1,4-bis(o-aminophenylmercapto)butadiene and 2-(2-amino-3-methyoxyphenyl)-4H-1-benzopyran-4-one, as well as alpha-[amino[(4-aminophenyl)thio]methylene]-2-(trifluoromethyl) benzeneacetonitrile, which passes the blood-brain barrier], a component of one of the intracellular signaling pathways activated by BDNF. The
MEK1
/2 inhibitors were also efficient in clearing PrPSc from prion-infected
GT1
-1 cells stimulated to accumulate high levels of PrPSc by enhanced serum concentrations in the medium or by the use of a serum-free neuron-specific neurobasal medium. PrPSc did not reappear in the cultures within 5 weeks after completion of treatment. We conclude that inhibitors of the
MEK1
/2 pathway can efficiently and probably irreversibly clear PrP(Sc) from prion-infected cells. The
MEK
pathway may therefore be a suitable target for therapeutic intervention in prion diseases.
...
PMID:Inhibitors of the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1/2 signaling pathway clear prion-infected cells from PrPSc. 1616 27
Hypothalamic astrocytes secrete TGF-beta and 3 alpha,5 alpha-tetrahydro progesterone (3 alpha,5 alpha-THP) in culture. When the astrocyte-conditioned medium (ACM) was incubated with the hypothalamic cell line
GT1
-7, it resulted in the secretion of GnRH. Immunoneutralization with TGF-beta antibody or ultra-filteration with a 10 kDa cut off filter resulted in attenuation of the GnRH releasing ability of ACM, indicating that TGF-beta was a major factor involved with GnRH release. Treatment with estrogens increases TGF-beta secretion. These observations indicate a significant role of astrocytes in GnRH secretion. Serum-deprivation results in the death of
GT1
-7 neurons in culture and addition of ACM or TGF-beta to the culture, attenuates cell death. The mechanism of protection from cell death appears to involve phosphorylation of
MKK4
, JNK, c-Jun(Ser63), and enhancement of AP-1 binding. Co-administration of JNK inhibitors, but not
MEK
inhibitors attenuated ACM or TGF-beta-induced c-Jun(Ser63) phosphorylation and their neuroprotective effects. These studies suggest that astrocytes can protect neurons, at least in part, by the release of TGF-beta and activation of a c-Jun/AP-1 protective pathway.
...
PMID:Role of astrocytes in reproduction and neuroprotection. 1638 90
Orexin A, a recently discovered hypothalamic peptide, has been shown to have a stimulatory effect on release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) from rat hypothalamic explants in vitro. However, it is presently unclear whether in vivo this effect is mediated directly at the level of the GnRH neuron, or via multiple afferent neuronal connections. Therefore, in the present study, we investigated the direct action of orexin A on GnRH neurons using the immortalized GnRH-secreting
GT1
-7 hypothalamic cells. Orexin-1 receptor (OX1R) expression was detected in
GT1
-7 cells by RT-PCR and Western blot. Results showed that 0.1-1 nM orexin A, when administered in culture media for 4 h, can significantly stimulate GnRH mRNA expression in
GT1
-7 cells (p < 0.05). Administration of 1 microM OX1R antagonist, SB-334867, completely blocked the observed orexin A responses in these cells, indicating that orexin A stimulation of GnRH neurons is specifically through OX1R. Moreover, 0.1 nM orexin A stimulated GnRH release after 30-45 min. To examine possible signal transduction pathways involved in mediating these effects, a
MEK
inhibitor (UO-126), PKC inhibitor (calphostin C), and PKA inhibitor (H-89), were used, with each blocking orexin A-induced GnRH transcription and release from immortalized cells. Collectively, our results show that orexin A is capable of directly stimulating GnRH transcription and neuropeptide release from these immortalized hypothalamic neurons, and that the effects of orexin A appear to be mediated via the OX1R, coupled with activation of the PKC-, MAPK- and PKA-signaling pathways. It is suggested that the stimulatory effect of orexin A on GnRH transcription and release may also occur directly at the level of GnRH neurons in vivo.
...
PMID:Orexin A induces GnRH gene expression and secretion from GT1-7 hypothalamic GnRH neurons. 1719 2
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