Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.12.2 (MEK)
18,161 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The pleiotropic cytokine tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha) controls the expression of multiple gene products in macrophages and plays an important role in host defense. TNF alpha is recognized by the receptors, CD120a (p55) and CD120b (p75). Ligation of CD120a (p55) by TNF alpha or by anti-receptor agonistic antibodies initiates signal transduction leading to the activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) (p42mapk/erk2 and p44mapk/erk1). Phosphorylation and activation of MAPK are mediated by MAPK kinase (MEK), a family of Thr/Tyr kinases. In this study, we investigated the preferential involvement of the MEK isoforms MEK1 and MEK2 in the activation of p42mapk/erk2 in mouse macrophages stimulated with TNF alpha. Exposure of macrophages to TNF alpha stimulated a time-dependent increase in the activity of MEK1 as measured by an in vitro kinase assay using kinase-inactive p42mapk/erk2 (rMAPKkd) as substrate in the presence of gamma-[32P]ATP. Maximal activation of MEK1 was detected at 10 min poststimulation and coincided with maximal transphosphorylation of Tyr and Thr residues of rMAPKkd. By contrast, there was no evidence of MEK2 activation in macrophages in response to TNF alpha. These data suggest that MEK1 is the preferred substrate for MEK kinase, the upstream kinase implicated in activation of the MAPK pathway in macrophages by TNF alpha.
...
PMID:Preferential involvement of MEK1 in the tumor necrosis factor-alpha-induced activation of p42mapk/erk2 in mouse macrophages. 749 90

Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) is a pleiotropic cytokine produced predominantly by macrophages. In addition, macrophages respond to TNF-alpha by differentiating to express different groups of gene products. Our laboratory recently showed that the context in which TNF-alpha is recognized by macrophages dramatically impacts the pattern of gene expression and hence investigating the mechanism of TNF-alpha signal transduction will be important in understanding how this molecule regulates macrophage differentiation. TNF-alpha is recognized by two cell surface receptors, CD120a (p55) and CD120b (p75) that belong to the TNF/NGF receptor family. Signalling is initiated by receptor multimerization in the plane of the plasma membrane. The initial signalling events activated by receptor cross-linking are unknown although activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade occurs shortly after ligand binding to CD120a (p55). We have investigated the upstream kinases that mediate the activation of p42mapk/erk2 following cross-linking of CD120a (p55) in mouse macrophages. Exposure of mouse macrophages to TNF-alpha stimulated a time-dependent increase in the activity of MEK1, that temporally preceded peak activation of p42mapk/erk2. MEKs, dual specificity T/Y kinases, act as a convergence point for several signalling pathways including Ras/Raf, MEKK and Mos. Incubation of macrophages with TNF-alpha was found to transiently stimulate an MEKK that peaked in activity within 30 sec of exposure and progressively declined towards basal levels by 5 min. By contrast, under these conditions, activation of either c-Raf-1 or Raf-B was not detected. These data suggest that the activation of the MAPK cascade in response to TNF-alpha is mediated by the sequential activation of an MEKK and MEK1 in a c-Raf-1 and Raf-B-independent fashion. The implications of these findings will be discussed in the context of the regulation of macrophage gene expression.
...
PMID:TNF-alpha-induced regulation and signalling in macrophages. 893 52

The cellular mechanisms that underlie nerve growth factor (NGF) induced increase in Ca(2+)-channel current in adult bullfrog sympathetic B-neurons were examined by whole cell recording techniques. Cells were maintained at low density in neuron-enriched, defined-medium, serum-free tissue culture for 6 days in the presence or absence of NGF (200 ng/ml). The increase in Ba2+ current (IBa) density induced by NGF was attenuated by the RNA synthesis inhibitor cordycepin (20 microM), by the DNA transcription inhibitor actinomycin D (0.01 microgram/ml), by inhibitors of Ras isoprenylation (perillic acid 0.1-1.0 mM or alpha-hydroxyfarnesylphosphonic acid 10-100 microM), by tyrosine kinase inhibitors genistein (20 microM) or lavendustin A (1 microM), and by PD98059 (10-100 microM), an inhibitor of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase. Inhibitors of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) pathway (wortmannin, 100 nM, or LY29400, 100 microM) were ineffective as were inhibitors of phospholipase C gamma (U73122 or neomycin, both 100 microM). The effect of NGF persisted in Ca(2+)-free medium that contained 1.8 mM Mg2+ and 2 mM ethylene glycol-bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid. It was mimicked by a Trk antibody that was capable of inducing neurite outgrowth in explant cultures of bullfrog sympathetic ganglion. Antibodies raised against the low-affinity p75 neurotrophin receptor were ineffective in blocking the effect of NGF on IBa. These results suggest that NGF-induced increase in Ca2+ channel current in adult sympathetic neurons results, at least in part, from new channel synthesis after Trk activation of Ras and mitogen activated protein kinase by a mechanism that is independent of extracellular Ca2+.
...
PMID:Involvement of Ras/MAP kinase in the regulation of Ca2+ channels in adult bullfrog sympathetic neurons by nerve growth factor. 974 44

Adult rat chromaffin cells may proliferate or extend neurites when stimulated by nerve growth factor (NGF) but their response is predominantly proliferative, making them a unique model for studying how mitogenic specificity is achieved. We examined contributions of the NGF receptors trk and p75 and of the major NGF signaling pathways to proliferation versus neurite outgrowth. The type of initial NGF response does not correlate with intensity of immunoreactivity for trk or p75. However, proliferation is initiated at lower NGF concentrations than neurite outgrowth, suggesting that it requires a less intense signal. Mitogenic cooperativity between receptors at low NGF concentrations is suggested by inhibitory effects of p75-blocking antibodies, but responses to trk-agonist antibody indicate that trk activation alone can induce proliferation. NGF-induced phosphorylation of ras-mediated mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) Erk1 and Erk2 is as prolonged in normal chromaffin cells as in PC12 cells, where NGF is neuritogenic. Trk-agonist antibody, which is as mitogenic as NGF but less neuritogenic, causes equally prolonged but less intense ERK phosphorylation. The MAPK kinase(MEK-1) inhibitor PD98059 partially inhibits Erk phosphorylation and does not inhibit chromaffin cell proliferation, while depolarization selectively inhibits proliferation without blocking Erk phosphorylation. Proliferation is markedly reduced by the phosphoinositol-3 (PI-3) kinase inhibitor LY294002 while downregulation of protein kinase C (PKC) causes no change. These findings suggest that low-level, rather than short-duration, stimulation of NGF signaling pathways causes NGF to be mitogenic. Ras-mediated MAPK activation may be more critical in neurite outgrowth than in proliferation and PI-3 kinase may be the major mitogenic determinant.
...
PMID:Nerve growth factor receptor signaling in proliferation of normal adult rat chromaffin cells. 993 50

Nerve growth factor (NGF) induces differentiation of the rat pheochromocytoma clone (PC12) by activating the high affinity receptor, p140(trkA), linked to mitogen-activated protein kinase. While the physiological role of the low affinity NGF receptor (p75) has not been clearly defined, this receptor promotes activation of nuclear factor (NF) kappaB in Schwann cells. PC12 cells express the A(2A) adenosine receptor (AR), whose expression is significantly decreased by NGF treatment. In this study, we determined whether TrkA or p75 is involved in NGF-mediated regulation of A(2A)AR expression. NGF treatment decreased A(2A)AR in a time-dependent manner, with maximal effects observed by 1 day, and continued down-regulation of the receptor for up to 3 days in the presence of NGF. The decrease in A(2A)AR was associated with a more delayed decrease in the steady-state levels of the A(2A)AR mRNA. Down-regulation of the A(2A)AR at 1 day was mimicked by activators of NFkappaB, such as H(2)O(2), and ceramide, and was attenuated by the inhibitor pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate or following transient transfection of PC12 cells with a dominant negative IkappaBalpha mutant. Moreover, NGF stimulated nuclear accumulation of p65 subunits of NFkappaB (but not p50 subunits) in PC12 cells, as determined by electrophoretic mobility shift assays and by Western blotting. In contrast, inhibition of TrkA by AG879 or of TrkA-dependent mitogen-activated protein kinase mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase with PD98059 blocked PC12 cell differentiation without affecting A(2A)AR down-regulation, suggesting dissociation between these two phenomena. Taken together, these data provide strong support for the involvement of the p75/NFkappaB pathway in NGF-mediated down-regulation of A(2A)AR in PC12 cells.
...
PMID:A role of p75 in NGF-mediated down-regulation of the A(2A) adenosine receptors in PC12 cells. 1053 99

We reported previously that bone marrow granulocytes respond to small amounts of enterobacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) via a CD14-independent and TLR4-mediated mechanism by de novo expression of an inducible receptor (CD14) and by down-modulation of a constitutive receptor (L-selectin). In this report we address another effect of LPS: the down-regulation of receptors for tumor necrosis factor-alpha. In mouse bone marrow cells (BMC), this down-regulation is detectable soon (20 min) after exposure of the cells to low levels (0.5 ng/ml) of LPS. This temperature-dependent effect is rather selective for LPS and requires the presence of a conventional lipid A structure in the LPS molecule and a functional TLR4 molecule in the cells. The down-modulation, due to a shedding of the receptors, is blocked by p38 MAPK inhibitors, by a furin inhibitor, and by three metalloproteinase inhibitors (BB-3103, TIMP-2, and TIMP-3). In contrast, inhibitors of MEK, protein kinase C, cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and kinases of the Src family do not block the shedding. Analysis of BMC from mice lacking tumor necrosis factor receptor-1 (CD120a-/-) or tumor necrosis factor receptor-2 (CD120b-/-) indicates that the LPS-induced shedding is specific for CD120b. Thus, exposure of BMC to LPS triggers a rapid shedding of CD120b via a protein kinase C- and Src-independent pathway mediated by p38 MAPK, furin, and metalloproteinase. The additive effects of furin and metalloproteinase inhibitors suggest that these enzymes are involved in parallel shedding pathways.
...
PMID:TLR4-dependent lipopolysaccharide-induced shedding of tumor necrosis factor receptors in mouse bone marrow granulocytes. 1266 67

In neuroblastoma (NB), expression of the TrkA receptor is correlated with good prognosis while N-myc amplification is correlated with poor prognosis. Decreased N-myc levels are key to controlling growth and inducing differentiation in NB cells. In this report, we detail mechanisms by which nerve growth factor (NGF) decreases N-myc levels in TrkA-transfected NB cells and its effect on NB cell proliferation. NGF induced a decrease in N-myc mRNA within 1 h of treatment that occurred in the presence of cycloheximide. The stability of N-myc mRNA was not affected by NGF, indicating a transcriptional control of N-myc mRNA by NGF. NGF but not brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) decreased N-myc levels demonstrating that p75 alone was not involved. The NGF-induced decrease in N-myc expression was blocked by the Trk tyrosine kinase (TK) antagonist K252a indicating that signals transduced by Trk TK downstream targets were involved. Pharmacologic inhibitors implicated the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) path. This was supported by the finding that expression of a constitutively activated component of the MAPK path, MAPK kinase (MEK), decreased N-myc levels. Alterations in the level of N-myc are known to alter NB cell cycle progression by affecting the levels of E2Fs and p27(kip1). Consistent with these findings, NGF decreased NB cell number and decreased cyclin E-dependent kinase activity via an increase in p27(kip1). Thus, our results indicate that the MAP kinase is selectively involved in the NGF-induced N-myc downregulation through a transcriptional mechanism. Furthermore, NGF affects the time required for 15N TrkA cells to complete a replication cycle by decreasing N-myc, E2Fs, cyclin E kinase activity and increasing p27(kip1) binding to cyclin E kinase.
...
PMID:NGF activation of TrkA decreases N-myc expression via MAPK path leading to a decrease in neuroblastoma cell number. 1469 55

The mechanisms of neuronal differentiation in PC12 cells are still not completely understood. Here, we report that the tumor suppressor PTEN has a profound effect on differentiation by affecting several pathways involved in nerve growth factor (NGF) signaling. When overexpressed in PC12 cells, PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homologue deleted on chromosome ten) blocked neurite outgrowth induced by NGF. In addition, these cells failed to demonstrate the transient mitogenic response to NGF, as well as subsequent growth arrest. Consistent with these observations was a finding that PTEN significantly inhibits NGF-mediated activation of the members of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK)/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT signaling pathways, crucial for these processes. While exploring possible mechanisms of PTEN effects on NGF signaling, we discovered a significant down-regulation of both high-affinity (TrkA) and low-affinity (p75) NGF receptors in PTEN-overexpressing clones. Subsequent microarray analysis of several independent clonal isolates revealed a myriad of neuronal genes to be affected by PTEN. All of these changes were validated by quantitative PCR. Of particular interest were the genes for the key enzymes of the dopamine synthesis pathway, receptors for different neurotransmitters, and neuron-specific cytoskeleton proteins, among others. Some, but not all effects could be reproduced by pharmacological inhibitors of PI3K and/or MAPK, suggesting that PTEN may influence some genes by mechanisms independent of these signaling pathways. Our findings may shed new light on the role of this tumor suppressor during normal brain development and suggest a previously uncharacterized mechanism of PTEN action in neuron-like cells.
...
PMID:Inhibition of neuronal phenotype by PTEN in PC12 cells. 1499 Jul 93

The accumulation of beta-amyloid (Abeta) peptide is a key pathogenic event in Alzheimer's disease. Previous studies have shown that Abeta peptide can damage neurons by activating the p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR). However, the signaling pathway leading to neuronal cell death is not completely understood. By using a neuroblastoma cell line devoid of neurotrophin receptors and engineered to express either a full-length or a death domain (DD)-truncated form of p75NTR, we demonstrated that Abeta peptide activates the mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) p38 and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK). We also found that Abeta peptide induces the translocation of nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB). These events depend on the DD of p75NTR. Beta-amyloid (Abeta) peptide was found not to be toxic when the above interactors were inhibited, indicating that they are required for Abeta-induced neuronal cell death. p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR)-expressing cells became resistant to Abeta toxicity when transfected with dominant-negative mutants of MAPK kinases 3, 4, or 6 (MKK3, MKK4, or MKK6), the inhibitor of kappaBalpha, or when treated with chemical inhibitors of p38 and JNK. Furthermore, p75NTR-expressing cells became resistant to Abeta peptide upon transfection with a dominant-negative mutant of p53. These results were obtained in the presence of normal p38 and JNK activation, indicating that p53 acts downstream of p38 and JNK. Finally, we demonstrated that NF-kappaB activation is dependent on p38 and JNK activation. Therefore, our data suggest a signaling pathway in which Abeta peptide binds to p75NTR and activates p38 and JNK in a DD-dependent manner, followed by NF-kappaB translocation and p53 activation.
...
PMID:Characterization of the signaling pathway downstream p75 neurotrophin receptor involved in beta-amyloid peptide-dependent cell death. 1578 62

The c-Jun/AP-1 transcription complex is associated with diverse cellular processes such as differentiation, proliferation, transformation, and apoptosis. These different biological endpoints are likely achieved by the regulation of specific target gene expression. We describe the identification of Ras guanine nucleotide exchange factor 1, Ras-GRF1, by microarray analysis as a c-Jun/AP-1 regulated gene essential for anchorage-independent growth of immortalized rat fibroblasts. Increased Ras-GRF1 expression, in response to inducible c-Jun expression in Rat1a fibroblasts, was confirmed by both real-time PCR and Northern blot analysis. We show that c-Jun/AP-1 can bind and activate the Ras-GRF1 promoter in vivo. A 75-kDa c-Jun/AP-1-inducible protein, p75-Ras-GRF1, was detected, and the inhibition of its expression with antisense oligomers significantly blocked c-Jun-regulated anchorage-independent cell growth. p75-Ras-GRF1 expression occurred with a concomitant increase in activated Ras (GTP bound), and the activation of Ras was significantly inhibited by antisense Ras-GRF1 oligomers. Moreover, p75-Ras-GRF1 could be coprecipitated with a Ras dominant-negative glutathione S-transferase (GST) construct, GST-Ras15A, demonstrating an interaction between p75-Ras-GRF1 and Ras. A downstream target of Ras activation, Elk-1, had increased transcriptional activity in c-Jun-expressing cells, and this activation was inhibited by dominant-negative Ras. In addition, c-Jun overexpression resulted in an increase in phospho-AKT while phosphorylation of ERK1/2 remained largely unaffected. The inhibition of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-AKT signal transduction by Ly294002 and wortmannin significantly blocked c-Jun-regulated morphological transformation, while inhibition of basal MEK-ERK activity with PD98059 and U0126 had little effect. We conclude that c-Jun/AP-1 regulates endogenous p75-Ras-GRF1 expression and that c-Jun/AP-1-regulated anchorage-independent cell growth requires activation of Ras-PI3K-AKT signal transduction.
...
PMID:p75-Ras-GRF1 is a c-Jun/AP-1 target protein: its up regulation results in increased Ras activity and is necessary for c-Jun-induced nonadherent growth of Rat1a cells. 1579 16


1 2 3 Next >>