Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

In PC12 cells, cAMP stimulates the MAP kinase pathway by an unknown mechanism. Firstly, we examined the role of calcium ion mobilization and of protein kinase C in cAMP-stimulated MAP kinase activation. We show that cAMP stimulates p44mapk independently of these events. Secondly, we studied the role of B-Raf in this process. We observed that NGF, PMA and cAMP induce the phosphorylation of B-Raf as well as an upward shift in its electrophoretic mobility. We show that B-Raf is activated following NGF and PMA treatment of PC12 cells, and that it can phosphorylate and activate MEK-1. However, cAMP inhibits B-Raf autokinase activity as well as its ability to phosphorylate and activate MEK-1. This inhibition is likely to be due to a direct effect since we found that PKA phosphorylates B-Raf in vitro. Further, we show that B-Raf binds to p21ras, but more important, this binding to p21ras is virtually abolished with B-Raf from PC12 cells treated with CPT-cAMP. Hence, these data indicate that the PKA-mediated phosphorylation of B-Raf hampers its interaction with p21ras, which is responsible for the PKA-mediated decrease in B-Raf activity. Finally, our work suggests that in PC12 cells, cAMP stimulates MAP kinase through the activation of an unidentified MEK kinase and/or the inhibition of a MEK phosphatase.
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PMID:Regulation of the MAP kinase cascade in PC12 cells: B-Raf activates MEK-1 (MAP kinase or ERK kinase) and is inhibited by cAMP. 783 30

Up-regulation of ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinase or MAP kinase) and MEK (ERK kinase or MAPK kinase) expression after rat facial nerve injury was demonstrated by in situ hybridization histochemistry and immunohistochemistry. These two enzymes play roles in one of the major intracellular signal cascade pathways involving receptor tyrosine kinase common to growth factor receptors, and transcription factors. Significant increases in ERK1 mRNA levels were observed from day 3 after facial nerve transection, with the highest level of expression from 1 to 2 weeks after the operation. This high level of mRNA expression then decreased gradually to the normal level. ERK1-like immunoreactivity showed a similar time course to that of its mRNA expression; however, the decay profile was more prolonged. The up-regulation of MEK, the ERK kinase/MAPK kinase, was also detected by immunohistochemistry. The protein expression profiles were almost equivalent, but the MEK expression was slightly advanced, suggesting that the observed up-regulation of MEK was not due to that of ERK. The receptor tyrosine kinase signal transduction pathway via MEK-ERK located downstream of growth factor receptors seems vital as a regulator of the synthesis of molecules that play important roles in the recovery process following injury or/and regeneration.
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PMID:Up-regulation of ERK (MAP kinase) and MEK (MAP kinase kinase) transcription after rat facial nerve transection. 783 28

Saccharomyces cerevisiae FUS3/DAC2 protein kinase, a homolog of mammalian mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase, inactivates a G1 cyclin encoded by the CLN3 gene to arrest cell division in the G1 phase and activates a transcriptional factor STE12 in response to mating pheromone during sexual conjugation. To elucidate the role of the FUS3/DAC2 gene product in the mating process, I constructed and characterized dac2 cln3 double mutants. Here, I show that FUS3/DAC2 is required for completion of cell fusion even in the dac2 cln3 double mutants in which the pheromone response is restored, suggesting that FUS3/DAC2 plays a positive role in cell fusion during conjugation. In addition, the cdc dac2 and cdc37 ste double mutants were constructed and investigated for their phenotypes to clarify the relationship between FUS3/DAC2, STE7 or STE11 and CDC gene products (CDC28, 36, 37 and 39). The results indicate that FUS3/DAC2 may act upstream of CDC28 and provide evidence that the G1 arrest and morphological changes conferred by the cdc37 mutation may require FUS3/DAC2 (MAP kinase), STE7(MEK) and STE11 (MEK kinase).
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PMID:Yeast homolog of mammalian mitogen-activated protein kinase, FUS3/DAC2 kinase, is required both for cell fusion and for G1 arrest of the cell cycle and morphological changes by the cdc37 mutation. 784 75

We have used the two-hybrid system of Fields and Song to identify protein-protein interactions that occur in the pheromone response pathway of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Pathway components Ste4p, Ste5p, Ste7p, Ste11p, Ste12p, Ste20p, Fus3p and Kss1p were tested in all pairwise combinations. All of the interactions we detected involved at least one member of the MAP kinase cascade that is a central element of the response pathway. Ste5p, a protein of unknown biochemical function, interacted with protein kinases that operate at each step of the MAP kinase cascade, specifically with Ste11p (an MEKK), Ste7p (an MEK), and Fus3p (a MAP kinase). This finding suggests that one role of Ste5p is to serve as a scaffold to facilitate interactions among members of the kinase cascade. In this role as facilitator, Ste5p may make both signal propagation and signal attenuation more efficient. Ste5p may also help minimize cross-talk with other MAP kinase cascades and thus ensure the integrity of the pheromone response pathway. We also found that both Ste11p and Ste7p interact with Fus3p and Kss1p. Finally, we detected an interaction between one of the MAP kinases, Kss1p, and a presumptive target, the transcription factor Ste12p. We failed to detect interactions of Ste4p or Ste20p with any other component of the response pathway.
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PMID:Protein-protein interactions in the yeast pheromone response pathway: Ste5p interacts with all members of the MAP kinase cascade. 785 59

ENGAGEMENT of the T-cell receptor (TCR) with cognate ligands provokes different outcomes depending on the developmental stage of the T cell and on the properties of the ligand. In immature thymocytes TCR stimulation may result in maturation (positive selection) or death (negative selection), whereas in mature T cells it may induce proliferation, death or unresponsiveness. To investigate the different signals involved in these processes, we have analysed the role of the MAP kinase (MAPK) cascade, which is required for growth-factor-stimulated replication and for differentiation in other cell types, by expressing a catalytically inactive form of MAPK kinase (MEK-1) in thymocytes, thereby blocking MAPK activation. We find that positive selection of these cells is inhibited but that negative selection and TCR-induced proliferation are unaffected. Our results indicate that the intracellular signals regulating lineage commitment in T cells parallel those in photoreceptor cell specification in Drosophila and vulval cell differentiation in Caenorhabditis elegans, suggesting that general rules for cell-type specification could apply among all metazoans.
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PMID:Selective requirement for MAP kinase activation in thymocyte differentiation. 785 19

Activation of the mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) plays essential roles in many signal transduction pathways. MAPK has been demonstrated to phosphorylate and regulate numerous cellular proteins, including growth factor receptor, transcription factors, cytoskeletal proteins, phospholipase and other protein kinases. Activation of MAPK requires phosphorylation of both threonine and tyrosine residues, which are catalysed by a single protein kinase known as MAPK kinase or MEK. MEK itself is activated by phosphorylation on two conserved serine residues. Three distinct mammalian Ser/Thr kinases, including Raf, Mos and MEKK (for MEK kinase), have been demonstrated to phosphorylate and activate MEK. The MAP kinase cascade is highly conserved in all eukaryotes and involved in numerous cellular responses. Activation of MAPK is a transient event that is tightly regulated by both kinases and phosphatases. A growth factor induced dual specific phosphatase is likely to play an important role in MAPK regulation.
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PMID:The mitogen activated protein kinase signal transduction pathway: from the cell surface to the nucleus. 785 62

Cellular growth control requires the coordination and integration of multiple signaling pathways which are likely to be activated concomitantly. Mitogenic signaling initiated by thyrotropin (TSH) in thyroid cells seems to require two distinct signaling pathways, a cyclic AMP (cAMP)-dependent signaling pathway and a Ras-dependent pathway. This is a paradox, since activated cAMP-dependent protein kinase disrupts Ras-dependent signaling induced by growth factors such as epidermal growth factor and platelet-derived growth factor. This inhibition may occur by preventing Raf-1 protein kinase from binding to Ras, an event thought to be necessary for the activation of Raf-1 and the subsequent activation of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP)/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) kinases (MEKs) and MAP kinase (MAPK)/ERKs. Here we report that serum-stimulated hyperphosphorylation of Raf-1 was inhibited by TSH treatment of Wistar rat thyroid cells, indicating that in this cell line, as in other cell types, increases in intracellular cAMP levels inhibit activation of downstream kinases targeted by Ras. Ras-stimulated expression of genes containing AP-1 promoter elements was similarly inhibited by TSH. On the other hand, stimulation of thyroid cells with TSH resulted in stimulation of DNA synthesis which was Ras dependent but both Raf-1 and MEK independent. We also show that Ras-stimulated DNA synthesis required the use of this kinase cascade in untreated quiescent cells but not in TSH-treated cells. These data suggest that in TSH-treated thyroid cells, Ras might be able to signal through effectors other than the well-studied cytoplasmic kinase cascade.
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PMID:Thyrotropin-induced mitogenesis is Ras dependent but appears to bypass the Raf-dependent cytoplasmic kinase cascade. 786 10

The regulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and MAPK kinase (MEK) was studied in freshly isolated adult rat heart preparations. In contrast to the situation in ventricular myocytes cultured from neonatal rat hearts, stimulation of MAPK activity by 1 mumol/L phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) was not consistently detectable in crude extracts. After fast protein liquid chromatography, MAPK isoforms p42MAPK and p44MAPK and two peaks of MEK were shown to be activated > 10-fold in perfused hearts or ventricular myocytes exposed to 1 mumol/L PMA for 5 minutes. The identities of MAPK or MEK were confirmed by immunoblotting and, for MAPK, by the "in-gel" myelin basic protein phosphorylation assay. In retrogradely perfused hearts, high coronary perfusion pressure (120 mm Hg for 5 minutes), norepinephrine (50 mumol/L for 5 minutes), or isoproterenol (50 mumol/L for 5 minutes) stimulated MAPK and MEK approximately 2- to 5-fold. In isolated myocytes, endothelin 1 (100 nmol/L for 5 minutes) also stimulated MAPK, but stimulation by norepinephrine or isoproterenol was difficult to detect. Immunoblotting showed that the relative abundances of MAPK and MEK protein in ventricles declined to < 20% of their postpartal abundances after 50 days. This may explain the difficulties encountered in assaying the activity of MAPK in crude extracts from adult hearts. We conclude that potentially hypertrophic agonists and interventions stimulate the MAPK cascade in adult rats and suggest that the MAPK cascade may be an important intracellular signaling pathway in this response.
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PMID:Regulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade in adult rat heart preparations in vitro. 792 40

Ustilago maydis is a plant pathogenic Basidiomycete fungus that exhibits dimorphism--it has a haploid, yeast-like phase and a dikaryotic, filamentous phase that is pathogenic. Establishment and maintenance of these two forms are controlled by two mating type loci, a and b. The a locus is thought to govern fusion of haploid cells to form a dikaryon and is also required for filamentous growth of the dikaryon. It encodes two components of a pheromone response pathway: pheromones and receptors. We report the identification of the U. maydis fuz7 gene, which codes for a putative dual specificity serine/threonine tyrosine kinase of the MAP kinase kinase (MAPKK/MEK) family, by homology with other members of the family. Analysis of mutants deleted for fuz7 shows that it participates in different facets of the life cycle: It is necessary for a-locus-dependent processes, such as conjugation tube formation, filament formation, and maintenance of filamentous growth, and for a-locus-independent processes, such as tumor induction and teliospore germination. fuz7 is the first U. maydis gene distinct from the b locus required for fungal pathogenicity. We propose that fuz7 is involved in at least two pathways, one of which responds to the pheromones coded by the a locus and the other to putative signals from the plant.
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PMID:Identification of fuz7, a Ustilago maydis MEK/MAPKK homolog required for a-locus-dependent and -independent steps in the fungal life cycle. 792 37

Previously pp60v-src, cyclin A, p39mos, and maturation-promoting factor (composed of Cdc2 and cyclin B) have been shown to activate mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and MAPK kinase (MEK) in cell-free extracts of Xenopus oocytes. The pp60v-src pathway is dependent on a functional Ras signal whereas the cyclin/maturation-promoting factor pathway is not. Here we show that protein kinase C (PKC) is also able to stimulate MAPK in a Ras-dependent manner, but PKC is not necessary for signaling by pp60v-src. In addition, preincubation of extracts with cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) blocks stimulation of MAPK by cyclin, p21V12ras, PKC, or pp60v-src, by at least 50%, but stimulation by c-Mos is unaffected. Furthermore, inhibition of endogenous PKA by the heat-stable PKA inhibitor is sufficient to stimulate MAPK activity in these extracts in the absence of protein synthesis and without dependence on a functional Ras protein. These results suggest that independent pp60v-src and PKC pathways converge at Ras and that PKA acts to block MAPK activation by both Ras-dependent and -independent signals.
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PMID:Regulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase activation by protein kinases A and C in a cell-free system. 792 38


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