Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.3.16 (calcineurin)
17,112 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Calponin, a thin-filament protein of smooth muscle, has been implicated in the regulation of smooth-muscle contraction, since in vitro the isolated protein inhibits the actin-activated myosin MgATPase. This inhibitory effect, and the ability of calponin to bind to actin, is lost after its phosphorylation by protein kinase C or Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II [Winder & Walsh (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 10148-10155]. If this phosphorylation reaction is of physiological significance, there must be a protein phosphatase in smooth muscle capable of dephosphorylating calponin and restoring its inhibitory effect on the actomyosin MgATPase. We demonstrate here the presence, in chicken gizzard smooth muscle, of a single major phosphatase activity directed towards calponin. This phosphatase was purified from the soluble fraction of chicken gizzard by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation and sequential chromatography on Sephacryl S-300, DEAE-Sephacel, omega-amino-octyl-agarose and thiophosphorylated myosin 20 kDa light-chain-Sepharose columns. The purified phosphatase contained three polypeptide chains of 60, 55 and 38 kDa which were shown to be identical with the subunits of SMP-I, a smooth-muscle phosphatase capable of dephosphorylating the isolated 20 kDa light chain of myosin but not intact myosin [Pato & Adelstein (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 7047-7054]. Consistent with its identity with SMP-I, calponin phosphatase was classified as a type-2A protein phosphatase. Of several potential phosphoprotein substrates examined, calponin proved to be kinetically the best, suggesting that calponin may be a physiological substrate for this phosphatase. Finally, dephosphorylation of calponin which had been phosphorylated by protein kinase C restored completely its ability to inhibit the actin-activated MgATPase of smooth-muscle myosin. These observations support the hypothesis that calponin plays a role in regulating the contractile state of smooth muscle and that this function in turn is controlled by phosphorylation-dephosphorylation.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of calponin phosphatase from smooth muscle. Effect of dephosphorylation on calponin function. 132 79

We determined the mRNA levels and the activities in nuclear and non-nuclear fractions of protein phosphatase type 1 (PP1) and type 2A (PP2A) through the cell cycle in synchronized mouse NIH3T3 fibroblasts. The mRNA level for PP1 alpha was gradually elevated in late G1 phase, began to decrease in M phase, and reached the control level with entering into the next G1 phase. The mRNA level for PP2A was rapidly increased in early G1 phase, kept at the high level, and decreased after S phase. In nuclear fractions of cells, spontaneous activities of both PP1 and PP2A were gradually increased until M phase and rapidly decreased with entering the next G1 phase, while in non-nuclear fraction such dramatic alterations were not observed. Potential activities of PP1 in both fractions revealed by Co(2+)-trypsin treatment showed an oscillaion patterns similar to those of the spontaneous activities. These results strongly suggest that cell cycle dependent gene expressions and activities of PP1 and PP2A play roles in DNA synthesis and mitosis during the cell cycle.
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PMID:Cell cycle dependent gene expressions and activities of protein phosphatases PP1 and PP2A in mouse NIH3T3 fibroblasts. 132 93

Murine cDNAs representing distinct genes for the regulatory subunits of calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase (CaM-PrP) were cloned from a testis library, using probes prepared by PCR amplification of brain and testis mRNA. The cDNA sequence of the brain-specific isoform (beta 1) encodes a 170 amino acid protein (M(r) approximately 19.3 kDa), whereas that for the testis isoform (beta 2) contains 179 residues (M(r) approximately 20.7 kDa); these two sequences show approximately 80% amino acid identity. An oligonucleotide probe for the brain isoform hybridized to a single mRNA of 3.6 kilobases (kb) in many tissues, whereas using the beta 2 probe, two mRNAs of 1.8 and 0.8 kb were detected only in testis. The mRNA for the testis-specific isoform increases markedly during development, its pattern being virtually identical to that of mRNA for a testicular form of the catalytic subunit (alpha 3). These data are consistent with the biological co-regulation of catalytic and regulatory subunits of a testis-specific isoenzyme during germ cell maturation.
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PMID:Structure and expression of two isoforms of the murine calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase regulatory subunit (calcineurin B). 132 94

The relative potencies of four main types of okadaic acid class compounds as inhibitors of the catalytic subunits of protein serine/threonine phosphatases 1 and 2A and the protein tyrosine phosphatase 1 were determined. These four types of compounds are okadaic acid, calyculin A, microcystin-LR, and tautomycin, which are isolated from different natural sources, a black sponge Halichondria okadai, a marine sponge Discodermia calyx, a blue-green alga Microcystis aeruginosa, and Streptomyces spirover ticillatus, respectively. While okadaic acid was a more effective inhibitor of protein phosphatase 2A (IC50, 0.07 nM) than protein phosphatase 1 (IC50, 3.4 nM), other compounds of the okadaic acid class were equally effective against the two protein serine/threonine phosphatases. The order of potency was microcystin greater than calyculin A greater than tautomycin, and the IC50S ranged from 0.1 to 0.7 nM. None of the okadaic acid class compounds inhibited protein tyrosine phosphatase 1 activity at concentrations up to 0.01 mM. These results indicate that the compounds of the okadaic acid class are selective inhibitors of protein serine/threonine but not tyrosine phosphatases.
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PMID:Structurally different members of the okadaic acid class selectively inhibit protein serine/threonine but not tyrosine phosphatase activity. 132 38

Addition of the protein phosphatase inhibitor, calyculin-A, to 3T3 fibroblasts causes a marked change in cell morphology. Initially the cells become rounded, develop surface blebs and then detach from the substratum. In the detached cells an unusual ball-like structure is observed. This study focuses on the cytoskeleton during these calyculin-A-induced morphological changes. Stress fibres disappear as the cells begin to round and aggregates of actin are formed towards the apical surface of the cell. These aggregates condense, in the detached cells, to form the ball structure of approximately 3 microns diameter. Between the ball and the nucleus are cables of intermediate filaments that appear to be attached to the surface of the ball and to the nuclear lamina. Using a procedure designed for the isolation of nuclei the nucleus-ball complex can be obtained. Analysis of the nucleus-ball preparation by immunofluorescence and electron microscopy demonstrate that the ball contains actin and that intermediate filaments are located between the ball and the nucleus. In this preparation, the intermediate filaments also appear to attach to the surfaces of the ball and the nucleus. Electrophoretic analysis of the nucleus-ball preparation indicates that, in addition to actin, a major component of the ball is myosin. It is suggested that the formation of the ball is caused by an actin-myosin-based contractile process, initiated by the phosphorylation of myosin. The aggregation of the actomyosin draws together the intermediate filaments into the area between the ball and nucleus. This hypothesis requires that vimentin binds both to the nucleus and to some component of the ball.
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PMID:Changes in the cytoskeleton of 3T3 fibroblasts induced by the phosphatase inhibitor, calyculin-A. 132 68

Growth factors regulate cellular proliferation and differentiation by activating plasma membrane tyrosine kinase receptors and triggering a cascade of events mediated by intracellular signaling proteins. The mechanism underlying growth factor modification of cellular functions, such as gap-junctional communication (gjc), has not been established clearly. Addition of epidermal growth factor (EGF) to T51B rat liver epithelial cells resulted in the rapid activation of EGF receptor tyrosine kinase activity followed by a transient dose-dependent disruption of gjc. This change did not result from the gross disturbance of membrane gap junction plaques as measured by immunofluorescence microscopy, but instead correlated with markedly elevated phosphorylation of the connexin43 (cx43) gap junction protein, a profound shift to predominantly phosphorylated forms of cx43, and the appearance of a novel phosphorylated cx43 protein. These changes in cx43 phosphorylation involved only serine residues. On restoration of gjc, these alterations in cx43 phosphorylation reverted to the pre-EGF treatment state. Both events were inhibited by the serine/threonine protein phosphatase inhibitor, okadaic acid. Therefore, unlike the case for pp60v-src, EGF-induced disruption of gjc is not associated with tyrosine phosphorylation of cx43, but instead may result from phosphorylation of cx43 by activated intracellular signaling serine protein kinase(s).
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PMID:Epidermal growth factor disrupts gap-junctional communication and induces phosphorylation of connexin43 on serine. 132 98

A type 1 serine/threonine protein phosphatase (PP1) which is mostly localized in the excitable ciliary membranes from the protozoan Paramecium, was purified to homogeneity. Approximately 4 micrograms enzyme of 37 kDa was isolated from 100 l axenic culture. The enzymic properties were characterized using phosphorylase a from rabbit skeletal muscle as a substrate and several known effectors of mammalian PP1. The protozoan PP1 was enzymically indistinguishable from its mammalian congener. The amino acid sequence of the Paramecium PP1 was deduced from its cDNA. The full-length clone was obtained in several steps starting with a pair of degenerate primers made according to the two most conserved peptides of rabbit PP1 and PP2A. The gene encodes a protein of 36,392 Da. The identity of the cloned gene and the isolated ciliary PP1 was unequivocally established by microsequencing of four tryptic and cyanogen-bromide peptides which were generated from the purified protein. Paramecium PP1 shows 75% amino-acid-sequence identity with rabbit PP1 alpha. Areas of major differences are the C-termini and N-termini and a sequence between residues 219-242.
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PMID:Purification, characterization and structure of protein phosphatase 1 from the cilia of Paramecium tetraurelia. 132 78

The protein kinase C (PKC) activator 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) has been shown to potentiate the stimulatory effect of ethanol on the hydrolysis of phosphatidylethanolamine (PtdEtn) in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts. Following an initial 20-min period, the main product of PtdEtn degradation in cells treated with TPA plus ethanol was ethanolamine phosphate. Here, we have examined the regulatory role of PKC and the possible catalytic role of phospholipase C in the formation of ethanolamine phosphate. TPA, bryostatin, and bombesin, direct or indirect activators of PKC, had similar potentiating effects on ethanol-induced formation of [14C]ethanolamine phosphate from [14C]PtdEtn in [14C]ethanolamine-prelabelled NIH 3T3 fibroblasts. At lower concentrations of ethanol (40-80 mM), significant stimulation of ethanolamine phosphate formation required longer treatments (2 h or longer). The combined effects of TPA (100 nM) and ethanol (50-200 mM) on ethanolamine phosphate formation were not inhibited by the PKC inhibitors staurosporine or 1-(5-isoquinolinylsulfonyl)-2-methylpiperazine (H7). In contrast, these inhibitors significantly inhibited TPA-induced formation of ethanolamine, catalyzed by a phospholipase-D-type enzyme. In membranes isolated from TPA+ethanol-treated cells, enhanced formation of ethanolamine phosphate was maintained for at least 20 min. Down-regulation of PKC by prolonged (24-h) treatment of NIH 3T3 fibroblasts by 300 nM TPA enhanced, while overexpression of alpha-PKC in Balb/c fibroblasts diminished, the stimulatory effect of ethanol on the formation of ethanolamine phosphate. Finally, addition of the protein phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid (2 microM) to fibroblasts inhibited TPA+ethanol-induced formation of ethanolamine phosphate. These results suggest that alpha-PKC-mediated protein phosphorylation may negatively regulate PtdEtn hydrolysis and that the potentiating effect of TPA may result, at least partly, from increased degradation of this PKC isoform.
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PMID:The long-term combined stimulatory effects of ethanol and phorbol ester on phosphatidylethanolamine hydrolysis are mediated by a phospholipase C and prevented by overexpressed alpha-protein kinase C in fibroblasts. 132 80

Arachidonic acid (AA) increased, at constant Ca2+, the levels of force and 20-kDa myosin light chain (MLC20) phosphorylation in permeabilized smooth muscle, and slowed relaxation and MLC20 dephosphorylation. The Ca(2+)-sensitizing effect of AA was not inhibited by inhibitors of AA metabolism (indomethacin, nordihydroguaiaretic acid, or propyl gallate), of protein kinase C (pseudopeptide) or by guanosine-5'-O-(beta-thiodiphosphate) and was abolished by oxidation of AA in air. A non-metabolizable AA analog, 5,8,11,14-eicosatetraynoic acid) also had Ca(2+)-sensitizing effects. Extensive treatment with saponin abolished the Ca(2+)-sensitizing effects of phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate and guanosine-5'-O-(gamma-thiotriphosphate), but not that of AA. A purified, oligomeric MLC20 phosphatase isolated from gizzard smooth muscle was dissociated into subunits by AA, and its activity was inhibited toward heavy meromyosin but not phosphorylase. We conclude that AA may act as a messenger-promoting protein phosphorylation through direct inhibition of the form of protein phosphatase(s) that dephosphorylate MLC20 in vivo.
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PMID:Arachidonic acid inhibits myosin light chain phosphatase and sensitizes smooth muscle to calcium. 132 35

The dephosphorylation of the mouse small heat shock protein hsp25 within an extract obtained from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells is inhibited by the calcium chelator EGTA and at concentrations of microcystin-LR which are characteristic for inhibition of calcium/calmodulin-dependent (2B type) protein phosphatases. Furthermore, the dephosphorylation of hsp25 in the cell-free system derived from Ehrlich ascites tumor could be increased specifically by addition of the calcium/calmodulin-dependent (2B type) protein phosphatase calcineurin. Dephosphorylation of the heat shock protein hsp25 is also obtained in an in vitro system containing phosphorylated recombinant hsp25, 1 mM Ca2+, calmodulin, and calcineurin specifying hsp25 as the direct substrate for this enzyme. The expression of two isoforms of the catalytic subunit of the mouse calcium/calmodulin-dependent (2B type) protein phosphatases in Ehrlich ascites tumor cells is demonstrated by polymerase chain reaction using specific oligonucleotide primers to the catalytic and calmodulin-binding domain, respectively. Northern blot analysis using the amplified fragments as probes shows that the mRNA of one isoform of the mouse calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase is of medium abundance in EAT cells. These data suggest a calcium/calmodulin-dependent dephosphorylation of the small stress protein in EAT cells also in vivo. Since it is known that heat shock increases the intracellular calcium level and that thermotolerance is influenced by calcium chelators, ionophores, and anti-calmodulin drugs, the changes in the degree of hsp25 phosphorylation induced by thermal stress resulting in an altered thermoresistance could be explained at least partially by the calcium/calmodulin-dependent dephosphorylation through protein phosphatases 2B.
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PMID:Dephosphorylation of the small heat shock protein hsp25 by calcium/calmodulin-dependent (type 2B) protein phosphatase. 132 40


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