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:3.1.3.16 (
calcineurin
)
17,112
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Yeast respond to a variety of stresses through a global stress response that is mediated by a number of signal transduction pathways and the cis-acting STRE DNA sequence. The CYC7 gene, encoding iso-2-
cytochrome c
, has been demonstrated to respond to heat shock, glucose starvation, approach-to-stationary phase, and, as we demonstrate here, to osmotic stress. This response was delayed in a the hog1-delta 1 strain implicating the Hog1 mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade, a known component of the global stress response. Deletion analysis of the CYC7 regulatory region suggested that three STRE elements were each capable of inducing the stress response. Mutations in the ROX3 gene prevented CYC7 RNA accumulation during heat shock and osmotic stress. ROX3 RNA levels were shown to be induced by stress through a novel regulatory element. A selection for high-copy suppressors of a ROX3 temperature-sensitive allele resulted in the isolation of RTS1, encoding a protein with homology to the B' regulatory subunit of
protein phosphatase
2A0. Deletion of RTS1 caused temperature and osmotic sensitivity and increased accumulation of CYC7 RNA under all conditions. Over-expression of this gene caused increased CYC7 RNA accumulation in rox3 mutants but not in wild-type cells.
...
PMID:Rox3 and Rts1 function in the global stress response pathway in baker's yeast. 884 89
Apoptosis is mediated by members of the caspase family of proteases which can be activated by release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
. Additional members of the caspase family are activated at the cell surface in response to direct stimulus from the external environment such as by activation of the Fas receptor. It has been suggested that these upstream caspases directly activate the downstream caspases which would obviate a role for
cytochrome c
in apoptosis induced by the Fas receptor. We demonstrate that
cytochrome c
is released from mitochondria of Jurkat cells in response to both staurosporine and an agonistic anti-Fas antibody and that only the latter is inhibited by the caspase inhibitor z-VAD-FMK. This suggests that an upstream caspase such as caspase-8 is required for the Fas-mediated release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
. The
protein phosphatase
inhibitor calyculin A prevented
cytochrome c
release and apoptosis induced by both agents, suggesting that release of
cytochrome c
is required in both models. Zinc, once thought of as an endonuclease inhibitor, has previously been shown to prevent the activation of caspase-3. We show that zinc prevents the activation of downstream caspases and apoptosis induced by both insults, yet does not prevent release of mitochondrial
cytochrome c
. The ability of calyculin A and zinc to prevent DNA digestion implies that the mitochondrial pathway is important for induction of apoptosis by both agents. These results do not support an alternative pathway in which caspase-8 directly activates caspase-3. These results also demonstrate that a critical
protein phosphatase
regulates the release of
cytochrome c
and apoptosis induced by both insults.
...
PMID:The temporal relationship between protein phosphatase, mitochondrial cytochrome c release, and caspase activation in apoptosis. 1006 78
Calcineurin is a Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent
protein phosphatase
that is abundantly expressed in several specific areas of the brain, which are exceptionally vulnerable to stroke, epilepsy, and neurodegenerative diseases. In this study, we assessed the effects of high level activity of
calcineurin
on neuronal cells. Virus-mediated high level constitutive activity of
calcineurin
rendered neuronal cells susceptible to apoptosis induced by serum reduction or by a brief exposure to calcium ionophore. Adenovirus-mediated, high level forced activity of
calcineurin
induced
cytochrome c
/caspase-3-dependent apoptosis in neurons. Preincubation with the
calcineurin
inhibitors cyclosporin A and FK506 reduced susceptibility to apoptosis. High level constitutive expression of Bcl-2 or CrmA or incubation with a specific caspase-3 inhibitor inhibited the
calcineurin
-induced apoptosis. These data indicate that high level constitutive activity of
calcineurin
predisposes neuronal cells to
cytochrome c
/caspase-3 dependent apoptosis even under sublethal conditions.
...
PMID:High level calcineurin activity predisposes neuronal cells to apoptosis. 1056 26
The calcium/calmodulin-dependent activation of nitric-oxide synthase (NOS) and its production of nitric oxide (NO) play a key regulatory role in plant and animal cell function. SCaM-1 is a plant calmodulin (CaM) isoform that is 91% identical to mammalian CaM (wild type CaM (wtCaM)) and a selective competitive antagonist of NOS (Cho, M. J., Vaghy, P. L., Kondo, R., Lee, S. H., Davis, J. P., Rehl, R., Heo, W. D., and Johnson, J. D. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 15593-15597). We have used site-directed mutagenesis to show that a point mutation, involving the substitution of valine for methionine at position 144, is responsible for SCaM-1's inhibition of mammalian NOS. An M144V mutation in wild type CaM produced a mutant (M144V) which exhibited nearly identical inhibition of NOS's NO production and NADPH oxidation, with a similar K(i) (approximately 15 nM) as SCaM-1. A V144M back mutation in SCaM-1 significantly restored its ability to activate NOS's catalytic functions. The length of the hydrophobic amino acid side chain at position 144 appears to be critical for NOS activation, since M144L and M144F activated NOS while M144V and M144C did not. Despite their competitive antagonism of NOS, M144V, like SCaM-1, exhibited a similar dose-dependent activation of phosphodiesterase and
calcineurin
as wtCaM. SCaM-1 and M144V produced greater inhibition of NOS's oxygenase domain function (NO production) than its reductase domain functions (NADPH oxidation and
cytochrome c
reduction). Thus, CaM's methionine 144 plays a critical role the activation of NOS, presumably by influencing the function of NOS's oxygenase domain.
...
PMID:A point mutation in a plant calmodulin is responsible for its inhibition of nitric-oxide synthase. 1059 8
Apoptosis of cardiac myocytes is one of the causes of heart failure. Here we examine the mechanism by which the activation of beta-adrenergic receptor induces cardiomyocyte apoptosis. Terminal deoxynucleotide transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling and DNA ladder analyses revealed that isoproterenol (Iso) induced the apoptosis of cardiac myocytes of neonatal rats through an increase in intracellular Ca(2+) levels. The Iso-induced cardiomyocyte apoptosis was strongly inhibited by the L-type Ca(2+) channel antagonist nifedipine and by the
calcineurin
inhibitors cyclosporin A and FK506. Iso reduced the phosphorylation levels of the proapoptotic Bcl-2 family protein Bad and induced
cytochrome c
release from mitochondria to the cytosol through
calcineurin
activation. Infusion of Iso increased
calcineurin
activity by approximately 3-fold in the hearts of wild-type mice but not in the hearts of transgenic mice that overexpress dominant negative mutants of
calcineurin
. Terminal deoxynucleotide transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling analysis revealed that infusion of Iso induced apoptosis of cardiac myocytes and that the number of apoptotic cardiomyocytes was significantly less in the hearts of the transgenic mice compared with the wild-type mice. These results suggest that
calcineurin
plays a critical role in Iso-induced apoptosis of cardiac myocytes, possibly through dephosphorylating Bad.
...
PMID:beta-Adrenergic pathway induces apoptosis through calcineurin activation in cardiac myocytes. 1093 27
Cyclosporin (CsA) inhibits mitochondrial death signaling and opposes tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-induced apoptosis in vitro. However, CsA is also a potent inhibitor of
calcineurin
, a phosphatase that may participate in cell death. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that
calcineurin
regulates TNF cytotoxicity in rat hepatoma cells (FTO2B). TNF-treated FTO2B cells appeared apoptotic by DNA fragmentation, nuclear condensation, annexin V binding, and caspase activation. We studied two
calcineurin
inhibitors, CsA and FK506, and found that each potently inhibited TNF cytotoxicity. Western blot demonstrated
calcineurin
in FTO2B homogenates. In a model of mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT), we found that CsA prevented MPT and
cytochrome c
release, while FK506 inhibited neither. In summary, we present evidence that
calcineurin
participates in an apoptotic death pathway activated by TNF. CsA may oppose programmed cell death by inhibiting
calcineurin
activity and/or inhibiting mitochondrial signaling.
...
PMID:Regulation of tumor necrosis factor cytotoxicity by calcineurin. 1104 65
Brain ischemia and reperfusion engage multiple independently-fatal terminal pathways involving loss of membrane integrity in partitioning ions, progressive proteolysis, and inability to check these processes because of loss of general translation competence and reduced survival signal-transduction. Ischemia results in rapid loss of high-energy phosphate compounds and generalized depolarization, which induces release of glutamate and, in selectively vulnerable neurons (SVNs), opening of both voltage-dependent and glutamate-regulated calcium channels. This allows a large increase in cytosolic Ca(2+) associated with activation of mu-calpain,
calcineurin
, and phospholipases with consequent proteolysis of calpain substrates (including spectrin and eIF4G), activation of NOS and potentially of Bad, and accumulation of free arachidonic acid, which can induce depletion of Ca(2+) from the ER lumen. A kinase that shuts off translation initiation by phosphorylating the alpha-subunit of eukaryotic initiation factor-2 (eIF2alpha) is activated either by adenosine degradation products or depletion of ER lumenal Ca(2+). Early during reperfusion, oxidative metabolism of arachidonate causes a burst of excess oxygen radicals, iron is released from storage proteins by superoxide-mediated reduction, and NO is generated. These events result in peroxynitrite generation, inappropriate protein nitrosylation, and lipid peroxidation, which ultrastructurally appears to principally damage the plasmalemma of SVNs. The initial recovery of ATP supports very rapid eIF2alpha phosphorylation that in SVNs is prolonged and associated with a major reduction in protein synthesis. High catecholamine levels induced by the ischemic episode itself and/or drug administration down-regulate insulin secretion and induce inhibition of growth-factor receptor tyrosine kinase activity, effects associated with down-regulation of survival signal-transduction through the Ras pathway. Caspase activation occurs during the early hours of reperfusion following mitochondrial release of caspase 9 and
cytochrome c
. The SVNs find themselves with substantial membrane damage, calpain-mediated proteolytic degradation of eIF4G and cytoskeletal proteins, altered translation initiation mechanisms that substantially reduce total protein synthesis and impose major alterations in message selection, down-regulated survival signal-transduction, and caspase activation. This picture argues powerfully that, for therapy of brain ischemia and reperfusion, the concept of single drug intervention (which has characterized the approaches of basic research, the pharmaceutical industry, and clinical trials) cannot be effective. Although rigorous study of multi-drug protocols is very demanding, effective therapy is likely to require (1) peptide growth factors for early activation of survival-signaling pathways and recovery of translation competence, (2) inhibition of lipid peroxidation, (3) inhibition of calpain, and (4) caspase inhibition. Examination of such protocols will require not only characterization of functional and histopathologic outcome, but also study of biochemical markers of the injury processes to establish the role of each drug.
...
PMID:Brain ischemia and reperfusion: molecular mechanisms of neuronal injury. 1105 82
Intracellular calcium signals mediated by IP(3)and ryanodine receptors (IP(3)R/RyR) play a central role in cell survival, but emerging evidence suggests that IP(3)R/RyR are also important in apoptotic cell death. Switch from the life program to the death program may involve coincident detection of proapoptotic stimuli and calcium signals or changes in the spatiotemporal pattern of the calcium signal or changes at the level of effectors activated by the calcium signal (e.g. calpain,
calcineurin
). The fate of the cell is often determined in the mitochondria, where calcium spikes may support cell survival through stimulation of ATP production or initiate apoptosis v ia opening of the permeability transition pore and release of apoptotic factors such as
cytochrome c
. The functional importance of these mitochondrial calcium signalling pathways has been underscored by the elucidation of a highly effective, local Ca(2+)coupling between IP(3)R/RyR and mitochondrial Ca(2+)uptake sites. This article will focus on the IP(3)R/RyR-dependent pathways to apoptosis, particularly on the mitochondrial phase of the death cascade.
...
PMID:Control of apoptosis by IP(3) and ryanodine receptor driven calcium signals. 1111 74
Okadaic acid is a specific inhibitor of serine/threonine
protein phosphatase
1 (PP-1) and 2A (PP-2A). The phosphorylation and dephosphorylation at the serine/threonine residues on proteins play important roles in regulating gene expression, cell cycle progression, and apoptosis. In this study, phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid induces apoptosis in U937 cells via a mechanism that appears to involve caspase 3 activation, but not modulation of Bcl-2, Bax, and Bcl-X(L) expression levels. Treatment with 20 or 40 nM okadaic acid for 24 h produced DNA fragmentation in U937 cells. This was associated with caspase 3 activation and PLC-gamma1 degradation. Okadaic acid-induced caspase 3 activation and PLC-gamma1 degradation and apoptosis were dose-dependent with a maximal effect at a concentration of 40 nM. Moreover, PMA (phorbol myristate acetate), PKC (protein kinase C) activator, protected U937 cells from okadaic acid-induced apoptosis, abrogated okadaic acid-induced caspase 3 activation, and specifically inhibited downregulation of XIAP (X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis) by okadaic acid. PMA cotreated U937 cells exhibited less
cytochrome c
release and sustained expression levels of the IAP (inhibitor of apoptosis) proteins during okadaic acid-induced apoptosis. In addition, these findings indicate that PMA inhibits okadaic acid-induced apoptosis by a mechanism that interferes with
cytochrome c
release and activity of caspase 3 that is involved in the execution of apoptosis.
...
PMID:Phorbol myristate acetate inhibits okadaic acid-induced apoptosis and downregulation of X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis in U937 cells. 1154 66
In CD4+ UE160 cells with inducible expression of gp160, mechanisms of apoptosis induced by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) Env protein were analyzed. Induction of gp160 caused intracellular calcium increase followed by the release of
cytochrome c
from mitochondria, which was inhibited by
calcineurin
inhibitors. Association of BAD with Bcl-xL was observed, and a portion of BAD was dephosphorylated after induction of gp160. These data suggested that
calcineurin
plays a role in the HIV Env-induced apoptosis in a mitochondrion-dependent way.
...
PMID:Calcineurin-dependent mitochondrial disturbances in calcium-induced apoptosis of human immunodeficiency virus gp160-expressing CD4+ cells. 1173 7
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Next >>