Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:3.1.3.16 (
calcineurin
)
17,112
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Okadaic acid
completely inhibits
phosphatase 2A
at nanomolar concentrations, while complete inhibition of type 1 phosphatases occurs at 1 microM. Phosphatase 2B is significantly inhibited only at concentrations > 1 microM. In rat pancreatic acini, 1 microM okadaic acid shifted the cholecystokinin (CCK) dose-response curve for stimulating amylase release to the right without reducing maximal secretion. At 3 microM, okadaic acid inhibited maximal CCK-induced amylase release to 78 +/- 7% of control, whereas the inactive analogue 1-Nor-okadaone had no effect. Three lines of evidence indicate that this inhibition by okadaic acid occurs at a late step in stimulus-secretion coupling: 1) intracellular Ca2+ signaling in response to agonist stimulation was not appreciably altered by okadaic acid; 2) stimulation with phorbol ester plus thapsigargin (thus by-passing receptor activation), which gave 85 +/- 4% of maximal CCK-induced amylase release, was inhibited 66 +/- 4% by 3 microM okadaic acid; and 3) Ca(2+)-induced amylase secretion in streptolysin O-permeabilized cells was also reduced by 85 +/- 7%. Two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of 32P-labeled acini and autoradiography demonstrated that okadaic acid dose dependently increased overall protein phosphorylation. Correspondingly, okadaic acid also led to an inhibition of CCK-induced dephosphorylation. These results show that okadaic acid inhibits pancreatic acinar secretion at a step after generation of intracellular messengers and indicate a role for protein dephosphorylation in stimulus-secretion coupling.
...
PMID:Effects of okadaic acid indicate a role for dephosphorylation in pancreatic stimulus-secretion coupling. 128 97
Okadaic acid
, a specific inhibitor of
protein phosphatase
1 and 2A, inhibited the synthesis of phosphatidylethanolamine via the CDPethanolamine pathway in isolated hepatocytes. Pulse-chase experiments and measurement of the enzyme activity demonstrated that the inhibition of phosphatidylethanolamine synthesis was not caused by an inhibition of CTP:phosphoethanolamine cytidylyltransferase, the putative regulatory enzyme. However, okadaic acid decreased the cellular diacylglycerol level to 30% of that in control cells. The data suggest that the availability of diacylglycerol limits phosphatidylethanolamine synthesis in okadaic acid-treated hepatocytes.
...
PMID:Okadaic acid inhibits phosphatidylethanolamine biosynthesis in rat hepatocytes. 131 68
Okadaic acid
and calyculin A, specific and cell permeable inhibitors of
protein phosphatase
1 and 2A, inhibited aggregation, secretion and delta [Ca++]i in thrombin stimulated platelets. The inhibitory effect of calyculin A (IC50: 3.6-4.8nM) was about two hundred times more potent than that of okadaic acid (IC50: 0.8-1.3 microM), which is consistent with the difference of the reported Ki values for
protein phosphatase
1. These phosphatase inhibitors and PGI2 synergistically enhanced the phosphorylation of 50kDa protein (P50), which is solely related to the inhibition of platelet reaction. These results indicate that serine/threonine
protein phosphatase
1 might play a role in platelet activation.
...
PMID:The effects of okadaic acid and calyculin A on thrombin induced platelet reaction. 131 73
Okadaic acid
, a
protein phosphatase
inhibitor, is a strong tumor promoter which activates protein phosphorylation. Because another activator of protein phosphorylation, phorbol esters, stimulates hematopoietic differentiation, we sought to determine whether okadaic acid could also induce the differentiation of the human leukemic cell line U937. Differentiation was assessed by measuring changes in the following: mRNA levels, cell growth, morphology, cell surface markers, and the ability to induce superoxide. We found that okadaic acid treatment of U937 cells induces immediate increases in total cellular levels of both c-jun and c-fos mRNAs. Nuclear run-on experiments demonstrate that initial increases are secondary to increases in transcription, whereas latter changes may be secondary to mRNA stabilization. Like phorbol esters, okadaic acid treatment also activates AP-1 enhancer activity and induces the phosphorylation of c-Jun protein. Approximately 6-12 hours after treatment with okadaic acid, mRNA levels of c-myc, p34cdc2, and p58GTA, two cell cycle regulated protein kinases, decrease.
Okadaic acid
inhibits the growth of U937 cells, induces changes in nuclear morphology, stimulates increases in Mac-1 and Leu 11 surface antigens, and induces these cells to produce superoxide. These changes, taken together, suggest that U937 cells have been induced by okadaic acid to differentiate towards a more mature cell type.
...
PMID:Induction of differentiation and c-jun expression in human leukemic cells by okadaic acid, an inhibitor of protein phosphatases. 131 24
The protein B-50 is dephosphorylated in rat cortical synaptic plasma membranes (SPM) by
protein phosphatase
type 1 and 2A (PP-1 and PP-2A)-like activities. The present studies further demonstrate that B-50 is dephosphorylated not only by a spontaneously active PP-1-like enzyme, but also by a latent form after pretreatment of SPM with 0.2 mM cobalt/20 micrograms of trypsin/ml. The activity revealed by cobalt/trypsin was inhibited by inhibitor-2 and by high concentrations (microM) of okadaic acid, identifying it as a latent form of PP-1. In the presence of inhibitor-2 to block PP-1, histone H1 (16-64 micrograms/ml) and spermine (2 mM) increased B-50 dephosphorylation. This sensitivity to polycations and the reversal of their effects on B-50 dephosphorylation by 2 nM okadaic acid are indicative of PP-2A-like activity. PP-1- and PP-2A-like activities from SPM were further displayed by using exogenous phosphorylase alpha and histone H1 as substrates. Both PP-1 and PP-2A in rat SPM were immunologically identified with monospecific antibodies against the C-termini of catalytic subunits of rabbit skeletal muscle PP-1 and PP-2A.
Okadaic acid
-induced alteration of B-50 phosphorylation, consistent with inhibition of
protein phosphatase
activity, was demonstrated in rat cortical synaptosomes after immunoprecipitation with affinity-purified anti-B-50 immunoglobulin G. These results provide further evidence that SPM-bound PP-1 and PP-2A-like enzymes that share considerable similarities with their cytosolic counterparts may act as physiologically important phosphatases for B-50.
...
PMID:Protein phosphatases 1 and 2A dephosphorylate B-50 in presynaptic plasma membranes from rat brain. 131 70
The immediate-early gene Egr-1 is strongly and rapidly induced in human and mouse Balb/c fibroblasts by okadaic acid and calyculin A, both specific inhibitors of protein serine/threonine phosphatases 1 and 2A. In contrast to the transient induction of the Egr-1 gene by serum or phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, these phosphatase inhibitors stimulated a sustained induction of the Egr-1 gene. The induction is shown to occur transcriptionally and is sustained post-transcriptionally.
Okadaic acid
-induced Egr-1 mRNA is significantly more stable than serum-induced Egr-1 mRNA. The half-life of serum-induced Egr-1 mRNA is estimated to be 12 min, compared with a half life of 2 h for okadaic acid-induced Egr-1 mRNA.
Okadaic acid
also induced the expression of the related immediate-early genes Egr-2 and Egr-3 albeit to a lesser extent than Egr-1. Treatment of cells with okadaic acid and calyculin A also induced the synthesis of Egr-1 protein. The Egr-1 protein is weakly or not phosphorylated in quiescent cells, but multiple species of the phosphorylated forms of the Egr-1 protein are detected in cells treated with either of the phosphatase inhibitors. Simultaneous treatment of cells with TPA and okadaic acid synergistically induced Egr-1 gene expression, and H7 strongly inhibits this induction. Taken together, the results indicate that the induction of Egr-1 gene transcription and the phosphorylation of the induced Egr-1 protein are under the control of protein kinase(s) and
protein phosphatase
(s). The phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of Egr-1 protein may play a role in controlling cell growth.
...
PMID:Protein phosphatase inhibitors induce the sustained expression of the Egr-1 gene and the hyperphosphorylation of its gene product. 132 9
Okadaic acid
, a selective inhibitor of serine/threonine protein phosphatases, was utilized to investigate the requirement for phosphatases in cell cycle progression of GH4 rat pituitary cells.
Okadaic acid
inhibited GH4 cell proliferation in a concentration-dependent manner with a half-maximal inhibition (IC50) of approximately 5 nM. Treatment of GH4 cells with 10 nM okadaic acid resulted in a 40-60% decrease in phosphatase activity and an increase in the proportion of phosphorylated retinoblastoma (RB) protein. Cell cycle analysis indicated that okadaic acid increased the percentage of cells in G2-M, decreased proportionally the percentage of cells in G1 phase, and had little effect on the percentage of cells in S-phase. The absence of a change in the proportion of S-phase cells indicates that G1-specific phosphatases responsible for dephosphorylation of RB protein were not inhibited by 10 mM okadaic acid. Mitotic index revealed that 10 nM okadaic acid decreased proliferation of GH4 cells specifically by slowing the progression through mitosis. Immunostaining with anti-tubulin demonstrated that 10 nM okadaic acid-treated mitotic cells contained mitotic spindles; however, the spindle apparatus in these cells frequently contained multiple poles. These results suggest that the organization of spindle microtubules during prometaphase requires a
protein phosphatase
that is sensitive to nanomolar concentrations of okadaic acid. Chromosomes in 10 nM okadaic acid-treated cells appear to be attached to spindle microtubules and the nuclear envelope is absent. The effects of okadaic acid on the spindle differ from those elicited by the calcium channel blocker, nimodipine, indicating that this okadaic acid sensitive phosphatase is not part of the calcium signalling events which participate in mitotic progression.
...
PMID:Okadaic acid inhibits a protein phosphatase activity involved in formation of the mitotic spindle of GH4 rat pituitary cells. 132 37
The
protein phosphatase
inhibitor okadaic acid suppressed autophagy completely in isolated rat hepatocytes, as measured by the sequestration of electroinjected [3H]raffinose into sedimentable autophagic vacuoles.
Okadaic acid
was effectively antagonized by the general protein kinase inhibitors K-252a and KT-5926, the calmodulin antagonist W-7, and by KN-62, a specific inhibitor of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMK-II). These inhibitors also antagonized a cytoskeleton-disruptive effect of okadaic acid, manifested as the disintegration of cell corpses after breakage of the plasma membrane. CaMK-II, or a closely related enzyme, would thus seem to play a role in the control of autophagy as well as in the control of cytoskeletal organization.
...
PMID:Protein kinase-dependent effects of okadaic acid on hepatocytic autophagy and cytoskeletal integrity. 132 Mar 71
The potent
protein phosphatase
inhibitor, okadaic acid, was used to determine the possible role of protein phosphorylation reaction(s) in phorbol ester-induced synthesis and hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho) in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts.
Okadaic acid
(2 microM) was found to enhance the stimulatory effects of lower concentrations (2.5-25 nM) of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) on PtdCho synthesis, but not on PtdCho hydrolysis, after treatments for 30-60 min. These data support a view that in fibroblasts PMA stimulates only PtdCho synthesis, and not PtdCho hydrolysis, by a protein phosphorylation-dependent mechanism.
...
PMID:The protein phosphatase inhibitor, okadaic acid, potentiates the stimulatory effect of phorbol ester on phosphatidylcholine synthesis, but not on phospholipid hydrolysis, in fibroblasts. 132 88
The biochemical mechanisms involved in neurite outgrowth in response to nerve growth factor (NGF) have yet to be completely resolved. Several recent studies have demonstrated that protein kinase activity plays a critical role in neurite outgrowth. However, little information exists about the role of protein phosphatases in the process. In the present study, okadaic acid, a phosphatase inhibitor (specific for types 2A and 1) and tumor promoter, was used to investigate the role of protein phosphatases in neurite outgrowth in PC12 cells. PC12 cells cultured in the presence of 50 ng/ml of NGF started to extend neurites after 1 day. After 3 days, 20-25% of the cells had neurites.
Okadaic acid
inhibited the rate of neurite outgrowth elicited by NGF with an IC50 of approximately 7 nM. This inhibition was rapidly reversed after washout of okadaic acid.
Okadaic acid
also enhanced the neurite degeneration of NGF-primed PC12 cells, indicating that continual phosphatase activity is required to maintain neurites. Taken together, these results reveal the presence of an okadaic acid-sensitive pathway in neurite outgrowth and imply that
protein phosphatase
plays a positive role in regulating the neuritogenic effects of NGE.
...
PMID:Okadaic acid, a protein phosphatase inhibitor, inhibits nerve growth factor-directed neurite outgrowth in PC12 cells. 132 35
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