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Query: EC:3.1.4.3 (
phospholipase C
)
18,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Membrane immunoglobulin M (mIgM) and mIgD are major B-lymphocyte antigen receptors, which function by internalizing antigens for processing and presentation to T cells and by transducing essential signals for proliferation and differentiation. Although ligation of mIgM or mIgD results in rapid activation of a
phospholipase C
and a
tyrosine kinase
(s), these receptors have cytoplasmic tails of only three amino acid residues (Lys-Val-Lys), which seem ill suited for direct physical coupling with cytoplasmic signal transduction structures. In this report, we identify the alpha, beta, and gamma components of the mIgM-associated phosphoprotein complex, which may play a role in signal transduction. Proteolytic peptide mapping demonstrated that the IgM-alpha chain differs from Ig-beta and Ig-gamma. The chains were purified, and amino-terminal sequencing revealed identity with two previously cloned B-cell-specific genes. One component, IgM-alpha, is a product of the mb-1 gene, and the two additional components, Ig-beta and Ig-gamma, are products of the B29 gene. Immunoblotting analysis using rabbit antibodies prepared against predicted peptide sequences of each gene product confirmed the identification of these mIgM-associated proteins. The deduced sequence indicates that these receptor subunits lack inherent protein kinase domains but include common tyrosine-containing sequence motifs, which are likely sites of induced tyrosine phosphorylation.
...
PMID:IgM antigen receptor complex contains phosphoprotein products of B29 and mb-1 genes. 202 45
Hemopoietic cells have an absolute requirement for survival and proliferation for specific growth factors. The growth factors maintain the critical vitality of the cells by stimulating adenosine triphosphate (ATP) synthesis and hexose transport. Intracellular alkalinization also occurs rapidly through the stimulation of the Na+/H+ antiporter. These immediate metabolic events, not initiated by serum components, appear to be necessary for the integrity of cellular viability (Fig. 6). Interleukin-3 has been shown to induce the activation of PK-C through a mechanism(s) not requiring the hydrolysis of phosphoinositol 4,5 bisphosphate. A role for Ca2+ influx or intracellular release in the action of CSFs or interleukins has not been shown. Although downregulation of cAMP has been reported in response to IL-2, the signal transduction process of CSFs and IL-2 appears not to be mediated by upregulation of cyclic nucleotide metabolism or "classical" phospholipid degradative pathways. Protein phosphorylation is clearly modulated by the hemopoietic cytokines, yet only the CSF-1 receptor has any known intrinsic kinase activity. Instead, the IL-3, GM-CSF receptors, and perhaps G-CSF appear to be coupling to kinases of both tyrosine and serine specificities. This may be a direct allosteric interaction with membrane-associated kinases or transduced through an intermediate protein such as those using GTP. Such is the case for many hormone receptors that couple to amplifying "second messenger" enzyme systems (i.e., adenylate cyclase,
phospholipase C
) or members of the insulin growth factor family that couple to tyrosine kinases in proximity to the receptors (IGF-II). One of the kinase systems that IL-2, IL-3, and other CSFs stimulate appears to have some characteristics similar to PK-C. Direct activators of PK-C stimulate some similar serine-threonine phosphorylation and perhaps even tyrosine phosphorylation. The hemopoietic growth factors, however, stimulate tyrosine phosphorylation of some proteins that are not phosphorylated in response to PK-C activators, suggesting that these kinase systems are independently regulated. Although phorbol esters stimulate many of the same metabolic activities (ATP synthesis in myeloid and lymphoid cell lines), growth-factor abrogation is clearly associated with the action of
tyrosine kinase
oncogenes or the nuclear oncogene effectors such as v-myc. It is likely, therefore, that tyrosine kinases are playing a critical role in the control of proliferation although the dominant amount of cellular protein phosphorylations are on serine. Both classes of kinases are apparently required for growth-factor action. All the hemopoietic growth factors examined thus far stimulate the steady-state accumulation of the nuclear protooncogenes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hematopoietic growth-factor signal transduction and regulation of gene expression. 209 Feb 58
We have previously demonstrated
phospholipase C
(
PLC
) independent activation of phospholipase A2(PLA2) by epidermal growth factor (EGF) in glomerular mesangial cells in culture. In the current study using glass beads to permeabilize [3H]- or [14C]-arachidonate labelled mesangial cells we demonstrate that guanine nucleotides modulate the EGF-mediated stimulation of arachidonic acid release (75% inhibition with 100 microM GDP beta S and 108% augmentation with 100 microM GTP gamma S). GTP gamma S alone stimulated both the release of free arachidonic acid and production of diacylglycerol (DAG), while EGF itself neither stimulated DAG nor augmented the DAG response to GTP gamma S. These findings suggest the intermediacy of a G-protein in
PLC
-independent stimulation of PLA2 by a growth factor, and provide a model system for determining the relationship between G-protein intermediacy and the intrinsic
tyrosine kinase
activity of the growth factor receptor.
...
PMID:A role for G-proteins in the epidermal growth factor stimulation of phospholipase A2 in rat kidney mesangial cells. 212 7
We have previously reported that epidermal growth factor (EGF) activates phospholipase A2 (PLA2) independently of
phospholipase C
(
PLC
) in renal mesangial cells. In this study we use NIH 3T3 cell lines transfected with the normal EGF receptor (HER14 cells) or with EGF receptor defective in
tyrosine kinase
activity (K721A cells), to determine whether the intrinsic
tyrosine kinase
activity of the EGF receptor is required for the
PLC
-independent activation of PLA2. Intact cells were preincubated with EGF or other ligands, and then PLA2 activity was assayed in cell-free extracts with 1-stearoyl-2-[14C]arachidonyl phosphatidylcholine as the substrate. In HER14 cells, EGF increased PLA2 activity by 226 +/- 30%, and the tumour promoter phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) increased activity by 223 +/- 30%. The effect of EGF was not mediated through protein kinase C (PKC), whose activation by EGF requires
tyrosine kinase
activity, since raising intracellular Ca2+ alone with the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 did not mimic its effect, and the effect of EGF persisted in PKC-down-regulated cells. In K721A cells EGF was ineffective, whereas PMA was still active. Furthermore, in intact HER14 cells prelabelled with [14C]arachidonate, EGF-stimulated release of [14C]arachidonic acid was synergistic with A23187, but was unaccompanied by a rise in [14C]diacylglycerol. EGF had no effect on [14C]arachidonic acid release in intact K721A cells. We conclude that the
tyrosine kinase
activity of the EGF receptor is necessary for the
PLC
-independent stimulation of PLA2 by EGF.
...
PMID:The tyrosine kinase activity of the epidermal-growth-factor receptor is necessary for phospholipase A2 activation. 215 83
A glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI) has been previously identified that serves as a precursor of the polar head group that mimics and may mediate some of the intracellular actions of insulin. Since many of the biological activities of insulin may depend upon the activity of the insulin receptor kinase, we evaluated the requirement for this activity in insulin-dependent GPI hydrolysis. For the analysis we used stably transfected CHO cell lines, expressing either the wild-type human insulin receptor or a mutant receptor that lacks
tyrosine kinase
activity (Chou et al., 1987) and a stably transfected CHO cell line, expressing the wild-type human insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-1) receptor (Steele-Perkins et al., 1988). A GPI was identified in both types of transfected cells and in both sets of parental cells by metabolic labeling with [3H]glucosamine or [3H]galactose. The isolated glycolipid was sensitive to hydrolysis by
phospholipase C
and to deamination by nitrous acid. Insulin induced a time- and dose-dependent hydrolysis of the GPI in the parental line and in the transfected cell types. Cells bearing normal human receptors hydrolyzed up to 70% of their radiolabeled GPI within 2 min of the addition of 0.1 nM insulin, whereas parental cells and cells expressing the mutant receptor hydrolyzed only 20-30% in response to 100 nM insulin. IGF-1 (5-50 nM) had little effect on GPI hydrolysis in these cells as well as in CHO cells expressing the human IGF-1 receptor. It is concluded that insulin-dependent GPI hydrolysis is mediated by the normal but not by a kinase-deficient insulin receptor.
...
PMID:Hydrolysis of glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol in response to insulin is reduced in cells bearing kinase-deficient insulin receptors. 216 Feb 61
Addition of guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) to intact Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts (CCL39) depolarized by high K+ concentrations results in activation of phosphoinositide-specific
phospholipase C
(
PLC
) (at GTP gamma S concentrations greater than 0.1 mM), inhibition of adenylate cyclase (between 10 microM and 0.5 mM), and activation of adenylate cyclase (above 0.5 mM). Since GTP gamma S-induced activation of
PLC
is dramatically enhanced upon receptor-mediated stimulation of
PLC
by alpha-thrombin, we conclude that in depolarized CCL39 cells GTP gamma S directly activates various guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory proteins (G proteins) coupled to
PLC
(Gp(s)) and to adenylate cyclase (Gi and Gs). Pretreatment of cells with pertussis toxin strongly inhibits GTP gamma S-induced activation of
PLC
and inhibition of adenylate cyclase. GTP gamma S cannot be replaced by other nucleotides, except by guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S), which mimics after a lag period of 15-20 min all the effects of GTP gamma S, with the same concentration dependence and the same sensitivity to pertussis toxin. We suggest that GDP beta S is converted in cells into GTP beta S, which acts as GTP gamma S. Since cell viability is not affected by a transient depolarization, these observations provide a simple method to examine long-term effects of G protein activation on DNA synthesis. We show that a transient exposure of G0-arrested CCL39 cells to GTP gamma S or GDP beta S under depolarizing conditions is not sufficient by itself to induce a significant mitogenic response, but markedly potentiates the mitogenic action of fibroblast growth factor, a mitogen known to activate a receptor-
tyrosine kinase
. The potentiating effect is maximal after 60 min of pretreatment with 2 mM GTP gamma S. GDP beta S is equally efficient but only after a lag period of 15-20 min. Mitogenic effects of both guanine nucleotide analogs are suppressed by pertussis toxin. Since the activation of G proteins by GTP gamma S under these conditions vanishes after a few hours, we conclude that a transient activation of G proteins facilitates the transition G0----G1 in CCL39 cells, whereas
tyrosine kinase
-induced signals are sufficient to mediate the progression into S phase.
...
PMID:Guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) and guanosine 5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) activate G proteins and potentiate fibroblast growth factor-induced DNA synthesis in hamster fibroblasts. 216 8
Heparin-binding growth factors (HBGFs) bind to high-affinity cell surface receptors which possess intrinsic
tyrosine kinase
activity. A Mr 150,000 protein phosphorylated on tyrosine in response to class 1 HBGF (HBGF-1) was purified and partially sequenced. On the basis of this sequence, cDNA clones were isolated from a human endothelial cell library and identified as encoding
phospholipase C
-gamma. Phosphorylation of
phospholipase C
-gamma in intact cells treated with HBGF-1 was directly demonstrated by using antiphospholipase C-gamma antibodies. Thus, HBGF-1 joins epidermal growth factor and platelet-derived growth factor, whose receptor activation leads to tyrosine phosphorylation and probable activation of
phospholipase C
-gamma.
...
PMID:Characterization and cDNA cloning of phospholipase C-gamma, a major substrate for heparin-binding growth factor 1 (acidic fibroblast growth factor)-activated tyrosine kinase. 216 38
Ligand stimulation of the platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGF-R) results in rapid activation of the receptor tyrosine kinase, stimulation of phosphoinositide hydrolysis, an increase in intracellular free Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i), and, ultimately, cellular proliferation. In a previous study, we demonstrated that staurosporine, a known inhibitor of protein kinase C, blocked PDGF-induced [Ca2+]i increases in Swiss mouse 3T3 fibroblasts by a mechanism that appeared unrelated to inhibition of protein kinase activity (Olsen, R., Melder, D., Seewald, M., Abraham, R., and Powis, G. (1990) Biochem. Pharmacol. 39, 968-972). In the present study, we report that staurosporine inhibits ligand-dependent PDGF-R
tyrosine kinase
activation in cell-free receptor preparations and in intact Swiss 3T3 cells. At the same concentrations (10(-8)-10(-6) M), staurosporine suppressed both the tyrosine phosphorylation of
phospholipase C
activity and the hydrolysis of phosphoinositides induced by PDGF stimulation of intact cells. In contrast, guanine nucleotide-binding protein-dependent
phospholipase C
activation induced by bradykinin or fluoroaluminate anion was relatively insensitive to staurosporine. A preferential inhibitory effect of staurosporine on signal generation by the PDGF-R was indicated by findings that epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R)
tyrosine kinase
activity and EGF-dependent
phospholipase C
in A-431 carcinoma cells were approximately 100-fold less sensitive to this drug. These data indicate that submicromolar concentrations of staurosporine inhibit PDGF-dependent phosphoinositide hydrolysis and Ca2+ mobilization through a proximal inhibitory effect on ligand-induced activation of the PDGF-R
tyrosine kinase
.
...
PMID:Preferential inhibition of the platelet-derived growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase by staurosporine. 217 5
Ganglioside (GM1) treatment of CD4+ human CEM lymphoma cells stimulated transient phosphoinositide (PI) breakdown, production of inositol phosphates (IP), protein phosphorylation and rapid decrease of CD4 surface expression. A comparison between the actions of GM1 and other agents that affect these signal transduction pathways demonstrated a distinct mechanism for GM1-induced decrease of CD4. GM1 stimulated both
phospholipase C
activity and protein phosphorylation but had no effect on either cellular cAMP levels or
tyrosine kinase
activity. Phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) stimulated protein phosphorylation and caused a significant decrease in surface display of CD4. Both of these processes were blocked by pretreating cells with the protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor H7. These results demonstrate that GM1 stimulates PI turnover and induces a rapid decrease of CD4 surface expression by processes that do not activate adenylate cyclase or
tyrosine kinase
. They further demonstrate that the mechanism for GM1-induced decrease of CD4 is distinct from the CD4 internalization processes mediated by PKC activity.
...
PMID:Transmembrane signalling associated with ganglioside-induced CD4 modulation. 217 87
In order to evaluate the role of phosphoinositide turnover in growth factor action, we expressed human M1 muscarinic acetylcholine (Hm1) receptors in Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts (CCL39 cell line). In the transfected cells (39M1-81 clone), but not in wild type fibroblasts, the muscarinic agonist carbachol induced a release of inositol phosphates as strong as alpha-thrombin, a very potent growth factor and activator of phosphoinositide-specific
phospholipase C
(
PLC
) in this cell system. In contrast to thrombin, carbachol-stimulated
PLC
activity was not inhibited by pertussis toxin treatment of cells. At concentrations that elicited a comparable initial rate of inositol phosphate release (10 nM for thrombin and 0.1 mM for carbachol), both agents gave rise to an identical calcium signal and equally stimulated Na+/H+ exchange and the transcription of the early genes c-jun, c-fos, and c-myc. Surprisingly, however, carbachol is not a mitogen for 39M1-81 cells, and even if tested in association with insulin or fibroblast growth factor, its effects on cell proliferation remained weak when compared with thrombin. Also, the muscarinic agonist did not stimulate soft agar colony forming capacity and did not prevent growth arrest in Go upon serum deprivation of cycling 39M1-81 cells. The failure of carbachol to induce cell proliferation could not be attributed to rapid and complete desensitization of Hm1 receptors nor to the activation of inhibitory pathways like adenylyl cyclase stimulation. We conclude that strong and persistent activation of phosphoinositide turnover elicits early biochemical events generally associated with mitogenesis, but is not sufficient to stimulate or maintain continuous cell proliferation. On the basis of our results, we postulate that thrombin mitogenesis depends critically on signaling events different from phosphoinositide turnover, possibly the stimulation of a receptor tyrosine kinase or a Gi protein-activated
tyrosine kinase
.
...
PMID:Strong and persistent activation of inositol lipid breakdown induces early mitogenic events but not Go to S phase progression in hamster fibroblasts. Comparison of thrombin and carbachol action in cells expressing M1 muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. 217 13
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