Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.11.18 (MAP)
7,412 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Protein phosphorylation has evolved as the most versatile posttranslational modification widely used by cells. Signal transduction pathways mediated by activation of MAP kinases and protein kinase C trigger the exit of cells from the quiscence (Go-->G1 transition). Indeed, binding of growth factors at the cell surface triggers their receptors, usually possessing a tyrosine kinase on the cytoplasmic side, to phosphorylate other molecules passing on the information sequentially to GRB2 protein, to p21ras, to c-Raf-1, to MAP kinase kinase, to MAP kinase, to p90rsk, to transcription factors. Activated PKC, MAP kinase, and pp90src can translocate to the nucleus where they phosphorylate a number of protein transcription regulators in a cell cycle-dependent manner or in response to cell stimulation for exit from quiescence. The cell cycle is mainly regulated by p34cdc2 or otherwise called cdc2 in association with cyclins B at G2/M and by Cdk2 in association with cyclins A, D1, and E at G1/S checkpoints; phosphorylation of histone H1 and lamins by cdc2 triggers chromosome assembly and nuclear envelope breakdown, respectively, as a prelude to mitosis. Cdc2 activities functioning as a G2/M regulator are controlled by its phosphorylation and dephosphorylation at Ser/Thr residues. MAP kinases might be the missing link in the chain connecting the Go to G1 transition with the cell cycle regulation, whereas phosphorylation of replication protein factors, retinoblastoma, and p53 might link the G1 to S transition with the control of DNA synthesis. A number of transcription factors are known to stimulate DNA replication, including p53, c-Myc, AP-1, Oct-1, T-antigen; the DNA binding activities of all these proteins and their interaction with other transcription factors are controlled by phosphorylation. The nuclear import of several proteins including NF kappa B, Dorsal, glucocorticoid receptor, ISGF3, rNFIL-6, T antigen, and the kinases PKC, MAP, and p90rsk, are dependent on their phosphorylation at specific sites. Histone phosphorylation stimulated at discrete stages of the cell cycle or in response to cAMP or other stimuli might induce profound changes in chromatin organization.
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PMID:Phosphorylation of transcription factors and control of the cell cycle. 754 80

Protein phosphorylation is a versatile posttranslational modification and the most eminent molecular mechanism that can regulate enzymatic activities, emergence of cells from quiescence, DNA replication and onset of mitosis, gene expression, nuclear import, development, and memory. The cell cycle is mainly regulated by p34cdc2 in association with cyclins B at G2/M and by Cdk2 in association with cyclins A, D1, and E at G1/S checkpoints. MAP kinases might link the G0 to G1 transition with the regulation of the cell cycle whereas phosphorylation of replication protein factors, c-Myc, AP-1, Oct-1, T-antigen, retinoblastoma, and p53 might link the G1 to S transition with the control of DNA synthesis. These transcription regulators can up- or downregulate DNA replication and their DNA binding activities or transacting properties are controlled by phosphorylation.
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PMID:Control of DNA replication by protein phosphorylation. 787 68

RFLPs were detected in the five subunit genes of the human muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) using genomic DNA or cDNA probes from the homologous mouse loci. The RFLPs at the alpha-, beta-, gamma-, delta-, and epsilon-subunit gene loci were analyzed for genetic linkage in 16 families (n = 188). Significant evidence was obtained for close linkage of the beta- and epsilon-nAChR genes and much greater genetic distance between the alpha-nAChR gene and the gamma/delta-nAChR gene complex. The linkage analysis program CRI-MAP was used to map the positions of the beta- and epsilon-nAChR genes relative to seven markers on chromosome 17. The results indicate the beta- and epsilon-nAChR genes are separated by about 5 cM and located in the region of chromosome 17p occupied by D17S1, D17S31, TP53, and D17S513. The statistical evidence was confirmed by hybridization of the beta- and epsilon-nAChR probes to a panel of human-hamster somatic cell hybrids. The alpha-, gamma-, and delta-nAChR genes were placed on a map of 13 chromosome 2 markers. The linkage analysis placed the nAChR genes at two sites on chromosome 2q about equidistant from the marker CRYGP1, with the alpha-nAChR gene about 27 cM proximal and the gamma/delta-nAChR gene complex about 31 cM distal to CRYGP1.
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PMID:Five subunit genes of the human muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor are mapped to two linkage groups on chromosomes 2 and 17. 790 25

Cellular senescence is a state of irreversible cell cycle arrest in which normal cells at the end of their lifespan fail to enter into DNA synthesis upon serum or growth factor stimulation. We examined whether proteins required for G1/S cell cycle progression were irreversibly down-regulated in senescent human fibroblasts. Both the 44- and 42-kDa forms of the MAP-kinase protein were expressed at similar levels in young and senescent cells. In contrast to young cells where both forms were phosphorylated on tyrosine in response to serum, the p42MAP-kinase was not tyrosine phosphorylated upon serum stimulation, whereas p44MAP-kinase was phosphorylated on tyrosine in serum-starved or serum-stimulated senescent cells. Examination of p53 protein in growing, quiescent, and senescent cells revealed no significant differences in levels between the different growth states. In contrast, cdk2 and cyclin A mRNAs were completely down-regulated in stimulated senescent fibroblasts, while the G1 cyclins, C, D1, and E mRNAs, were still expressed in stimulated senescent cells although at reduced levels compared to young cells. The expression of early G1 markers, but not late G1 markers, indicates that senescent cells may be blocked at a point in late G1. We investigated whether transfection of cyclin A, alone or in combination with cdc2, was sufficient for extension of lifespan or escape from senescence. Clones expressing the transfected human cyclin A or cdc2 genes senesced at a population doubling similar to controls, thereby showing that cyclin A or cdc2 expression alone was insufficient for escape from senescence.
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PMID:Investigation of the role of G1/S cell cycle mediators in cellular senescence. 826 40

Recently, much progress has been made in defining the signal transduction pathways mediating the cellular response to genotoxic stress. Multiple pathways involving several distinct MAP kinases (ERK, JNK/SAPK, and p38/HOG1) as well as the tumor suppressor protein p53 contribute to the response; the various pathways being differentially activated by particular genotoxic agents. Although both DNA damage and extranuclear events are important in initiating the response, recent evidence suggests the response is controlled primarily through events occurring at the plasma membrane, overlapping significantly with those important in initiating mitogenic responses. Attenuation of the responses appears to be largely controlled through feedback mechanisms involving gene products produced during the activation process.
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PMID:Signaling events controlling the molecular response to genotoxic stress. 885 80

The organochlorine pesticide heptachlor constitutes a potential health hazard because of its persistence in nature, its reported contamination in food and milk, and its possible carcinogenic effects. As a tumor promoter, heptachlor induces human myeloblastic leukemia cells to differentiate, and also down-regulates the tumor suppressor gene p53 in human immune cells. In this study, the heptachlor signaling pathway in human lymphocytes was studied. Addition of heptachlor to human CEM x174 lymphocytic cells reduced the cellular levels of MAP kinase (MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase) cascade proteins, including ERK1 (a 44-kDa MAPK), ERK2 (a 42-kDa MAPK), a 85-kDa and a 54-kDa MAP kinase, MEK1 (a 45-kDa ERK kinase) and MEKK (a 78-kDa MEK kinase). However, heptachlor treatment caused a marked increase in the expression of the activated (Thr- and Tyr-dually phosphorylated) ERK1 and ERK2 in the cells. These studies indicate that mitogen-activated protein kinases are important intermediates in the signal transduction pathway of immune cells upon heptachlor exposure, and the observation of stimulation of activated MAP kinases without a simultaneous accumulation of basal enzymes may suggest the involvement of a negative feedback control mechanism in the pathway.
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PMID:Heptachlor and the mitogen-activated protein kinase module in human lymphocytes. 970 2

The role of hepatitis B virus HBx protein in the carcinogenesis associated with chronic viral infection remains ill-defined. Indeed, pleiotropic effects have been ascribed to HBx: in addition to its well-documented ability to indirectly stimulate transcription, the protein has been reported to affect cell growth, signal transduction, DNA repair and apoptosis. In this work, we generated Chang (CCL-13)-derived cell lines constitutively expressing wild type or mutant HBx, as a model of HBx-host cell interaction closer to the chronic infection setting, than the classically used transient expression systems. We document the potentiation by HBx of the apoptotic cell death pathway in the recipient cells. This effect is unlikely to rely on p53 activity since the protein is functionally inactivated in CCL-13. In addition, antioxidants and cyclosporin A failed to reduce the apoptotic response back to the normal level, suggesting that production of reactive oxygen species and calcineurin activation are not directly involved in the proapoptotic effect of HBx. In contrast, our data show that transactivation and stimulation of apoptosis are tightly linked HBx activities. Finally, expression of transactivation-active protein did not result in detectable change in the pattern of MAP kinases phosphorylation nor did it affect the ability of the host cell to repair in vitro irradiated plasmid DNA.
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PMID:The proapoptotic effect of hepatitis B virus HBx protein correlates with its transactivation activity in stably transfected cell lines. 1036 57

p53 plays a critical role as a tumour-suppressor in restricting the proliferation of damaged cells, thus preventing formation of genetically altered cell clones. Its inactivation leads, in particular, to accumulation of polyploid and aneuploid cells. To elucidate the role of p53 in control of chromosome number, we analysed its participation in the cell cycle checkpoints controlling: (1) spindle assembly; and (2) G1-to-S transitions in cells with disintegrated microtubule cytoskeleton. Treatment with 8-10 ng/ml of colcemid causing no visible destruction of the spindle leads to arrest of metaphase-to-anaphase transition in both p53-positive and p53-negative murine fibroblasts, as well as in p53-positive REF52 cells and their counterparts (where the p53 function was inactivated by transduction of dominant-negative p53 fragment). Furthermore, p53-positive and p53-defective rodent and human cells showed no significant difference in kinetics of metaphase-to-interphase transitions in cultures treated with high colcemid doses preventing spindle formation. These data argue against the hypothesis that p53 is a key component of the spindle-assembly checkpoint. However, p53 mediates activation of the G1 checkpoint in response to depolymerization of microtubules in interphase cells. Treatment of synchronized G0/G1 cells with colcemid causes arrest of G1-to-S transition. Inactivation of the p53 function by transduction of dominant-negative p53 fragment abolishes the G1 checkpoint that prevents entry into S phase of cells with disrupted microtubules. Transduction of kinase-defective dominant-negative c- raf mutant or application of PD 098059, a specific inhibitor of MEK1, also abrogates the G1 cell cycle arrest in cells with disintegrated microtubule system. It seems that Raf-MAP-kinase signalling pathways are responsible for p53 activation induced by depolymerization of microtubules.
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PMID:p53 does not control the spindle assembly cell cycle checkpoint but mediates G1 arrest in response to disruption of microtubule system. 1057 98

Two p53-null T lymphoma cell lines proved to be highly sensitive to inhibition of gene expression. With either actinomycin D or cycloheximide, apoptosis commenced within 2 h, as indicated by loss of membrane integrity, degradation of certain proteins (including the phosphatase calcineurin) and DNA fragmentation. These effects were ablated by co-expression of Bcl-2 or co-incubation with the caspase inhibitor Z-VAD-fmk. These results suggest that the apoptotic machinery is in place in these cells but held in check by an unknown labile protein, which probably acts upstream of Bcl-2. Although cycloheximide can activate the JNK or p38 MAP kinases in some cells, neither was implicated here. However, disruption of phosphoinositide 3-kinase signaling may be involved, because the cells were also sensitive to wortmannin. The high sensitivity of the p53-null lymphoma cells to inhibitors of gene expression suggests that such inhibitors might prove useful in the cytotoxic therapy of certain tumors.
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PMID:Interference with gene expression induces rapid apoptosis in p53-null T lymphoma cells. 1063 38

The c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs, also called stress activated protein kinases. SAPKs) and p38 kinases constitute together with extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) the family of MAP kinases. Whereas the functions of JNKs under physiological conditions are largely unknown, there is raising evidence that JNKs are potent effectors of apoptosis or degeneration of neurons in vitro and in the brain. The activation of the inducible transcription factor c-Jun by N-terminal phosphorylation is a central event in JNK-mediated degenerative processes that depend on de novo protein synthesis. At the post-translational level, cytoplasmic degenerative actions of JNKs might comprise inhibition of Bcl-2 and steroid hormone-receptor signaling or hyperphosphorylation of tau; and at transcriptional level, JNKs might trigger the induction of the apoptotic effectors p53 and Fas-Ligand by phosphorylation of c-Jun. The role of p38 is the nervous system is poorly understood, but its activation is also considered as part of the neuronal stress response. This review informs about the genetic processing, the regulation of activity and the biochemical actions of JNK and p38 isoforms in general. In the second part, we summarize the findings on expression and activation of JNKs and p38 under neurodegenerative condition. A particular focus is also put on the putative function of JNK under physiological conditions and for neuroprotection.
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PMID:JNK and p38 stresskinases--degenerative effectors of signal-transduction-cascades in the nervous system. 1075 64


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