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Query: HUMANGGP:009336 (
ATPase
)
59,826
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Calcineurin is a conserved Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase that plays a critical role in Ca(2+)-mediated signaling in many cells. Yeast cells lacking functional calcineurin (cna1 cna2 or cnb1 mutants) display growth defects under specific environmental conditions, for example, in the presence of high concentrations of Na+, Li+, Mn2+, or OH- but are indistinguishable from wild-type cells under standard culture conditions. To characterize regulatory pathways that may overlap with calcineurin, we performed a synthetic lethal screen to identify mutants that require calcineurin on standard growth media. The characterization of one such mutant, cnd1-8, is presented. The CND1 gene was cloned, and sequence analysis predicts that it encodes a novel protein 1,876 amino acids in length with multiple membrane-spanning domains. CND1 is identical to the gene identified previously as FKS1, ETG1, and CWH53, cnd1 mutants are sensitive to FK506 and cyclosporin A and exhibit slow growth that is improved by the addition of osmotic stabilizing agents. This osmotic agent-remedial growth defect and microscopic evidence of spontaneous cell lysis in cnd1 cultures suggest that cell integrity is compromised in these mutants. Mutations in the genes for yeast protein kinase C (pkc1) and a
MAP kinase
(mpk1/slt2) disrupt a Ca(2+)-dependent signaling pathway required to maintain a normal cell wall and cell integrity. We show that pkc1 and mpk1/slt2 growth defects are more severe in the absence of calcineurin function and less severe in the presence of a constitutively active form of calcineurin. These observations suggest that calcineurin and protein kinase C perform independent but physiologically related functions in yeast cells. We show that several mutants that lack a functional vacuolar H(+)-
ATPase
(vma) require calcineurin for vegetative growth. We discuss possible roles for calcineurin in regulating intracellular ion homeostasis and in maintaining cell integrity.
...
PMID:Calcineurin, the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase, is essential in yeast mutants with cell integrity defects and in mutants that lack a functional vacuolar H(+)-ATPase. 754 41
It is known that mechanical stress directly changes the conformation of the functional proteins, or directly activates enzymes such as phospholipase in the plasma membrane. The integrin-cytoskeleton complex may be an alternative candidate structure for a mechanoreceptor and a transducer. The cytoskeleton has been also shown to play an important role in secretion. Mechanical stress may stimulate the secretion of some cytokines or angiotensin II, which may generate multiple intracellular signals as a secondary event. External stimuli are generally transduced into the nucleus through the activation of protein kinase cascade. Stretching of cardiac myocytes stimulates the activity of PKC, Raf-1 kinase, MAP kinase kinase.
MAP kinase
and S6 kinase. In cardiac myocytes, mechanical stress directly induces gene expression as well as protein synthesis. Immediate early genes are first induced, and then fetal-type genes are reinduced. Both in hypertrophied hearts and in the experimental model of cardiac hypertrophy induced by pressure overload. Ca(2+)-
ATPase
content of cardiac myocytes is depressed. Reduced function of sarcoplasmic reticulum causes insufficient decrease of intracellular calcium in diastole and induces slowing of ventricular relaxation. In the interstitium of pressure overloaded hearts, the accumulation of collagen fiber is increased. The abnormal deposit leads to increased chamber stiffness and diastolic dysfunction. Furthermore, TGF-beta and tissue renin-angiotensin system are up-regulated in pressure overloaded hearts, both of which accelerate the interstitial fibrosis.
...
PMID:Interaction of cardiac myocytes and non-myocytes in mechanical stress-induced hypertrophy. 777 62
The activation of endothelial cells following exposure to a variety of receptor-dependent and -independent stimuli is associated with the release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores as well as the influx of Ca2+ from the extracellular space. In the present study, we investigated the interaction between Ca2+ signaling in cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells and tyrosine phosphorylation. Stimulation of endothelial cells with either bradykinin (100 nmol/L), histamine (1 mumol/L), or the Ca(2+)-
ATPase
inhibitor thapsigargin (30 nmol/L) resulted in a slightly delayed but prolonged tyrosine phosphorylation of two low molecular weight proteins (approximately 42 and approximately 44 kD). These proteins were identified by immunoprecipitation as the 42- and 44-kD isoforms of
mitogen-activated protein kinase
(
MAP kinase
). The agonist-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the 42-/44-kD doublet was sensitive to the tyrosine kinase inhibitors genistein (100 mumol/L) and piceatannol (10 mumol/L) and was inhibited by the removal of Ca2+ from the extracellular medium. In fura 2-loaded endothelial cells, inhibition of tyrosine kinases attenuated Ca2+ signaling after stimulation with either bradykinin (30 nmol/L) or thapsigargin (30 nmol/L). Since inhibition of tyrosine kinases specifically attenuates the plateau phase of the Ca2+ response after stimulation, the effect of tyrosine kinase inhibition appeared to be mostly associated with the influx of Ca2+ from the extracellular space.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Calcium signaling in endothelial cells involves activation of tyrosine kinases and leads to activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases. 789 28
The yeast PMR2/ENA1 gene encodes an
ATPase
involved in sodium extrusion and induced by NaCl. At low salt concentrations (0.3 M) induction is mediated by the HOG-
MAP kinase
pathway, a system activated by non-specific osmotic stress. At high salt concentrations (0.8 M) induction is mediated by the protein phosphatase calcineurin and is specific for sodium. Protein kinase A and Sis2p/Hal3p modulate PMR2/ENA1 expression as negative and positive factors, respectively but Sis2p/Hal3p does not participate in the transduction of the salt signal. Salt stress decreases the level of cAMP and the resulting decrease in protein kinase A activity may contribute to HOG-mediated induction.
...
PMID:Multiple transduction pathways regulate the sodium-extrusion gene PMR2/ENA1 during salt stress in yeast. 861 70
Thapsigargin is a non-phorbol ester-type tumor promoter that elevates the intracellular Ca2+ (Ca(i)2+) levels by blocking the microsomal Ca2+
ATPase
. At present, the consequence of this Ca(i)2+ increase and the nature of the tumorigenicity of thapsigargin still remain to be elucidated. Previously, we demonstrated that thapsigargin activates the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase via Ca(i)2+ but independently of protein kinase C or Ca2+ influx. Here, we show that thapsigargin also rapidly stimulates the Src tyrosine kinase. Transfection of a v-Src gene into a hippocampal cell line (H19-7) renders a constitutive activation of
MAP kinase
, whereas transfection of a kinase-deficient Src mutant blocks the activation by thapsigargin, suggesting that Src is required for the thapsigargin-induced
MAP kinase
activation. Cotransfection of a dominant-inhibitory Raf-1 and the v-Src genes into H19-7 cells results in an inhibition of the otherwise constitutively elevated
MAP kinase
activity, suggesting that Raf-1 is required for the Src-dependent activation of
MAP kinase
. Similarly, in the LA-90 cells, expression of a temperature-sensitive allele of v-Src constitutively activates Raf-1 and
MAP kinase
, whereas expression of a dominant-inhibitory Raf-1 mutant abolishes the
MAP kinase
activation induced by either v-Src or thapsigargin treatment. Together, these results suggest that thapsigargin stimulates
MAP kinase
signaling via Src and Raf-1. The activation of this Src-
MAP kinase
pathway suggests a biochemical mechanism for the tumorigenic nature of thapsigargin.
...
PMID:Src tyrosine kinase mediates stimulation of Raf-1 and mitogen-activated protein kinase by the tumor promoter thapsigargin. 924 45
We showed before that partial inhibition of Na/K-
ATPase
by non-toxic concentrations of ouabain caused hypertrophic growth of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes, and induced several early- and late-response genes that are markers of cardiac hypertrophy. The aim of this study was to determine if the genes of the alpha-subunit isoforms of Na/K-
ATPase
were among those regulated by ouabain; and if so, to begin the characterization of the pathways regulating these genes. When neonatal myocytes, expressing alpha1- and alpha3-isoform messages, were exposed to 5-100 micro M ouabain, alpha1 mRNA was not affected, but alpha3 mRNA was decreased in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Ouabain-induced down-regulation of alpha3 mRNA was accompanied by a decrease in alpha3-protein content in these myocytes. There was a significant correlation between ouabain effects on alpha3-repression and skeletal alpha-actin induction; also, ouabain's transcriptional effects on both genes were antagonised by retinoic acid. These findings suggested the association of alpha3 repression with ouabain-induced hypertrophy. Phenylephrine and a phorbol ester, two hypertrophic stimuli that do not inhibit Na/K-
ATPase
, also down-regulated alpha3 mRNA without affecting alpha1 mRNA, suggesting that alpha3-repression is a common feature of the hypertrophic phenotype in these myocytes. Ouabain-induced repression of alpha3 required the influx of extracellular Ca2+, and was antagonized by inhibitors of protein kinase C, Ca2+-calmodulin kinase, and
mitogen-activated protein kinase
but not by inhibition of protein kinase A. These data, and prior findings on the mechanisms of hypertrophic effects of phenylephrine and phorbol esters, suggest that transcriptional repression of alpha3 by ouabain and other hypertrophic stimuli involves a common step regulated by a
mitogen-activated protein kinase
.
...
PMID:Differential regulation of Na/K-ATPase alpha-subunit isoform gene expressions in cardiac myocytes by ouabain and other hypertrophic stimuli. 940 89
The tumor promoter palytoxin has been found to activate the
stress-activated protein kinase
/c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase 1 (
SAPK
/JNK1), and it also potentiates, as demonstrated here, the p38/HOG1
mitogen-activated protein kinase
and the upstream activator of
SAPK
/JNK1, SEK1/MKK4. In search of possible mechanisms for both the cytotoxicity and the activation of stress kinases by palytoxin, we found that palytoxin is a potent inhibitor of cellular protein synthesis. The inhibition of translation by palytoxin does not result from its direct binding to the translational apparatus. We have previously demonstrated that ribotoxic stressors (Iordanov, M. S., Pribnow, D., Magun, J. L., Dinh, T.-H., Pearson, J. A., Chen, S. L.-Y., and Magun, B. E. (1997) Mol. Cell. Biol. 17, 3373-3381) signal the activation of
SAPK
/JNK1 by binding to or covalently modifying 28 S rRNA in ribosomes that are active at the time of exposure to the stressor. Palytoxin acted as a ribotoxic stressor, inasmuch as it required actively translating ribosomes at the time of exposure to activate
SAPK
/JNK1. Palytoxin has been shown to augment ion fluxes by binding to the Na+/K+-
ATPase
in the plasma membrane of cells. To determine whether altered fluxes of either Na+ or K+ could be responsible for the effects of palytoxin on translation and on activation of
SAPK
/JNK1, cells were exposed to palytoxin in modified culture medium in which a major portion of the Na+ was replaced by either K+ or by choline+. The substitution of Na+ by K+ strongly inhibited the ability of palytoxin both to inhibit protein translation and to activate
SAPK
/JNK1, whereas the substitution of Na+ by choline+ did not. These results suggest that palytoxin-induced efflux of cellular K+ mimics ribotoxic stress by provoking both translational inhibition and activation of protein kinases associated with cellular defense against stress.
...
PMID:Loss of cellular K+ mimics ribotoxic stress. Inhibition of protein synthesis and activation of the stress kinases SEK1/MKK4, stress-activated protein kinase/c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase 1, and p38/HOG1 by palytoxin. 945 78
We showed before that in neonatal rat cardiac myocytes partial inhibition of Na+/K+-
ATPase
by nontoxic concentrations of ouabain causes hypertrophic growth and transcriptional regulations of genes that are markers of cardiac hypertrophy. In view of the suggested roles of Ras and p42/44 mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) as key mediators of cardiac hypertrophy, the aim of this work was to explore their roles in ouabain-initiated signal pathways regulating four growth-related genes of these myocytes, i.e. those for c-Fos, skeletal alpha-actin, atrial natriuretic factor, and the alpha3-subunit of Na+/K+-
ATPase
. Ouabain caused rapid activations of Ras and p42/44 MAPKs; the latter was sustained longer than 90 min. Using high efficiency adenoviral-mediated expression of a dominant-negative Ras mutant, and a specific inhibitor of
MAPK
kinase (MEK), activation of Ras-Raf-MEK-p42/44
MAPK
cascade by ouabain was shown. The effects of the mutant Ras, an inhibitor of Ras farnesylation, and the MEK inhibitor on ouabain-induced changes in mRNAs of the four genes indicated that (a) skeletal alpha-actin induction was dependent on Ras but not on p42/44 MAPKs, (b) alpha3 repression was dependent on the Ras-p42/44
MAPK
cascade, and (c) induction of c-fos or atrial natriuretic factor gene occurred partly through the Ras-p42/44
MAPK
cascade, and partly through pathways independent of Ras and p42/44 MAPKs. All ouabain effects required extracellular Ca2+, and were attenuated by a Ca2+/calmodulin antagonist or a protein kinase C inhibitor. The findings show that (a) signal pathways linked to sarcolemmal Na+/K+-
ATPase
share early segments involving Ca2+ and protein kinase C, but diverge into multiple branches only some of which involve Ras, or p42/44 MAPKs, or both; and (b) there are significant differences between this network and the related gene regulatory pathways activated by other hypertrophic stimuli, including those whose responses involve increases in intracellular free Ca2+ through different mechanisms.
...
PMID:Multiple signal transduction pathways link Na+/K+-ATPase to growth-related genes in cardiac myocytes. The roles of Ras and mitogen-activated protein kinases. 961 40
We previously demonstrated that the marine toxin and skin tumor promoter palytoxin activates the
stress-activated protein kinase
/
c-Jun N-terminal kinase
(JNK), but not the
extracellular signal-regulated kinase
(
ERK
), which is typically activated by mitogenic agents. JNK,
ERK
, and p38, another
stress-activated protein kinase
, are members of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase family of serine/threonine kinases, which coordinate the transmission of various signals through the cell. The Na+,K+-
ATPase
is the putative palytoxin receptor. Therefore, we hypothesized that the Na+,K+-
ATPase
inhibitor ouabain might also stimulate signaling pathways that activate MAP kinases. Using HeLa and COS7 cells, we found that, although there are similarities between the protein kinase cascades by which palytoxin and ouabain activate JNK, there are also significant differences between the activation of specific MAP kinases by palytoxin and ouabain. Transient expression of dominant negative mutants indicates that ouabain, like palytoxin, activates JNK through a protein kinase cascade that involves the JNK kinase SEK1 but does not require the GTPase Ras. Palytoxin activates JNK and p38 to a greater extent than ouabain. By contrast, ouabain activates
ERK
to a greater extent than palytoxin. Ouabain blocked palytoxin-stimulated activation of JNK and p38, but not anisomycin-stimulated activation of these kinases, supporting the conclusion that ouabain and palytoxin bind to the same site on the Na+,K+-
ATPase
. These results suggest that the Na+,K+-
ATPase
can differentially mediate the activation of MAP kinases by two diverse ligands, palytoxin and ouabain.
...
PMID:Differential activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases by palytoxin and ouabain, two ligands for the Na+,K+-ATPase. 970 14
The yeast ENA1/PMR2A gene encodes a cation extrusion
ATPase
in Saccharomyces cerevisiae which is essential for survival under salt stress conditions. One important mechanism of ENA1 transcriptional regulation is based on repression under normal growth conditions, which is relieved by either osmotic induction or glucose starvation. Analysis of the ENA1 promoter revealed a Mig1p-binding motif (-533 to -544) which was characterized as an upstream repressing sequence (URSMIG-ENA1) regulated by carbon source. Its function was abolished in a mig1 mig2 double-deletion strain as well as in either ssn6 or tup1 single mutants. A second URS at -502 to -513 is responsible for transcriptional repression regulated by osmotic stress and is similar to mammalian cyclic AMP response elements (CREs) that are recognized by CREB proteins. This URSCRE-ENA1 element requires for its repression function the yeast CREB homolog Sko1p (Acr1p) as well as the integrity of the Ssn6p-Tup1p corepressor complex. When targeted to the GAL1 promoter by fusing with the Gal4p DNA-binding domain, Sko1p acts as an Ssn6/Tup1p-dependent repressor regulated by osmotic stress. A glutathione S-transferase-Sko1 fusion protein binds specifically to the URSCRE-ENA1 element. Furthermore, a hog1
mitogen-activated protein kinase
deletion strain could not counteract repression on URSCRE-ENA1 during osmotic shock. The loss of SKO1 completely restored ENA1 expression in a hog1 mutant and partially suppressed the osmotic stress sensitivity, qualifying Sko1p as a downstream effector of the HOG pathway. Our results indicate that different signalling pathways (HOG osmotic pathway and glucose repression pathway) use distinct promoter elements of ENA1 (URSCRE-ENA1 and URSMIG-ENA1) via specific transcriptional repressors (Sko1p and Mig1/2p) and via the general Ssn6p-Tup1p complex. The physiological importance of the relief from repression during salt stress was also demonstrated by the increased tolerance of sko1 or ssn6 mutants to Na+ or Li+ stress.
...
PMID:Repressors and upstream repressing sequences of the stress-regulated ENA1 gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: bZIP protein Sko1p confers HOG-dependent osmotic regulation. 985 77
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