Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Previously, we reported that Rck1 regulates Hog1 and Slt2 activities and affects MAP kinase activity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Recently, we found that Rck1 up-regulates phospho-Kss1 and phospho-Fus3. Kss1 has been known as a component in the pseudohyphal growth pathway, and we attempted to identify the function of Rck1 in pseudohyphal growth. Rck1 up-regulated Ras2 at the protein level, not the transcriptional level. Additionally, FLO11 transcription was up-regulated by RCK1 over-expression. RCK1 expression was up-regulated during growth on SLAD+1% butanol medium. On nitrogen starvation agar plates, RCK1 over-expression induced pseudohyphal growth of colonies, and cells over-expressing RCK1 showed a filamentous morphology when grown in SLAD medium. Furthermore, 1-butanol greatly induced filamentous growth when RCK1 was over-expressed. Moreover, invasive growth was activated in haploid cells when RCK1 was over-expressed. The growth defect of cells observed on 1-butanol medium was recovered when RCK1 was over-expressed. Interestingly, Ras2 and phospho-Kss1 were up-regulated by Rck1 independently. Together, these results suggest that Rck1 promotes pseudohyphal growth by activating Ras2 and Kss1 via independent pathways in S. cerevisiae.
...
PMID:Rck1 up-regulates pseudohyphal growth by activating the Ras2 and MAP kinase pathways independently in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 2449 52

Insulin-like signalling is a conserved mechanism that coordinates animal growth and metabolism with nutrient status. In Drosophila, insulin-producing median neurosecretory cells (IPCs) regulate larval growth by secreting insulin-like peptides (dILPs) in a diet-dependent manner. Previous studies have shown that nutrition affects dILP secretion through humoral signals derived from the fat body. Here we uncover a novel mechanism that operates cell autonomously in the IPCs to regulate dILP secretion. We observed that impairment of ribosome biogenesis specifically in the IPCs strongly inhibits dILP secretion, which consequently leads to reduced body size and a delay in larval development. This response is dependent on p53, a known surveillance factor for ribosome biogenesis. A downstream effector of this growth inhibitory response is an atypical MAP kinase ERK7 (ERK8/MAPK15), which is upregulated in the IPCs following impaired ribosome biogenesis as well as starvation. We show that ERK7 is sufficient and essential to inhibit dILP secretion upon impaired ribosome biogenesis, and it acts epistatically to p53. Moreover, we provide evidence that p53 and ERK7 contribute to the inhibition of dILP secretion upon starvation. Thus, we conclude that a cell autonomous ribosome surveillance response, which leads to upregulation of ERK7, inhibits dILP secretion to impede tissue growth under limiting dietary conditions.
...
PMID:p53- and ERK7-dependent ribosome surveillance response regulates Drosophila insulin-like peptide secretion. 2539 88

Adaptation to a changing environment is essential for the survival and propagation of sessile organisms, such as plants or fungi. Filamentous fungi commonly respond to a worsening of their growth conditions by differentiation of asexually or sexually produced spores. The formation of these specialized cell types is, however, also triggered as part of the general life cycle by hyphal age or density. Spores typically serve for dispersal and, therefore, translocation but can also act as resting states to endure times of scarcity. Eukaryotic differentiation in response to environmental and self-derived signals is commonly mediated by three-tiered mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase signaling cascades. Here, we report that the MAP kinase Fus3 of the black mold Aspergillus niger (AngFus3) and its upstream kinase AngSte7 control vegetative spore formation and secondary metabolism. Mutants lacking these kinases are defective in conidium induction in response to hyphal density but are fully competent in starvation-induced sporulation, indicating that conidiation in A. niger is triggered by various independent signals. In addition, the mutants exhibit an altered profile of volatile metabolites and secrete dark pigments into the growth medium, suggesting a dysregulation of the secondary metabolism. By assigning the AngFus3 MAP kinase pathway to the transduction of a potentially self-derived trigger, this work contributes to the unraveling of the intricate signaling networks controlling fungal differentiation. Moreover, our data further support earlier observations that differentiation and secondary metabolism are tightly linked in filamentous fungi.
...
PMID:The AngFus3 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Controls Hyphal Differentiation and Secondary Metabolism in Aspergillus niger. 2588 53

P38-regulated and activated kinase (PRAK/MAPKAPK5) is a serine/threonine kinase which lies downstream of the p38 and ERK3/4 MAP kinase pathways. PRAK plays diverse roles in the processes of cell growth, nutrient starvation response, programmed cell death, senescence and motility. PRAK has been shown to both promote and inhibit cell motility in different contexts. The pro-motility functions of PRAK are attributed mainly to cytoskeletal rearrangement occurring downstream of its phosphorylated substrate HSP27; however, it was recently shown that PRAK is required for motility in endothelial cells upstream of Focal adhesion kinase (FAK). Along with Src, FAK functions as a mediator of motility signaling through the phosphorylation of substrates in focal adhesions. Here, we show that PRAK, initially identified as a FAK substrate in an in situ/ kinase overlay assay, is a Src substrate, the phosphorylation of which directs PRAK to focal adhesions. Focal adhesion localization of PRAK was not found to affect cell motility, however transient over expression of PRAK inhibited motility in HeLa cells. This effect requires PRAK kinase activity and proceeds through an impairment of FAK activation via phosphorylation on Y861. Our studies demonstrate for the first time that PRAK is regulated by tyrosine phosphorylation, localizes to focal adhesions, and interacts physically with and can phosphorylate FAK/Src. Further we provide a novel mechanism for the inhibition of motility downstream of PRAK.
...
PMID:Cross-Phosphorylation and Interaction between Src/FAK and MAPKAP5/PRAK in Early Focal Adhesions Controls Cell Motility. 2604 27

Sphingolipids are major constituents of membranes. A number of S. cerevisiae sphingolipid intermediates such as long chains sphingoid bases (LCBs) and ceramides act as signaling molecules regulating cell cycle progression, adaptability to heat stress, and survival in response to starvation. Here we show that S. cerevisiae haploid cells must synthesize ceramide in order to induce mating specific cell cycle arrest. Cells devoid of sphingolipid biosynthesis or defective in ceramide synthesis are sterile and harbor defects in pheromone-induced MAP kinase-dependent transcription. Analyses of G1/S cyclin levels indicate that mutant cells cannot reduce Cln1/2 levels in response to pheromone. FACS analysis indicates a lack of ability to arrest. The addition of LCBs to sphingolipid deficient cells restores MAP kinase-dependent transcription, reduces cyclin levels, and allows for mating, as does the addition of a cell permeable ceramide to cells blocked at ceramide synthesis. Pharmacological studies using the inositolphosphorylceramide synthase inhibitor aureobasidin A indicate that the ability to synthesize and accumulate ceramide alone is sufficient for cell cycle arrest and mating. Studies indicate that ceramide also has a role in PI(4,5)P2 polarization during mating, an event necessary for initiating cell cycle arrest and mating itself. Moreover, our studies suggest a third role for ceramide in localizing the mating-specific Ste5 scaffold to the plasma membrane. Thus, ceramide plays a role 1) in pheromone-induced cell cycle arrest, 2) in activation of MAP kinase-dependent transcription, and 3) in PtdIns(4,5)P2 polarization. All three events are required for differentiation during yeast mating.
...
PMID:Ceramide signals for initiation of yeast mating-specific cell cycle arrest. 2682 56

The Rho family GTPase Cdc42 is a key regulator of eukaryotic cellular organization and cell polarity [1]. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, active Cdc42 and associated effectors and regulators (the "Cdc42 polarity module") coordinate polarized growth at cell tips by controlling the actin cytoskeleton and exocytosis [2-4]. Localization of the Cdc42 polarity module to cell tips is thus critical for its function. Here we show that the fission yeast stress-activated protein kinase Sty1, a homolog of mammalian p38 MAP kinase, regulates localization of the Cdc42 polarity module. In wild-type cells, treatment with latrunculin A, a drug that leads to actin depolymerization, induces dispersal of the Cdc42 module from cell tips and cessation of polarized growth [5, 6]. We show that latrunculin A treatment also activates the Sty1 MAP kinase pathway and, strikingly, we find that loss of Sty1 MAP kinase signaling prevents latrunculin A-induced dispersal of the Cdc42 module, allowing polarized growth even in complete absence of the actin cytoskeleton. Regulation of the Cdc42 module by Sty1 is independent of Sty1's role in stress-induced gene expression. We also describe a system for activation of Sty1 kinase "on demand" in the absence of any external stress, and use this to show that Sty1 activation alone is sufficient to disperse the Cdc42 module from cell tips in otherwise unperturbed cells. During nitrogen-starvation-induced quiescence, inhibition of Sty1 converts non-growing, depolarized cells into growing, polarized cells. Our results place MAP kinase Sty1 as an important physiological regulator of the Cdc42 polarity module.
...
PMID:Remodeling of the Fission Yeast Cdc42 Cell-Polarity Module via the Sty1 p38 Stress-Activated Protein Kinase Pathway. 2774 23

Autophagy, a pathway for bulk protein degradation and removal of damaged organelles, represents one of the major responses of cells to stress, thereby exerting a strict control on their correct functioning. Consequently, this process has been involved in the pathogenesis and therapeutic responses of several human diseases. Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase 15 (MAPK15) is an atypical member of the MAP kinase family that recently emerged as a key modulator of autophagy and, through this, of cell transformation. Still, no information is available about signaling pathways mediating the effect of MAPK15 on this process, nor is it known which phase of autophagosome biogenesis is affected by this MAP kinase. Here, we demonstrate that MAPK15 stimulated 5'-AMP-activated protein kinase-dependent activity of UNC-51-like kinase 1 (ULK1), the only protein kinase among the ATG-related proteins, toward downstream substrates and signaling intermediates. Importantly, MAPK15 directly interacted with the ULK1 complex and mediated ULK1 activation induced by starvation, a classical stimulus for the autophagic process. In turn, ULK1 and its highly homologous protein ULK2 are able to transduce MAPK15 signals stimulating early phases of autophagosomal biogenesis in a multikinase cascade that offers numerous potential targets for future therapeutic intervention in cancer and other autophagy-related human diseases.
...
PMID:MAPK15 is part of the ULK complex and controls its activity to regulate early phases of the autophagic process. 3013 41

Endothelial cell injury and death precede atherosclerosis development. Thus, it is important to understand the mechanisms that lead to these early changes in endothelial cells. Although members of the MAP kinase/ERK kinase (MEK) kinase 3 (MEKK3)-MEK5-ERK5 module play an essential role in underpinning endothelial cell survival, how they execute these actions remain poorly understood. Furthermore, there is poor understanding of death-inducing pathways in endothelial cells and it is also unclear whether there are direct interactions between the kinase module and death-inducing pathways. Using immunoprecipitation and liquid chromatography-electrospray ionisation tandem mass spectrometry approaches, we show in human umbilical vein endothelial cells that the MEKK3-MEK5-ERK5 ternary complex contains glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), a glycolytic enzyme that can trigger the death of certain cell-types. GAPDH binds directly to MEKK3. Interestingly, serum depletion, a trigger of endothelial cell death, results in a rapid loss of cytosolic MEKK3 and MEKK3-GAPDH interaction. MEKK3 rapidly reappears in the cytosol upon serum replenishment, accompanied by the restoration of MEKK3-GAPDH interaction. During serum starvation or exposure to cytotoxic concentrations of H2O2, GAPDH accumulates in the nucleus. Inhibition of the nuclear accumulation of GAPDH with R-(-)-deprenyl hydrochloride attenuates the degree of cell death. Serum replenishment of serum-starved cells reduces the level of nuclear GAPDH and prevents cell death. Cell-free assays show phosphorylation of GAPDH on four residues by MEKK3. These data not only strongly implicate nuclear GAPDH in causing endothelial cell death but also reveal a potential mechanism for MEKK3 to regulate GAPDH function and hence promote endothelial cell survival.
...
PMID:Regulation of endothelial cell survival and death by the MAP kinase/ERK kinase kinase 3 - glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase signaling axis. 3083 Nov 95

A cellular slime mold, Dictyostelium discoideum, is an amoeboid organism that has a unique life cycle consisting of distinctly separated vegetative and developmental phases. Thus, this organism presents a rare opportunity in which to examine the effects of bioactive substances on separate cellular activities. In this research, we investigated the effect of a culture extract, termed EMXG, produced by a synthetic microbial consortium. EMXG promoted proliferative response of amoeba cells. It further accelerated the developmental phase, leading to the preferred fruiting body formation from fewer cells. Furthermore, EMXG modulated biological rhythm of this organism, that is, interval of oscillation of cAMP level observed in suspension starvation was significantly shortened. Concomitantly, the level of ERKB, a MAP kinase, was found to oscillate in a similar fashion to that of cAMP. Additionally, ErkB-deficient mutant amoeboid cells did not respond to proliferative stimulation by EMXG. These lines of evidence point to a likelihood that MAP kinase cascade is involved and further that ErkB could be the molecular target of EMXG.
...
PMID:The Life Cycle of Dictyostelium discoideum Is Accelerated via MAP Kinase Cascade by a Culture Extract Produced by a Synthetic Microbial Consortium. 3180 58

Transcription factors are often the downstream effectors of signaling cascades. In fission yeast, the transcription factor Atf1 is phosphorylated by the MAP kinase Sty1 under several environmental stressors to promote transcription initiation of stress genes. However, Sty1 and Atf1 have also been involved in other cellular processes such as homologous recombination at hotspots, ste11 gene expression during mating and meiosis, or regulation of fbp1 gene transcription under glucose starvation conditions. Using different phospho-mutants of Atf1, we have investigated the role of Atf1 phosphorylation by Sty1 in those biological processes. An Atf1 mutant lacking the canonical MAP kinase phosphorylation sites cannot activate fbp1 transcription when glucose is depleted, but it is still able to induce recombination at ade6.M26 and to induce ste11 after nitrogen depletion; in these last cases, Sty1 is still required, suggesting that additional non-canonical sites are activating the transcription factor. In all cases, an Atf1 phosphomimetic mutant bypasses the requirement of the Sty1 kinase in these diverse biological processes, highlighting the essential role of the DNA binding factor Atf1 on chromatin remodeling and cell adaptation to nutritional changes. We propose that post-translational modifications of Atf1 by Sty1, either at canonical or non-canonical sites, are sufficient to activate some of the functions of Atf1, those involving chromatin remodeling and transcription initiation. However, in the case of fbp1 where Atf1 acts synergistically with other transcription factors, elimination of the canonical sites is sufficient to hamper some of the interactions required in this complex scenario and to impair transcription initiation.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of the Transcription Factor Atf1 at Multiple Sites by the MAP Kinase Sty1 Controls Homologous Recombination and Transcription. 3279 31


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6