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Query: UNIPROT:P05412 (
c-Jun
)
11,453
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have investigated the role of the two AP-1 sites, located at approximately -150 and -180 bp relative to the transcription start site, in induction of the
IL-2
promoter through the TCR/CD3 complex. We show that only the proximal (-150 bp) AP-1 site is functional in vitro, as judged by its ability to bind nuclear proteins from T cells stimulated with Ag or anti-CD3 epsilon. The inducible nuclear proteins binding to this site have the characteristics of AP-1, as judged by their kinetics of induction, the ability to compete and be competed efficiently by a metallothionein AP-1 site oligonucleotide, and their reaction with antibodies to Fos and Jun proteins. Mutations in the proximal AP-1 site greatly diminish or abrogate induction of the
IL-2
promoter, indicating that the site is also functional in vivo. Although the distal (-180 bp) AP-1 site is incapable of direct binding to nuclear proteins from activated T cells, a mutation in this site diminishes
IL-2
promoter induction, suggesting that this site may also be functional in vivo. Cotransfection of a 5'
IL-2
-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase plasmid with c-Fos and/or
c-Jun
enhances the induction of
IL-2
-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase activity, confirming that the
IL-2
promoter contains a functional AP-1 site. Both AP-1 sites may be targets for c-Fos action, as inferred from the results of experiments in which c-Fos was cotransfected with internal deletion mutants of the
IL-2
promoter lacking either AP-1 site. Northern analysis indicates that mRNAs for at least six members of the Fos/Jun family (c-fos, fosB, fra-1, c-jun, junB, and junD) are expressed in activated Ar-5 cells; thus the AP-1 sites of the
IL-2
promoter may bind different dimeric Fos/Jun complexes at different times after T cell activation, perhaps mediating both positive and negative regulation of the
IL-2
promoter.
...
PMID:Analysis of the AP-1 sites in the IL-2 promoter. 173 37
The transcriptional activity of the
IL-2
promoter requires T-cell costimulation delivered by the TCR and the auxiliary receptor CD28. Several transcription factors participate in
IL-2
promoter activation, among which are AP-1-like factors and NF-kappa B. Protein phosphorylation has an important role in the regulation of these two factors: (1) it induces the transactivating capacity of the AP-1 protein
c-Jun
; and (2) it is involved in the release of the cytoplasmic inhibitor, I kappa B, from NF-kappa B, allowing translocation of the latter into the nucleus. We have recently shown that both phosphorylation processes require T-cell costimulation. Furthermore, in activated T cells, the kinetics of the two phosphorylation events are essentially similar. According to our results, however, the kinases responsible for the two processes are distinct entities. Whereas TPCK inhibits phosphorylation of I kappa B and, consequently, activation of NF-kappa B, it markedly enhances the activity of JNK, the MAP kinase-related kinase that phosphorylates the transactivation domain of
c-Jun
. We, therefore, propose the activation scheme presented in FIGURE 3 for T-cell costimulation. Costimulation results in the activation of a signaling pathway that leads to the simultaneous induction of the two transcription factors, AP-1 and NF-kappa B. Integration of the signals generated by TCR and CD28 engagement occurs along this pathway, which then bifurcates to induce I kappa B phosphorylation and NF-kappa B activation on the one hand, and JNK activation and
c-Jun
phosphorylation on the other. We are currently engaged in defining where the two signals integrate along the AP-1/NF-kappa B pathway.
...
PMID:Costimulation requirement for AP-1 and NF-kappa B transcription factor activation in T cells. 748 67
We have earlier shown that stimulation of human CD4+ T cells with SEA presented on Chinese hamster ovary (CHO)-DR transfectants coexpressing either B7 or LFA-3 resulted in distinct cytokine profiles. We now demonstrate that B7, but not LFA-3, strongly costimulated
IL-2
transcription and mRNA expression in CD4+ T cells. Maximal increase in
IL-2
transcription was recorded with CHO-DR/B7/LFA-3, suggesting a cooperative effect of B7 and LFA-3 at the transcriptional level. Gel-shift analysis demonstrated that stimulation of CD4+ T cells with CHO-DR and staphylococcal enterotoxin A was sufficient to induce significant amounts of NF-kappa B binding proteins, whereas induction of AP-1 binding proteins required costimulation. LFA-3 induced moderate levels of AP-1, but did not influence the levels of NF-kappa B, while B7 costimulation strongly induced both AP-1 and substantially enhanced NF-kappa B binding proteins. The CHO-DR/B7/LFA-3 triple transfectant induced a further increase in AP-1 and NF-kappa B binding proteins compared with the double transfectants. The level of Oct-1 binding proteins remained similar in all samples. Super-shift analysis revealed that the NF-kappa B complex of costimulated CD4+ T cells contained large amounts of p50, substantial amounts of p65, and marginal levels of c-Rel proteins. The AP-1 binding proteins contained
c-Jun
, Jun-D, and Fra-1, but marginal amounts of Jun-B and c-Fos. Our results indicate distinct effects of B7 and LFA-3 costimulation on the activity of AP-1 and NF-kappa B. These may partly account for the differential effects of B7 and LFA-3 costimulation on
IL-2
expression.
...
PMID:Costimulation of human CD4+ T cells with LFA-3 and B7 induce distinct effects on AP-1 and NF-kappa B transcription factors. 754 15
Previously we reported that the administration of human (h) lymphotoxin (h-LT) markedly protected NOD mice from insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) partly by affecting the generation phase of anti-islet effector cells, probably in the thymus. In this study, we investigated the effect of h-LT on the signal transduction of the mouse thymocytes by observing c-Fos expression in the thymocytes by using a flow cytometer. The intensity of c-Fos expression in whole thymocytes was significantly lower in the female NOD with a high incidence of diabetes than that in the male NOD mice with a low incidence of diabetes and than that in normal mice (P < 0.0001). The low c-Fos expression in the female NOD thymocytes was most prominent in CD3low thymocytes.
c-Jun
expression of the CD3low thymocytes was also lower in the female NOD mice. Administrations of h-LT, h-TNF, and h-
IL-2
, which has been reported to prevent IDDM in NOD mice by systemic administration, significantly up-regulated c-Fos expression in CD3low thymocytes. From these results, it is assumed that a relationship may exist between the high diabetes incidence and the defective c-Fos expression in female NOD mice and between the prevention of IDDM and the amelioration of the defective c-Fos expression with h-LT in female NOD mice.
...
PMID:Reduced expression of c-Fos in female NOD mouse thymocytes and up-regulation with human lymphotoxin. 765 36
Expression of the transcription complex AP-1, composed of Jun and Fos family members, can be induced by a variety of stimuli. In lymphocytes, AP-1 transcriptional activity increases after TCR ligation and plays an important role in T cell activation events such as lymphokine secretion. To explore the requirements for AP-1 in
IL-2
production, the AP-1 complex was targeted with a dominant negative mutant
c-Jun
protein, TAM-67, from which the transactivation domain has been deleted. In transient transfections of Jurkat cells, TAM-67 efficiently inhibited endogenous AP-1 transcriptional activity and blocked the activity of a reporter construct containing the 5' regulatory region of the
IL-2
gene. TAM-67 also inhibited the transcriptional activity of nuclear factor-AT (NF-AT), whereas the NF-kappa B, NF-IL-2A, and the proximal TRE-like sites were relatively unaffected. The use of this dominant negative transcription factor suggests that: 1) transactivation-defective nuclear factors represent a novel approach to study the functional consequences of nuclear protein interactions on gene transcription; 2) the proximal TRE-like site from the
IL-2
promoter is different from the consensus TRE; and 3) AP-1 plays an important role in the transcriptional activation mediated by the NF-AT binding complex.
...
PMID:Dominant negative mutant of c-Jun inhibits NF-AT transcriptional activity and prevents IL-2 gene transcription. 805 9
Endothelial cells (EC) act as APC for resting PBL in vitro, and may have important roles in vivo in the pathogenesis of allograft rejection and delayed hypersensitivity. We previously reported that human umbilical vein EC provide costimulatory signals to PHA-stimulated PBL via CD2:lymphocyte function-associated Ag-3 and an unidentified ligand pair, resulting in a three- to eight-fold enhancement of
IL-2
production. The physiologic relevance of this increase was demonstrated by the proliferative advantage provided by EC to PBL suboptimally stimulated with mAb OKT3. We now report that EC costimulation causes increased levels of
IL-2
mRNA as a result of increased
IL-2
transcription in PBL. We therefore examined the effects of EC on T cell nuclear factors known to regulate
IL-2
transcription, including c-jun and c-fos-two components of the
transcription factor AP-1
, NFAT, and others. PBL constitutively express c-jun transcripts, and the level of c-jun mRNA is not altered by PHA activation in the absence or presence of EC. In contrast, c-fos mRNA is absent from resting T cells and is induced on PHA activation. EC alone do not induce c-fos mRNA but augment the level of c-fos mRNA in PHA-activated T cells by 3- to 10-fold. This effect is largely independent of the CD2:lymphocyte function-associated Ag-3 pathway. Gel-shift analysis reveals the constitutive presence of nuclear factors in resting PBL that bind to the proximal AP-1 site of the
IL-2
promoter and that contain immunoreactive
c-Jun
but not c-Fos protein. In contrast, AP-1 from PHA-activated cells contains
c-Jun
and low levels of c-Fos. Strikingly, costimulation with EC results in a dramatic increase (up to 15-fold) in the c-Fos content of AP-1. Levels of other nuclear factors involved in
IL-2
regulation were not altered by EC, although NFAT-DNA complexes migrated at a slightly different mobility. In summary, our data suggest that changes in the composition of
transcription factor AP-1
is a key molecular mechanism for increasing
IL-2
transcription and may underlie the phenomenon of costimulation by EC.
...
PMID:Costimulation of peripheral blood T cell activation by human endothelial cells. Enhanced IL-2 transcription correlates with increased c-fos synthesis and increased Fos content of AP-1. 846 62
Mouse MHC class I-specific mAbs recognizing the alpha 1/alpha 2, but not those directed against the alpha 3 domain of the molecule, inhibited RNA, protein, and DNA synthesis of splenic T cells in response to stimulation through the TCR/CD3 complex. Similar inhibition was seen with LFA-1-specific mAbs under the same stimulation conditions. The effect of class I- and LFA-1-specific mAbs reflected a decrease of both
IL-2
and IFN-gamma synthesis and IL-2 receptor alpha chain induction.
IL-2
, IL-2 receptor alpha chain, IFN-gamma, c-fos, c-jun, and c-myc mRNAs were not detected. Activation of AP-1 (c-Fos and
c-Jun
proteins) and NF-kappa B transcription factors were also inhibited. Inhibition was observed both after treatment of cells in culture and after intravenous injection of Abs in mice. Although bulk phosphorylation was inhibited, early tyrosine phosphorylation and calcium ion influx were normally induced. Protein phosphatase inhibitors did not reverse this inhibition, ruling out an enhanced activation of these enzymes in the observed inhibition. Cell surface expression of one of early PKC activation marker, CD69 was also inhibited. Phorbol esters that directly activate PKC prevented inhibition. Thus, class I molecules are implicated in signal transduction involved at an early stage for T cell activation in a manner that suggests their implication in accessory signal transmission that contributes to the regulation of PKC activity.
...
PMID:MHC class I molecules are implicated in costimulatory signals during TCR/CD3-induced activation. 859 31
Although transcriptional factors AP-1 and nuclear factor of activated T cells (NF-AT) are important for the normal induction of
IL-2
, it is unknown if the age-related decline in
IL-2
production by activated human T cells may be associated with aberrancies in transcriptional regulatory proteins. In the current studies,
IL-2
production by T cells from elderly (mean 78 years) and young (mean 37 years) humans was measured in cultures stimulated with PHA, PHA plus PMA, crosslinked anti-CD3 mAB OKT3 plus PMA, or PMA plus ionomycin. Substantial decreases of
IL-2
production were observed for cell cultures from 7 of 12 elderly individuals in response to the different stimuli, whereas the levels of
IL-2
produced by stimulated T cells from other elderly individuals were equivalent to those observed for stimulated T cells of young subjects. Analyses of nuclear extracts by electrophoretic DNA mobility shift assays showed that decreased
IL-2
production by stimulated T cells of elderly individuals was closely associated with impairments in the activation of both AP-1 and NF-AT. By contrast, T cells from elderly subjects with normal levels of
IL-2
production exhibited normal activation of AP-1 and NF-AT. In addition, the results of competition experiments analyzing the normal components of NF-AT showed that the age-related reductions in stimulus-dependent NF-AT complexes corresponded to the slow migrating complexes that were composed of c-Fos/
c-Jun
AP-1. The resting and stimulated levels of NF kappa B were reduced in T cells from certain elderly individuals; however, alterations of NF kappa B did not correlate with changes in
IL-2
expression. Thus, these results show that age-related impairments in the activation of AP-1 and NF-AT are closely associated with decreased expression of
IL-2
and further suggest that aberrancies in the signaling pathways important for the induction of transcriptionally active c-Fos/
c-Jun
AP-1 may contribute to the impaired activation of NF-AT.
...
PMID:Age-related decreases in IL-2 production by human T cells are associated with impaired activation of nuclear transcriptional factors AP-1 and NF-AT. 862 May 46
The Rel family of transcription factors are important mediators of various cytokine stimuli such as interleukin (IL)-1, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, and CD28 costimulation in T cell effector responses. These stimuli induce Rel family DNA-binding activity to the kappaB enhancer and CD28 response elements of many cytokine gene promoters leading to cytokine production. Consistent with the importance of Rel family induction during immune responses, c-Rel knockout mice exhibit profound defects in T cell functions including
IL-2
secretion and T cell proliferative responses to CD28 plus T cell receptor costimulation. The novel protein kinases,
c-Jun
NH2-terminal kinases (JNKs)/stress-activated protein kinases, are also activated by TNF-alpha, IL-1, and CD28 costimulation. Because of the common regulation of c-Rel and JNK1 by these agents in T cells, we investigated the role of JNK1 in c-Rel activation. We found that MAP kinase kinase kinase (MEKK) 1, a JNK1 activator, induced transcription from the human immunodeficiency virus-1 long terminal repeat and IL-2R alpha promoters in a kappaB-dependent manner. Coexpression of IkappaBalpha, a c-Rel inhibitor, inhibited the MEKK1-induced transcriptional activity. JNK1 synergized with MEKK1 in activating transcription from a kappaB-driven heterologous promoter. Furthermore, JNK1 associated with c-Rel in vivo in Jurkat T cells by coimmunoprecipitation assays and bound directly to c-Rel in a yeast two-hybrid assay. c-Rel also competed with
c-Jun
in in vitro kinase assays. However, JNK1 did not phosphorylate c-Rel, NF-kappaB, and IkappaB alpha in vitro, indicating that c-Rel may serve as a docking molecule to allow JNK1 phosphorylation of certain Rel-associated proteins. Transactivation of the IL-2Ralpha and HIV-kappaB-driven promoters by c-Rel was augmented by coexpression of MEKK1. These results demonstrate the first significant role for the MEKK1 kinase cascade module in c-Rel-mediated transcription.
...
PMID:Interaction between c-Rel and the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 1 signaling cascade in mediating kappaB enhancer activation. 862 42
Ceramide, produced through either the induction of SM hydrolysis or synthesized de novo transduces signals mediating differentiation, growth, growth arrest, apoptosis, cytokine biosynthesis and secretion, and a variety of other cellular functions. A generalized ceramide signal transduction scheme is shown in Fig. 2 in which ceramide is generated through the activation of distinct SMases residing in separate subcellular compartments in response to specific stimuli. Clearly, specificity of cellular responses to ceramide depends upon many factors which include the nature of the stimulus, co-stimulatory signals and the cell type involved. Ceramide derived from neutral SMase activation is thought to be involved in modulating CAPK and MAP kinases, PLA2 (arachidonic acid mobilization), and CAPP while ceramide generated through acid SMase activation appears to be primarily involved in NF-kappa B activation. While there is no apparent cross-talk between these two ceramide-mediated signalling pathways, there is likely to be significant cross-talk between ceramide signalling and other signal transduction pathways (e.g., the PKC and MAP kinase pathways). Other downstream targets for ceramide action include Cox, IL-6 and
IL-2
gene expression, PKC zeta, Vav, Rb, c-Myc, c-Fos,
c-Jun
and other transcriptional regulators. Many, if not all, of these ceramide-mediated signalling events have been identified in the various cells comprising the immune system and are integral to the optimal functioning of the immune system. Although the role of the SM pathway and the generation of ceramide in T and B lymphocytes have only recently been recognized, it is clear from these studies that signal transduction through SM and ceramide can strongly affect the immune response, either directly through cell signalling events, or indirectly through cytokines produced by other cells as the result of signalling through the SM pathway. An overview of the signalling mechanisms coupling ceramide to the modulation of the immune response is depicted in Fig. 3 and shows how ceramide may play pivotal roles in regulating a number of complex processes. The SM pathway represents a potentially valuable focal point for therapeutic control of immune responses, perhaps for either enhancement of the activity of T cells in the elimination of tumors, or the down-regulation of lymphocyte function in instances of autoimmune disease. The recent explosion of knowledge regarding ceramide signalling notwithstanding, a number of critical questions need to be answered before a comprehensive, mechanistic understanding can be formulated relative to the incredibly varied effects of ceramide on cell function. For example, (i) how is a structurally simple molecule like ceramide able to mediate so many different, and sometimes paradoxical, physiological responses ranging from cell proliferation and differentiation to inhibition of cell growth and apoptosis, (ii) what are the molecular identities and modes of activation of the various SMase isoforms, (iii) what determines the distribution of the unique isoforms of SMase in cells of different lineages or at different stages of differentiation, (iv) what is the relative contribution of ceramide generated through SM hydrolysis versus de novo synthesis, and (v) by what means does ceramide interact with specific intracellular targets? Although a number of ceramide-activatable kinases, phosphatases, and their protein substrates have been identified, a more extensive search for additional cellular targets will be indispensable in determining the phosphorylation cascades linking the activation of the SM pathway to the regulation of nuclear events. Clearly, cross-talk between ceramide-induced signal transduction cascades and other signalling pathways adds to the inherent difficulty in distinguishing the specific effects of complex, intertwining signalling pathways.
...
PMID:Ceramide signalling and the immune response. 866 39
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