Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
630,302 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Following hepatic injury or stress, gluconeogenic and acute-phase response genes are rapidly upregulated to restore metabolic homeostasis and limit tissue damage. Regulation of the liver-restricted insulin-like growth factor binding protein 1 (IGFBP-1) gene is dramatically altered by changes in the metabolic state and hepatectomy, and thus it provided an appropriate reporter to assess the transcriptional milieu in the liver during repair and regeneration. The cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6) is required for liver regeneration and repair, and it transcriptionally upregulates a vast array of genes during liver growth by unknown mechanisms. Evidence for a biologic role of IL-6 in IGFBP-1 upregulation was demonstrated by increased expression of hepatic IGFBP-1 in IL-6 transgenic and following injection of IL-6 into nonfasting animals and its reduced expression in IL-6(-/-) livers posthepatectomy. In both hepatic and nonhepatic cells, IL-6 -mediated IGFBP-1 promoter activation was via an intact hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 (HNF-1) site and was dependent on the presence of endogenous liver factor HNF-1 and induced factors STAT3 and AP-1 (c-Fos/c-Jun). IL-6 acted through the STAT3 pathway, as dominant negative STAT3 completely blocked IL-6-mediated stimulation of the IGFBP-1 promoter via the HNF-1 site. HNF-1/c-Fos and HNF-1/STAT3 protein complexes were detected in mouse livers and in hepatic and nonhepatic cell lines overexpressing STAT3/c-Fos/HNF-1. Similar regulation was demonstrated using glucose-6-phosphatase and alpha-fibrinogen promoters, indicating that HNF-1/IL-6/STAT3/AP-1-mediated transactivation of hepatic gene expression is a general phenomenon after liver injury. These results demonstrate that the two classes of transcription factors, growth induced (STAT3 and AP-1) and tissue specific (HNF-1), can interact as an adaptive response to liver injury to amplify expression of hepatic genes important for the homeostatic response during organ repair.
Mol Cell Biol 2001 Jan
PMID:Interleukin-6-induced STAT3 and AP-1 amplify hepatocyte nuclear factor 1-mediated transactivation of hepatic genes, an adaptive response to liver injury. 1113 30

There have been many studies concerning the hemodynamics and physiological mechanisms in ischemic heart disease, little is known about molecular mechanisms during myocardial ischemia in in vivo study. As the signal transduction pathway responsible for myocardial hypertrophy and apoptosis, janus kinase (JAK) and signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT) are suggested to play an important role. However, whether in vivo activation of JAK-STAT pathway occurs during myocardial ischemia is still unknown. The purpose of this study was to determine whether myocardial JAK or STAT is activated in ischemic heart, and to evaluate the angiotensin blockade on the pathway. Myocardial infarction was produced by ligation of the coronary artery in Wistar rats. After myocardial ischemia, we analysed both activated levels and total amounts of JAK1, JAK2, STAT1 and STAT3 by Western blot analyses at 0, 5, 15, 30, 60, 120 and 240 min. Compared with JAK activities at 0 min, JAK1 activities were significantly increased at 60 and 120 min (3.0- and 3.7-fold, respectively, P<0.01). JAK2 and STAT1 activities of ischemic myocardium were unchanged through the time course. STAT3 activities were increased at 5 min (3.3-fold, P<0.01) and markedly enhanced at 30, 60 and 120 min (4.6-, 7.7- and 8.7-fold, respectively, P<0.01). Pretreatment with imidapril (ACE inhibitor) and candesartan cilexitil (AT1 receptor antagonist) significantly prevented the increase in the phosphorylation of JAK1 at 120 min and STAT3 at 30 and 120 min. Sis-inducing factor (SIF) DNA complex was supershifted by specific anti-STAT3 antibody, indicating that increased SIF complex at least contained activated STAT3 proteins in ischemic myocardium. Imidapril and candesartan cilexitil inhibited the activation of SIF DNA binding at 1 day after coronary ligation. In conclusion, we showed that JAK1 and STAT3 were activated by ischemia from the basal activities in in vivo rat myocardial ischemia model. Imidapril and candesartan cilexitil prevented the increase in phosphorylated JAK1 and STAT3, thereby suggesting that angiotensin II, especially angiotensin II type I receptor, partially mediates activation of myocardial JAK-STAT pathway in acute myocardial ischemia.
J Mol Cell Cardiol 2001 Feb
PMID:Myocardial ischemia activates the JAK-STAT pathway through angiotensin II signaling in in vivo myocardium of rats. 1116 35

The circulating level of angiotensinogen (AGT) is dynamically regulated as an important determinant of blood pressure and electrolyte homeostasis. Because the mechanisms controlling the regulated expression of human angiotensinogen (hAGT) are unknown, we investigated the inducible regulation of the hAGT gene in well differentiated HepG2 cells. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) stimulation produced a 3.2-fold increase in hAGT mRNA peaking at 96 h after stimulation. Deletional mutagenesis of the hAGT promoter in transient transfection assays identified an IL-6 response domain between nucleotides -350 and -122 containing three reiterated motifs, termed human acute phase response elements (hAPREs). Although mutation of each site individually caused a fall in IL-6-inducible luciferase activity, mutation of all three sites was required to block the IL-6 effect. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA), supershift, and microaffinity DNA binding assays indicate IL-6-inducible high-affinity binding of signal transducers and activators of transcription 1 and -3 (STAT1 and -3) to hAPRE1 and -3 but only low-affinity binding to hAPRE2. Expression of a dominant-negative form of STAT3, but not STAT1, produced a concentration-dependent reduction in IL-6-induced hAGT transcription and endogenous mRNA expression. These data indicate that STAT3 plays a major role in hAGT gene induction through three functionally distinct hAPREs in its promoter and suggest a mechanism for its up-regulation during the acute-phase response.
Mol Endocrinol 2001 Mar
PMID:Role of signal transducers and activators of transcription 1 and -3 in inducible regulation of the human angiotensinogen gene by interleukin-6. 1122 45

We generated mice carrying a STAT3 allele amenable to Cre-mediated deletion and intercrossed them with Mx-Cre transgenic mice, in which the expression of Cre recombinase can be induced by type I interferon. Interferon-induced deletion of STAT3 occurred very efficiently (more than 90%) in the liver and slightly less efficiently (about 70%) in the bone marrow. Analysis of the induction of liver acute-phase genes in response to bacterial lipopolysaccharide unequivocally identifies STAT3 as a fundamental mediator of their induction. The different degrees of defectiveness displayed by the various genes allowed us to differentiate them into three separate groups according to their degree of dependence on STAT3. Induction was totally defective for group I genes, defective at 24 h but almost normal at earlier time points for group II genes, and only slightly defective for group III genes. This division was in good agreement with the known structures of the respective promoters. We also found that the overall induction of the transcription factors C/EBP beta and -delta was only minimally defective in the absence of STAT3. Finally, even though corticosterone levels and action were found to be normal in the conditional-mutant mice, production of both proinflammatory and antiinflammatory cytokines was increased and prolonged, probably as a result of STAT3 deletion in macrophages.
Mol Cell Biol 2001 Mar
PMID:Essential role of STAT3 in the control of the acute-phase response as revealed by inducible gene inactivation [correction of activation] in the liver. 1123 99

The effect of treatment with a 0.03% fatty acid (FA) cocktail on leptin-receptor-mediated STAT (signal transducers and activators of transcription) activation in the rat insulinoma cell line BRIN-BD11 was investigated. Leptin (10 nM) stimulated the tyrosine phosphorylation of STAT3 and STAT5b. Acute treatment with FAs prevented leptin-stimulated STAT3 tyrosine phosphorylation and significantly raised basal STAT5 phosphorylation. A chronic treatment (5 days) of BRIN-BD11 cells with FAs similarly attenuated leptin-stimulated STAT tyrosine phosphorylation. Chronic FA treatment also attenuated prolactin-stimulated STAT5b tyrosine phosphorylation but not interleukin-6-stimulated STAT3 tyrosine phosphorylation, suggesting that the effect is receptor/ligand specific. TaqMan analysis of gene expression following chronic FA treatment showed neither a decrease in the amount of leptin receptor (Ob-R) mRNA, nor an increase in the negative regulators of STAT signalling, SOCS3 (suppressors of cytokine signalling) or cytokine inducible sequence (CIS). These data demonstrate that FAs modulate leptin and prolactin signalling in beta-cells, implying that high levels of circulating FAs present in obese individuals affect the action of selective cytokines in beta-cell function.
J Mol Endocrinol 2001 Apr
PMID:Fatty acids inhibit leptin signalling in BRIN-BD11 insulinoma cells. 1124 Nov 66

The promoting effects of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) have been studied extensively in a variety of two-stage carcinogenesis models. However, the molecular mechanisms responsible for the promotion effects of PCBs have not been elucidated. We measured the effect of PCBs on DNA-binding proteins involved in cell proliferation and transformation. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were injected intraperitoneally with mono-, di-, tri-, tetra-, or hexachlorobiphenyls (300 micromol/kg/d) each day for 4 d and killed 4 h after the last injection. To detect alterations in nuclear proteins that could explain the tumor-promoter activity of PCBs, liver nuclear extracts were analyzed by electrophoretic mobility shift assays. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay analysis of signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT)-binding activity to a consensus gamma-interferon-activated sequence (GAS) element was compared in liver nuclear extracts from treated rats. STAT-binding activity was eightfold to tenfold higher in nuclear extracts from animals treated with 2,4,4'-trichloro- (PCB 28) and 2,2',4,4',5,5'-hexachlorobiphenyl (PCB 153). Analysis of the protein complex binding to the GAS element, with antibodies specific for STAT3, STAT5, and STAT6, indicated that the protein complex was made up of STAT5 and STAT6 proteins. HepG2 cells transiently transfected with a luciferase reporter gene construct containing many STAT5 binding sites were treated with PCB 28 and PCB 153. PCB 28 stimulated a greater than 25-fold increase in luciferase activity at the highest concentration tested, 1.0 microg/mL. However, enhanced luciferase activity did not occur with PCB 153 treatment. 4-Chlorobiphenyl (PCB 3), PCB 28, and PCB 153 treatment of Sprague-Dawley rats resulted in a large increase in protein binding to a consensus activated protein-1 (AP-1) element. However, 3,4-dichlorobiphenyl (PCB 12) and 3,3',4,4'-tetrachlorobiphenyl (PCB 77) treatments did not increase AP-1 transcription activity. Further analysis of the proteins binding to the AP-1 consensus sequence with antibodies specific for c-fos, junD, and junB indicated that the protein composition consists of junD proteins. These data showed functional differences between noncoplanar and coplanar PCBs with respect to STAT activation and AP-1-DNA binding.
Mol Carcinog 2001 Apr
PMID:2,4,4'-trichlorobiphenyl increases STAT5 transcriptional activity. 1134 82

Leptin is secreted by adipocytes and regulates appetite through interaction with hypothalamic leptin receptors (OB-R). Leptin is involved in the stimulation of reproductive functions, and local expression of leptin and OB-R in the ovary, oocyte, embryo, and placenta might play a role in early development. The mRNA and protein of the long form leptin receptor (OB-R(L)) but not of leptin are expressed in the human endometrium and the abundance of OB-R mRNA expression varies during the menstrual cycle with a peak in the early secretory phase. We examined the steroidal regulation of OB-R(L) mRNA expression. Northern blot analyses showed that in organ-cultured proliferative endometrial specimens, oestradiol (10(-9) and 10(-8) mol/l) had no acute effect on the OB-R(L) mRNA expression, whereas oestradiol plus progesterone (10(-8), 10(-7) and 10(-6) mol/l) or medroxyprogesterone acetate (10(-8) and 10(-7) mol/l) suppressed the expression by approximately 50%. This progestin-induced suppression was blocked by a concomitant addition of mifepristone. Additionally, incubation of endometrial specimens in the presence of leptin resulted in the phosphorylation of its intracellular target, STAT3 (signal transducer and activator of transcription 3). These results indicate that, in the human endometrium, progestins act via the progesterone receptors to suppress functional OB-R(L) mRNA expression, and may thereby alter the sensitivity of the endometrium to leptin.
Mol Hum Reprod 2001 Jun
PMID:Progesterone inhibition of functional leptin receptor mRNA expression in human endometrium. 1138 12

The binding of cytokines to the gp130 receptor activates the STAT3, MEK/MAPK, and PI3K/Akt signalling pathways. To assess the relative importance of these pathways in promoting the survival of cytokine-dependent neurons, we conditionally inactivated STAT3 in mice and inhibited MEK, PI3K, and Akt in cultured neurons using pharmacological reagents and by expressing specific inhibitory proteins. Inactivation of STAT3 enhanced the death of the cytokine-dependent sensory neurons of the nodose ganglion in vivo and substantially reduced the response of these neurons to CNTF and LIF in vitro. LY294002, an inhibitor of PI3K, but not PD98059, an inhibitor of MEK, markedly reduced the response of these neurons to CNTF, as did dominant-negative PI3K, dominant-negative Akt, and overexpression of Ruk (a natural PI3K inhibitor). These results demonstrate that STAT3 and PI3K/Akt signalling play major roles in mediating the survival response of neurons to cytokines.
Mol Cell Neurosci 2001 Sep
PMID:Role of STAT3 and PI 3-kinase/Akt in mediating the survival actions of cytokines on sensory neurons. 1159 Nov 28

The FOP-fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) fusion protein is expressed as a consequence of a t(6;8) (q27;p12) translocation associated with a stem cell myeloproliferative disorder with lymphoma, myeloid hyperplasia and eosinophilia. In the present report, we show that the fusion of the leucine-rich N-terminal region of FOP to the catalytic domain of FGFR1 results in conversion of murine hematopoietic cell line Ba/F3 to factor-independent cell survival via an antiapoptotic effect. This survival effect is dependent upon the constitutive tyrosine phosphorylation of FOP-FGFR1. Phosphorylation of STAT1 and of STAT3, but not STAT5, is observed in cells expressing FOP-FGFR1. The survival function of FOP-FGFR1 is abrogated by mutation of the phospholipase C gamma binding site. Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) is also activated in FOP-FGFR1-expressing cells and confers cytokine-independent survival to hematopoietic cells. These results demonstrate that FOP-FGFR1 is capable of protecting cells from apoptosis by using the same effectors as the wild-type FGFR1. Furthermore, we show that FOP-FGFR1 phosphorylates phosphatidylinositol 3 (PI3)-kinase and AKT and that specific inhibitors of PI3-kinase impair its ability to promote cell survival. In addition, FOP-FGFR1-expressing cells show constitutive phosphorylation of the positive regulator of translation p70S6 kinase; this phosphorylation is inhibited by PI3-kinase and mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) inhibitors. These results indicate that translation control is important to mediate the cell survival effect induced by FOP-FGFR1. Finally, FOP-FGFR1 protects cells from apoptosis by survival signals including BCL2 overexpression and inactivation of caspase-9 activity. Elucidation of signaling events downstream of FOP-FGFR1 constitutive activation provides insight into the mechanism of leukemogenesis mediated by this oncogenic fusion protein.
Mol Cell Biol 2001 Dec
PMID:8p12 stem cell myeloproliferative disorder: the FOP-fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 fusion protein of the t(6;8) translocation induces cell survival mediated by mitogen-activated protein kinase and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt/mTOR pathways. 1168 2

We recently demonstrated that ischemic preconditioning (IPC) induced by cyclic episodes of short durations of ischemia and reperfusion potentiates a signal transduction cascade involving protein tyrosine kinases and MAP kinases. A rapid activation of janus kinase (JAK) and several signal transducers and activators of the transcription (STATs) including STAT3, STAT5A and STAT6 has been shown to occur during myocardial ischemia and reperfusion. This study sought to examine if JAK/STAT signaling pathway play any role in classical early phase of IPC. Isolated working rat hearts were perfused for 15 min with KHB buffer in the absence or presence of a JAK kinase inhibitor tyrphostin AG490 (5 microm) followed by IPC, 30 min global ischemia and 2 h of reperfusion. The results demonstrated extensive phosphorylation of JAK2 and STAT3 in the IPC hearts which was almost completely abolished by an inhibitor of JAK2, AG490. IPC displayed cardioprotection as evidenced by improved post-ischemic contractile recovery, decreased myocardial infarct size and reduced number of apoptotic cardiomyocytes. AG490 blocked IPC-mediated cardioprotection by altering the IPC-mediated survival signal into death signal. Thus, IPC-induced upregulation of antiapoptotic gene bcl-2 and downregulation of pro-apoptotic gene bax are decreased and increased, respectively, in the AG490 treated hearts. The results suggest that early phase of IPC potentiates JAK/STAT signaling by activating STAT3 which transmits a survival signal to the myocardium.
J Mol Cell Cardiol 2001 Nov
PMID:Role of STAT3 in ischemic preconditioning. 1170 38


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