scholarly journals Role of diacylglycerol-regulated protein kinase C isotypes in growth factor activation of the Raf-1 protein kinase.

1997 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 732-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Cai ◽  
U Smola ◽  
V Wixler ◽  
I Eisenmann-Tappe ◽  
M T Diaz-Meco ◽  
...  

The Raf protein kinases function downstream of Ras guanine nucleotide-binding proteins to transduce intracellular signals from growth factor receptors. Interaction with Ras recruits Raf to the plasma membrane, but the subsequent mechanism of Raf activation has not been established. Previous studies implicated hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine (PC) in Raf activation; therefore, we investigated the role of the epsilon isotype of protein kinase C (PKC), which is stimulated by PC-derived diacylglycerol, as a Raf activator. A dominant negative mutant of PKC epsilon inhibited both proliferation of NIH 3T3 cells and activation of Raf in COS cells. Conversely, overexpression of active PKC epsilon stimulated Raf kinase activity in COS cells and overcame the inhibitory effects of dominant negative Ras in NIH 3T3 cells. PKC epsilon also stimulated Raf kinase in baculovirus-infected Spodoptera frugiperda Sf9 cells and was able to directly activate Raf in vitro. Consistent with its previously reported activity as a Raf activator in vitro, PKC alpha functioned similarly to PKC epsilon in both NIH 3T3 and COS cell assays. In addition, constitutively active mutants of both PKC alpha and PKC epsilon overcame the inhibitory effects of dominant negative mutants of the other PKC isotype, indicating that these diacylglycerol-regulated PKCs function as redundant activators of Raf-1 in vivo.

1991 ◽  
Vol 276 (1) ◽  
pp. 257-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Pears ◽  
D Schaap ◽  
P J Parker

Protein kinase C (PKC) consists of a family of closely related enzymes that can be divided into two subfamilies (alpha, beta and gamma and delta, epsilon and zeta) on the basis of primary sequence. Functional differences have also been described; thus PKC-alpha, PKC-beta and PKC-gamma readily phosphorylate histone IIIS in vitro, whereas PKC-epsilon will not employ this substrate efficiently. We have previously demonstrated, however, that proteolytic cleavage of PKC-epsilon generates a constitutive kinase activity that is an efficient histone IIIS kinase [Schaap, Hsuan, Totty & Parker (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 191, 431-435]. In order to investigate the structural basis for this switch in specificity, we have constructed a chimaeric protein containing the regulatory domain of PKC-epsilon fused to the catalytic domain of PKC-gamma. When this is expressed in COS1 cells the chimaeric kinase shows a substrate-specificity similar to that of PKC-epsilon rather than to that of PKC-gamma. This demonstrates a role for the regulatory domain in substrate selection of PKC-epsilon.


1995 ◽  
Vol 308 (1) ◽  
pp. 181-187 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Avignon ◽  
M L Standaert ◽  
K Yamada ◽  
H Mischak ◽  
B Spencer ◽  
...  

Effects of insulin of levels of mRNA encoding protein kinase C (PKC)-alpha, PKC-beta, PKC-epsilon and PKC-theta were examined by ribonuclease protection assay in primary cultures of rat adipocytes in vitro, and in rat adipose tissue and gastrocnemius muscle in vivo. In all cases, insulin increased the levels of PKC-alpha mRNA and PKC-beta mRNA, and, in muscle, insulin also increased the level of PKC-theta mRNA. PKC-epsilon mRNA levels, on the other hand, were not altered significantly. Insulin also stimulated the apparent translocation of PKC-alpha, -beta, -epsilon and -theta, to the membrane fractions of adipocytes, adipose tissue and gastrocnemius muscles, and, in some instances, total PKC levels were diminished, e.g. PKC-alpha and PKC-beta in cultured adipocytes in vitro and/or whole adipose tissue in vivo, and PKC-alpha and PKC-theta in the gastrocnemius muscle. Thus, insulin-induced increases in PKC mRNA may have been partly compensatory in nature to restore PKC levels following translocation and proteolytic losses. However, much more severe depletion of PKC-alpha and PKC-beta by phorbol ester treatment in cultured rat adipocytes in vitro resulted in, if anything, smaller increases in PKC-alpha mRNA and PKC-beta mRNA, and it therefore appears that insulin effects on PKC mRNA levels were not simply due to decreases in respective PKC levels. In addition, effects of insulin, particularly on PKC-beta mRNA, could not be attributed to increased glucose metabolism, which alone decreased PKC-beta mRNA in cultured adipocytes in vitro. We conclude that insulin-induced translocation and degradation of PKC-alpha, PKC-beta and PKC-theta are attended by selective increases in their mRNAs. This mechanism of increasing mRNA may be important in maintaining PKC levels during the continued action of insulin.


1995 ◽  
Vol 308 (1) ◽  
pp. 177-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Yamada ◽  
A Avignon ◽  
M L Standaert ◽  
D R Cooper ◽  
B Spencer ◽  
...  

Protein kinase C (PKC)-theta is a newly recognized major PKC isoform in skeletal muscle. In this study we found that insulin provoked rapid biphasic increases in membrane-associated immunoreactive PKC-theta, as well as PKC-alpha, PKC-beta and PKC-epsilon, in rat soleus muscles incubated in vitro. Effects of insulin on PKC isoforms in the soleus were comparable in magnitude with those of phorbol esters. Increases in membrane-associated PKC-theta, PKC-alpha, PKC-beta and PKC-epsilon were also observed in rat gastrocnemius muscles after insulin treatment in vivo. Our findings suggest that PKC-theta, like other diacylglycerol-sensitive PKC isoforms (alpha, beta and epsilon), may play a role in insulin action in skeletal muscles.


2001 ◽  
Vol 168 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Boiti ◽  
D Zampini ◽  
M Zerani ◽  
G Guelfi ◽  
A Gobbetti

Studies were conducted to characterize receptors for prostaglandin (PG) F(2alpha) (PGF(2alpha)) and PGE(2), and the signalling pathways regulating total nitric oxide synthase activity and progesterone production in rabbit corpora lutea (CL) of different luteal stages. CL were obtained at days 4, 9 and 13 of pseudopregnancy and cultured in vitro for 2 h with PGF(2alpha) or PGE(2) and with activators and inhibitors of G protein (Gp), phospholipase C (PLC), protein kinase C (PKC), adenylate cyclase (AC) and protein kinase A (PKA). High affinity PGF(2alpha) receptor (K(d)=1.9+/-0.6 nM mean+/-s.e.m. ) concentrations increased (P< or =0.01) four- to five-fold from early to mid- and late-luteal phases (50.6+/-8.5, 188.3+/-36.1 and 231.4+/-38.8 fmol/mg protein respectively). By contrast, PGE(2) receptor (K(d)=1.6+/-0.5 nM) concentrations decreased (P< or =0.01) from day 4 to day 9 and 13 (27.5+/-7.7, 12.4+/-2.4 and 16.5+/-3.0 fmol/mg protein respectively). The Gp-dependent AC/PKA pathway was triggered only on day 4 CL, mimicking the PGE(2) treatment and increasing progesterone production. In both day 9 and day 13 CL, the Gp-activated PLC/PKC pathway evoked a luteolytic effect similar to that induced by PGF(2alpha). The time-dependent selective resistance to PGF(2alpha) and PGE(2) by rabbit CL is mediated by factors other than a lack of luteal receptor-ligand interactions.


1996 ◽  
Vol 271 (1) ◽  
pp. F108-F113 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. B. Ganz ◽  
B. Saksa ◽  
R. Saxena ◽  
K. Hawkins ◽  
J. R. Sedor

In vitro and in vivo data suggest a remarkable plasticity in the differentiated phenotype of intrinsic glomerular cells, which after injury express new structures and functions. We have shown that a protein kinase C (PKC) isoform, beta II, is expressed in diseased but not normal glomeruli. Since intrarenal cytokine synthesis has been implicated in the pathogenesis of progressive glomerular injury, we have hypothesized that these mediators induce a change in isoform profile. To test this hypothesis in vitro, we have determined whether platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and interleukin-1 (IL-1) alter the expression or activation of PKC isoforms in cultured mesangial cells (MCs). By immunoblot and ribonuclease (RNase) protection assays, both PDGF and IL-1 induce as early as 2 h de novo synthesis of PKC-beta II. Since MCs constitutively express PKC-alpha, -beta I, and -zeta, we also determined whether IL-1 or PDGF alter the activity of these isoforms. PDGF maximally induced translocation of PKC-alpha (10 min), -beta I (90 min), -epsilon (120 min), and -zeta (120 min) from the cytosolic to the membrane fraction. IL-1, in contrast, did not alter the distribution of alpha, beta I, or epsilon at any time measured but did induce PKC-zeta translocation. These data suggest inflammatory mediators regulate PKC isoform activity in diseased glomeruli both by de novo synthesis of unexpressed isoforms and by activation of constitutively expressed PKC isoforms.


1999 ◽  
Vol 276 (2) ◽  
pp. G322-G330 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian K. Dieckgraefe ◽  
Danielle M. Weems

The signaling pathways activated in response to gastrointestinal injury remain poorly understood. Previous work has implicated the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) mitogen-activated protein kinase as a mediator of wound-signal transduction and a possible regulator of epithelial restitution. Monolayer injury resulted in rapid activation of p42 and p44 ERK. Injury-induced ERK activation was blocked by protein kinase C inhibition or by disruption of the cell cytoskeleton. Significant increases in Fos and early growth response (Egr)-1 mRNA levels were stimulated by injury, peaking by 20 min. ERK activation and the induction of Egr-1 mRNA were inhibited in a dose-dependent fashion with PD-98059. Fos mRNA expression was partially blocked by PD-98059. Western blot analysis demonstrated strong expression and nuclear localization of Fos and Egr after wounding. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays demonstrated that nuclear extracts contained a protein that specifically bound double-stranded oligonucleotides containing the Egr consensus binding element. Gel supershift assays demonstrated that the protein-DNA complexes were recognized by anti-Egr antibody. Inhibition of injury-induced ERK activation by PD-98059 or direct interference with Egr by expression of a dominant negative mutant led to significantly reduced in vitro monolayer restitution.


2010 ◽  
Vol 298 (2) ◽  
pp. H570-H579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengqun Huang ◽  
Wayne Liu ◽  
Cynthia N. Perry ◽  
Smadar Yitzhaki ◽  
Youngil Lee ◽  
...  

Previously, we showed that sulfaphenazole (SUL), an antimicrobial agent that is a potent inhibitor of cytochrome P4502C9, is protective against ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury (Ref. 15 ). The mechanism, however, underlying this cardioprotection, is largely unknown. With evidence that activation of autophagy is protective against simulated I/R in HL-1 cells, and evidence that autophagy is upregulated in preconditioned hearts, we hypothesized that SUL-mediated cardioprotection might resemble ischemic preconditioning with respect to activation of protein kinase C and autophagy. We used the Langendorff model of global ischemia to assess the role of autophagy and protein kinase C in myocardial protection by SUL during I/R. We show that SUL enhanced recovery of function, reduced creatine kinase release, decreased infarct size, and induced autophagy. SUL also triggered PKC translocation, whereas inhibition of PKC with chelerythrine blocked the activation of autophagy in adult rat cardiomyocytes. In the Langendorff model, chelerythrine suppressed autophagy and abolished the protection mediated by SUL. SUL increased autophagy in adult rat cardiomyocytes infected with GFP-LC3 adenovirus, in isolated perfused rat hearts, and in mCherry-LC3 transgenic mice. To establish the role of autophagy in cardioprotection, we used the cell-permeable dominant-negative inhibitor of autophagy, Tat-Atg5K130R. Autophagy and cardioprotection were abolished in rat hearts perfused with recombinant Tat-Atg5K130R. Taken together, these studies indicate that cardioprotection mediated by SUL involves a PKC-dependent induction of autophagy. The findings suggest that autophagy may be a fundamental process that enhances the heart's tolerance to ischemia.


1999 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 2180-2188 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria-José Lallena ◽  
María T. Diaz-Meco ◽  
Gary Bren ◽  
Carlos V. Payá ◽  
Jorge Moscat

ABSTRACT The atypical protein kinase C (PKC) isotypes (λ/ιPKC and ζPKC) have been shown to be critically involved in important cell functions such as proliferation and survival. Previous studies have demonstrated that the atypical PKCs are stimulated by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and are required for the activation of NF-κB by this cytokine through a mechanism that most probably involves the phosphorylation of IκB. The inability of these PKC isotypes to directly phosphorylate IκB led to the hypothesis that ζPKC may use a putative IκB kinase to functionally inactivate IκB. Recently several groups have molecularly characterized and cloned two IκB kinases (IKKα and IKKβ) which phosphorylate the residues in the IκB molecule that serve to target it for ubiquitination and degradation. In this study we have addressed the possibility that different PKCs may control NF-κB through the activation of the IKKs. We report here that αPKC as well as the atypical PKCs bind to the IKKs in vitro and in vivo. In addition, overexpression of ζPKC positively modulates IKKβ activity but not that of IKKα, whereas the transfection of a ζPKC dominant negative mutant severely impairs the activation of IKKβ but not IKKα in TNF-α-stimulated cells. We also show that cell stimulation with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate activates IKKβ, which is entirely dependent on the activity of αPKC but not that of the atypical isoforms. In contrast, the inhibition of αPKC does not affect the activation of IKKβ by TNF-α. Interestingly, recombinant active ζPKC and αPKC are able to stimulate in vitro the activity of IKKβ but not that of IKKα. In addition, evidence is presented here that recombinant ζPKC directly phosphorylates IKKβ in vitro, involving Ser177 and Ser181. Collectively, these results demonstrate a critical role for the PKC isoforms in the NF-κB pathway at the level of IKKβ activation and IκB degradation.


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