36 resultados para non-canonical signaling pathways


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Epithelial locomotility is a fundamental determinant of tissue patterning that is subject to strict physiological regulation. The current, study sought to identify cellular signals that initiate cell migration in cultured thyroid epithelial cells. Porcine thyroid cells cultured as 3-dimensional follicles convert to 2-dimensional monolayers when deprived of agents that stimulate cAMP/PKA signaling. This morphogenetic event is driven by the activation of cell-on-substrate locomotility, providing a convenient assay for events that regulate the initiation of locomotion. In this system, the extracellular signal regulated kinase (ERK) pathway became activated as follicles converted to monolayer, as demonstrated by immunoblotting for activation-specific phosphorylation and nuclear accumulation of ERK. Inhibition of ERK activation using the drug PD98059 effectively prevented cells from beginning to migrate. PD98059 inhibited cell spreading, actin filament reorganization and the assembly of focal adhesions, cellular events that mediate the initiation of thyroid cell locomotility. Akt (PKB) signaling was also activated during follicle-to-monolayer conversion and the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) inhibitor, wortmannin, also blocked the initiation of cell movement. Wortmannin did not, however, block activation of ERK signaling. These findings, therefore, identify the ERK and PI3-kinase signaling pathways as important stimulators of thyroid cell locomotility. These findings are incorporated into a model where the initiation of thyroid cell motility constitutes a morphogenetic checkpoint regulated by coordinated changes in stimulatory (ERK, PI3-kinase) and tonic inhibitory (cAMP/PKA) signaling pathways. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 49:93-103, 2001. (C) 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Alcoholism is a major health problem in Western countries, yet relatively little is known about the mechanisms by which chronic alcohol abuse causes the pathologic changes associated with the disease. It is likely that chronic alcoholism affects a number of signaling cascades and transcription factors, which in turn result in distinct gene expression patterns. These patterns are difficult to detect by traditional experiments measuring a few mRNAs at a time, but are well suited to microarray analyses. We used cDNA microarrays to analyze expression of approximately 10 000 genes in the frontal and motor cortices of three groups of chronic alcoholic and matched control cases. A functional hierarchy was devised for classification of brain genes and the resulting groups were compared based on differential expression. Comparison of gene expression patterns in these brain regions revealed a selective reprogramming of gene expression in distinct functional groups. The most pronounced differences were found in myelin-related genes and genes involved in protein trafficking. Significant changes in the expression of known alcohol-responsive genes, and genes involved in calcium, cAMP, and thyroid signaling pathways were also identified. These results suggest that multiple pathways may be important for neuropathology and altered neuronal function observed in alcoholism.

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The ability of viral or mutated cellular oncogenes to initiate neoplastic events and their poor immunogenicity have considerably undermined their potential use as immunotherapeutic tools for the treatment of human cancers. Using an EpsteinBarr virus-encoded oncogene, latent membrane protein 1 (LMP1), as a model, we report a novel strategy that both deactivates cellular signaling pathways associated with the oncogenic phenotype and reverses poor immunogenicity. We show that cotranslational ubiquitination combined with Wend rule targeting of LMP1 enhanced the intracellular degradation of LMP1 and total blockade of LMP1-mediated nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) and signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) activation in human cells. In addition, although murine cells expressing LMP1 were uniformly tumorigenic, this oncogenicity was completely abrogated by covalent linkage of LMP1 with ubiquitin, while an enhanced CD8(+) T cell response to a model epitope fused to the C-terminus of LMP1 was observed following immunization with ubiquitinated LMP1. These observations suggest that proteasomal targeting of tumor-associated oncogenes could be exploited therapeutically by either gene therapy or vaccination.

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The origin of intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+](i)) transients stimulated by nicotinic ( nAChR) and muscarinic ( mAChR) receptor activation was investigated in fura-2-loaded neonatal rat intracardiac neurons. ACh evoked [Ca2+](i) increases that were reduced to similar to 60% of control in the presence of either atropine ( 1 muM) or mecamylamine ( 3 muM) and to < 20% in the presence of both antagonists. Removal of external Ca2+ reduced ACh-induced responses to 58% of control, which was unchanged in the presence of mecamylamine but reduced to 5% of control by atropine. The nAChR-induced [Ca2+](i) response was reduced to 50% by 10 μM ryanodine, whereas the mAChR-induced response was unaffected by ryanodine, suggesting that Ca2+ release from ryanodine-sensitive Ca2+ stores may only contribute to the nAChR-induced [Ca2+](i) responses. Perforated-patch whole cell recording at - 60 mV shows that the rise in [Ca2+](i) is concomitant with slow outward currents on mAChR activation and with rapid inward currents after nAChR activation. In conclusion, different signaling pathways mediate the rise in [Ca2+](i) and membrane currents evoked by ACh binding to nicotinic and muscarinic receptors in rat intracardiac neurons.

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NOR-1/NR4A3 is an orphan member of the nuclear hormone receptor superfamily. NOR-1 and its close relatives Nurr1 and Nur77 are members of the NR4A subgroup of nuclear receptors. Members of the NR4A subgroup are induced through multiple signal transduction pathways. They have been implicated in cell proliferation, differentiation, T-cell apoptosis, chondrosarcomas, neurological disorders, inflammation, and atherogenesis. However, the mechanism of transcriptional activation, coactivator recruitment, and agonist-mediated activation remain obscure. Hence, we examined the molecular basis of NOR-1-mediated activation. We observed that NOR-1 trans-activates gene expression in a cell- and target-specific manner; moreover, it operates in an activation function (AF)-1-dependent manner. The N-terminal AF-1 domain delimited to between amino acids 1 and 112, preferentially recruits the steroid receptor coactivator (SRC). Furthermore, SRC-2 modulates the activity of the AF-1 domain but not the C-terminal ligand binding domain (LBD). Homology modeling indicated that the NOR-1 LBD was substantially different from that of hRORbeta, a closely related AF-2-dependent receptor. In particular, the hydrophobic cleft characteristic of nuclear receptors was replaced with a very hydrophilic surface with a distinct topology. This observation may account for the inability of this nuclear receptor LBD to efficiently mediate cofactor recruitment and transcriptional activation. In contrast, the N-terminal AF-1 is necessary for cofactor recruitment and can independently conscript coactivators. Finally, we demonstrate that the purine anti-metabolite 6-mercaptopurine, a widely used antineoplastic and anti-inflammatory drug, activates NOR-1 in an AF-1-dependent manner. Additional 6-mercaptopurine analogs all efficiently activated NOR-1, suggesting that the signaling pathways that modulate proliferation via inhibition of de novo purine and/or nucleic acid biosynthesis are involved in the regulation NR4A activity. We hypothesize that the NR4A subgroup mediates the genotoxic stress response and suggest that this subgroup may function as sensors that respond to genotoxicity.