909 resultados para inhibitor protein kappa B
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Maintenance of oxygen homeostasis is a key requirement to ensure normal mammalian cell growth and differentiation. Hypoxia arises when oxygen demand exceeds supply, and is a feature of multiple human diseases including stroke, cancer and renal fibrosis. We have investigated the effect of hypoxia on kidney cells, and observed that insulin-induced cell viability is increased in hypoxia. We have characterized the role of protein kinase B (PKB/ Akt) in these cells as a potential mediator of this effect. PKB/Akt activity was increased by low oxygen concentrations in kidney cells, and insulin-stimulated activation of PKB/Akt was stronger, more rapid and more sustained in hypoxia. Reduction of HIF1 alpha levels using antimycin-A or siRNA targeting HlF1 alpha did not affect PKB/Akt activation in hypoxia. Pharmacologic stabilization of HIF1 alpha independent of hypoxia did not increase insulin-stimulated PKB/Akt activation. Although increased insulin-stimulated cell viability was observed in hypoxia, no differences in the degree of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake were observed in L6 muscle cells in hypoxia compared to normoxia. Thus, PKB/Akt may regulate specific cellular responses to growth factors such as insulin under adverse conditions such as hypoxia. alpha 2007 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
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The role of the serine/threonine protein kinase B (PKB, also known as Akt) is becoming increasingly more evident to researchers investigating diverse cellular processes such as glucose uptake, cell-cycle progression, apoptosis and transcriptional regulation. New roles for PKB/Akt have been described in various organisms and biological processes. From the regulation of ovarian ecdysteroid production in the humble mosquito (Aedes aegypti), through the seasonal, tissue-specific regulation of PKB/Akt during the hibernation of yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventris), to the control of glucose metabolism and insulin signalling in the mouse (Mus musculus), our knowledge of the function of this protein kinase has expanded greatly in recent years. Significant advances in all aspects of PKB/Akt signalling have occurred in the past 2 years, including biological insights, novel substrates and newly discovered regulatory mechanisms of PKB/Akt. Collectively, these data expand the current models of PKB/Akt signalling and highlight potential directions for PKB/Akt research in the future.
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It is ten years since the publication of three papers describing the cloning of a new proto-oncogene serine/threonine kinase termed protein kinase B (PKB)/Akt. Key roles for this protein kinase in cellular processes such as glucose metabolism, cell proliferation, apoptosis, transcription and cell migration are now well established. The explosion of publications involving PKB/Akt in the past three years emphasizes the high level of current interest in this signalling molecule. This review focuses on tracing the characterization of this kinase, through the elucidation of its mechanism of regulation, to its role in regulating physiological and pathophysiological processes,to our current understanding of the biology of PKB/Akt, and prospects for the future.
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Background: Hypercapnic acidosis exerts protective effects in acute lung injury but may also slow cellular repair. These effects may be mediated via inhibition of nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappa B), a pivotal transcriptional regulator in inflammation and repair.
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Many reviews have been written on protein kinase B/Akt focusing on its history dating back from the isolation of the Akt8 transforming murine leukemia virus by Staal in 1977, to the co-discovery of the Akt1 gene by the three groups in 1991 (reviewed in 7). There are currently over 22,000 publications in the PubMed database with "Akt" as a keyword - these publications describe a wealth of diverse data on the physiological functions of Akt isoforms. Many of these publications describe roles of Akt ranging from its requirement for cellular processes such as glucose uptake, cell survival and angiogenesis to roles in diseases such as cancer and ischaemia (22). This review will focus on the evidence for Akt signaling in different kidney cells during diabetes, or diabetic nephropathy (DN).
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DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) has been implicated in a variety of nuclear processes including DNA double strand break repair, V(D)J recombination, and transcription. A recent study showed that DNA-PK is responsible for Ser-473 phosphorylation in the hydrophobic motif of protein kinase B (PKB/Akt) in genotoxic-stressed cells, suggesting a novel role for DNA-PK in cell signaling. Here, we report that DNA-PK activity toward PKB peptides is impaired in DNA-PK knock-out mouse embryonic fibroblast cells when compared with wild type. In addition, human glioblastoma cells expressing a mutant form of DNA-PK (M059J) displayed a lower DNA-PK activity when compared with glioblastoma cells expressing wild-type DNA- PK (M059K) when PKB peptide substrates were tested. DNA- PK preferentially phosphorylated PKB on Ser-473 when compared with its known in vitro substrate, p53. A consensus hydrophobic amino acid surrounding the Ser-473 phospho-acceptor site in PKB containing amino acids Phe at position +1 and +4 and Tyr at position -1 are critical for DNA- PK activity. Thus, these data define the specificity of DNA- PK action as a Ser-473 kinase for PKB in DNA repair signaling.
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Persistent activation of NF-B is central to the pathogenesis of many inflammatory lung disorders including Cystic Fibrosis, Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. A20 is an endogenous negative regulator of NF-B signalling which has been widely described in autoimmune and inflammatory disorders including Diabetes and Crohn’s disease, but which has received little attention in terms of chronic lung disorders. This review examines the existing body of research on A20 regulation of NF-B signalling and details the mechanism and regulation of A20 action focusing, where possible, on pulmonary inflammation. A20 and its associated signalling molecules are highlighted as being of potential therapeutic interest for the treatment of inflammatory disorders and a proposed model of A20 activity in inflammatory lung disease is provided.
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The environmental bacterium Burkholderia cenocepacia causes opportunistic lung infections in immunocompromised individuals, particularly in patients with cystic fibrosis. Infections in these patients are associated with exacerbated inflammation leading to rapid decay of lung function, and in some cases resulting in cepacia syndrome, which is characterized by a fatal acute necrotizing pneumonia and sepsis. B. cenocepacia can survive intracellularly in macrophages by altering the maturation of the phagosome, but very little is known on macrophage responses to the intracellular infection. In this study, we have examined the role of the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway in B. cenocepacia-infected monocytes and macrophages. We show that PI3K/Akt activity was required for NF-kappa B activity and the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines during infection with B. cenocepacia. In contrast to previous observations in epithelial cells infected with other Gram-negative bacteria, Akt did not enhance I kappa B kinase or NF-kappa B p65 phosphorylation, but rather inhibited GSK3 beta, a negative regulator of NF-kappa B transcriptional activity. This novel mechanism of modulation of NF-kappa B activity may provide a unique therapeutic target for controlling excessive inflammation upon B. cenocepacia infection. The Journal of Immunology, 2011, 187: 635-643.
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Dissertação para a obtenção do grau de doutor em Biologia pelo Instituto de Tecnologia Química e Biológica. Universidade Nova de Lisboa.
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Le cancer de la prostate (CaP) est le plus diagnostiqué chez les hommes au Canada et représente le troisième cancer le plus meurtrier au sein de cette population. Malgré l’efficacité des traitements de première ligne, de nombreux patients finiront par développer une résistance et, le cas échéant, verront leur CaP progresser vers une forme plus agressive. Plusieurs paramètres, essentiellement cliniques, permettent de prédire la progression du CaP mais leur sensibilité, encore limitée, implique la nécessité de nouveaux biomarqueurs afin de combler cette lacune. Dans cette optique nous nous intéressons au facteur de transcription NF-κB. Des études réalisées au laboratoire et ailleurs, associent RelA(p65) à un potentiel clinique dans le CaP, soulignant ainsi l’importance de la voie classique NF-κB. L’implication de la voie alternative NF-κB dans la progression du CaP a aussi été suggérée dans une de nos études illustrant la corrélation entre la distribution nucléaire de RelB et le score de Gleason. Alors que la voie classique est largement documentée et son implication dans la progression du CaP établie, la voie alternative, elle, reste à explorer. La présente thèse vise à clarifier l’implication de la voie alternative NF-κB dans le CaP et répond à deux objectifs fixés dans ce but. Le premier objectif fut d’évaluer l’impact de l'activation de la voie alternative NF-κB sur la biologie des cellules cancéreuses prostatiques. L’étude de la surexpression de RelB a souligné les effets de la voie alternative NF-κB sur la prolifération et l'autophagie. Étant ainsi impliquée tant dans la croissance tumorale que dans un processus de plus en plus associée à la progression tumorale, quoique potentiellement létal pour les cellules cancéreuses, son impact sur la tumorigénèse du CaP reste encore difficile à définir. Il n'existe, à ce jour, aucune étude permettant de comparer le potentiel clinique des voies classique et alternative NF-κB. Le second objectif de ce projet fut donc l'analyse conjointe de RelA(p65) et RelB au sein de mêmes tissus de patients atteints de CaP afin de déterminer l'importance clinique des deux signalisations NF-κB, l'une par rapport à l'autre. Le marquage immunofluorescent de RelA(p65) et RelB en a permis l'analyse quantitative et objective par un logiciel d'imagerie. Nos travaux ont confirmé le potentiel clinique associé à RelA(p65). La variable RelA(p65)/RelB s’est, elle, avérée moins informative que RelA(p65). Par contre, aucune corrélation entre RelB et les paramètres cliniques inclus dans l'étude n’est ressortie. En définitive, mon projet de thèse aura permis de préciser l'implication de la voie alternative NF-κB sur la biologie du CaP. Son impact sur la croissance des cellules cancéreuses prostatiques ainsi que sur l'autophagie, dénote l’ambivalence de la voie alternative NF-κB face à la tumorigénèse du CaP. L’étude exhaustive de la signalisation NF-κB souligne davantage l'importance de la voie classique dont l’intérêt clinique est principalement associé au statut de RelA(p65). Ainsi, bien que RelB n’affiche aucun potentiel en tant que biomarqueur exploitable en clinique, l’analyse de l’intervention de la voie alternative NF-κB sur la biologie des cellules cancéreuses prostatiques reste d’intérêt pour la compréhension de son rôle exact dans la progression du CaP.