960 resultados para PROTEIN-KINASE-C


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Cytochrome P4501A1 (CYP1A1), an enzyme known to metabolize polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, is regulated by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR). The involvement of protein kinase C (PKC) in the regulation of AhR signal transduction pathway, has been widely studied but the role of specific PKC isoform(s) involved in this process it is not well clarified. To study which PKC isoform(s) is implicated in the regulation of CYP1A1, in the poorly tumorigenic MH1C1 rat hepatoma cells, we examined the effects of some PKC pharmacological inhibitors, Calphostin C (CAL), Staurosporine (STA) and H7, and of 12-0-tetradecanoyl phorbol 13-acetate (TPA), a PKC activator, on basal and 3- methylcholanthrene (MC)-induced CYP1A1 protein expression and mediated ethoxyresorufin O-deethylation (EROD) activity. In parallel, the activities of PKC-α, -βI, -δ and -ε isoforms, the most expressed in MH1C1 cells, were monitored. After pre-treatment with CAL, STA and H7, the MC-induced CYP1A1 protein and EROD activity were rapidly reduced with temporal profile similar to the profile of the activity of α and β1 PKC isoforms. Moreover, TPA pre-treatment induced a biphasic effect on EROD activity, and a decline of PKC -βI and -α, in first instance, and -δ and -ε activities later on. These findings clearly show that, in MH1C1 cells, PKC is involved in CYP1A1 regulation and that α and βI classic PKC isoforms play an active role in modulating this process.

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Angiotensin II (Ang II) and platelet-derived growth factor-BB (PDGF-BB) are associated with excessive cell migration, proliferation and many growth-related diseases. However, whether these agents utilise similar mechanisms to trigger vascular pathologies remains to be explored. The effects of Ang II and PDGF-BB on coronary artery smooth muscle cell (CASMC) migration and proliferation were investigated via Dunn chemotaxis assay and the measurement of [3H]thymidine incorporation rates, respectively. Both atherogens produced similar degrees of cell migration which were dramatically inhibited by mevastatin (10 nM). However, the inhibitory effects of losartan (10 nM) and MnTBAP (a free radical scavenger; 50 μM) were found to be unique to Ang II-mediated chemotaxis. In contrast, MnTBAP, apocynin (an antioxidant and phagocytic NADPH oxidase inhibitor; 500 μM), mevastatin and pravastatin (100 nM) equally suppressed both Ang II and PDGF-BB-induced cellular growth. Although atherogens produced similar changes in NADPH oxidase, NOS and superoxide dismutase activities, they differentially regulated antioxidant glutathione peroxidase activity which was diminished by Ang II and unaffected by PDGF-BB. Studies with signal transduction pathway inhibitors revealed the involvement of multiple pathways i.e. protein kinase C, tyrosine kinase and MAPK in Ang II- and/or PDGF-BB-induced aforementioned enzyme activity changes. In conclusion, Ang II and PDGF-BB may induce coronary atherosclerotic disease formation by stimulating CASMC migration and proliferation through agent-specific regulation of oxidative status and utilisation of different signal transduction pathways.

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Aims: Hyperglycaemia (HG), in stroke patients, is associated with worse neurological outcome by compromising endothelial cell function and the blood–brain barrier (BBB) integrity. We have studied the contribution of HG-mediated generation of oxidative stress to these pathologies and examined whether antioxidants as well as normalization of glucose levels following hyperglycaemic insult reverse these phenomena. Methods: Human brain microvascular endothelial cell (HBMEC) and human astrocyte co-cultures were used to simulate the human BBB. The integrity of the BBB was measured by transendothelial electrical resistance using STX electrodes and an EVOM resistance meter, while enzyme activities were measured by specific spectrophotometric assays. Results: After 5 days of hyperglycaemic insult, there was a significant increase in BBB permeability that was reversed by glucose normalization. Co-treatment of cells with HG and a number of antioxidants including vitamin C, free radical scavengers and antioxidant enzymes including catalase and superoxide dismutase mimetics attenuated the detrimental effects of HG. Inhibition of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38MAPK) and protein kinase C but not phosphoinositide 3 kinase (PI3 kinase) also reversed HG-induced BBB hyperpermeability. In HBMEC, HG enhanced pro-oxidant (NAD(P)H oxidase) enzyme activity and expression that were normalized by reverting to normoglycaemia. Conclusions: HG impairs brain microvascular endothelial function through involvements of oxidative stress and several signal transduction pathways.

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L'insuline est une hormone qui diminue la concentration de sucre dans le sang et qui est produite par la cellule β du pancréas. Un défaut de production de cette hormone est une des causes principales du diabète. Cette perte de production d'insuline est la conséquence à la fois, de la réduction du nombre de cellules β et du mauvais fonctionnement des cellules β restantes. L'inflammation, en activant la voie de signalisation «c-Jun N-terminal Kinase» (JNK) contribue au déclin de ces cellules. Cette voie de signalisation est activée par des protéines telles que des kinases qui reçoivent le signal de stress. Dans ce travail de thèse nous nous sommes intéressés à étudier le rôle de «Dual leucine zipper bearing kinase» (DLK) comme protéine capable de relayer le stress inflammatoire vers l'activation de la voie JNK dans les cellules β-pancréatiques. Nous montrons que DLK est présente dans les cellules β-pancréatiques et qu'elle agit effectivement comme un activateur de la voie de signalisation de JNK. En outre, DLK joue un rôle clé dans le contrôle de l'expression de l'insuline, de la sécrétion de l'insuline en réponse au glucose et au maintien de la survie des cellules β. Si l'expression de cette protéine diminue, la cellule produit moins d'insuline et sera plus sensible à la mort en réponse au stress inflammatoire. A l'inverse si l'expression de DLK est augmentée, la cellule β produit et secrète plus d'insuline. Des variations de l'expression de DLK sont par ailleurs, associées à l'état de santé de la cellule β. Chez la ratte en gestation ou la souris obèse, dans lesquelles la cellule β produit plus d'insuline, l'expression de DLK est augmentée. En revanche dans les cellules β des patients diabétiques, l'expression de DLK est diminuée par rapport aux cellules non malades. En résumé, DLK est nécessaire pour le bon fonctionnement de la cellule β-pancréatique et son expression corrèle avec le degré de santé des cellules, faisant que cette protéine pourrait être une cible thérapeutique potentiel. Les cellules β-pancréatiques ont la capacité de réguler la sécrétion d'insuline en s'adaptant précisément au stimulus et à la glycémie. La fonction de la cellule β est cruciale dans l'homéostasie du glucose puisque sa dysfonction et sa mort mènent au développement des diabètes de type 1 et 2. De nombreuses études suggèrent que l'inflammation pourrait avoir un rôle dans la dysfonction et la destruction de ces cellules dans le diabète de type 2. L'excès chronique de cytokines proinflammatoires accélère le dysfonctionnement de la cellule β pancréatique par un mécanisme qui implique la voie de signalisation «c-Jun N-terminal Kinase» (JNK). L'activation de cette voie est organisée par des protéines d'échafaudages. Elle se fait par trois étapes successives de phosphorylation impliquant une «Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase Kinase Kinase» (MAP3K), une MAP2K et JNK. Dans ce travail de thèse nous montrons l'expression abondante et spécifique de la MAP3K «Dual Leucine Zipper Bearing Kinase» (DLK) dans les cellules β pancréatiques. Cela est la conséquence de l'absence du répresseur transcriptionnel «Repressor Element 1 Silencing Transcription». Nous montrons également que DLK régule l'activation de JNK et qu'il s'avère nécessaire pour la fonction et la survie de la cellule β pancréatique par un mécanisme impliquant le facteur de transcription PDX-1. L'invalidation de l'expression de DLK diminue l'expression de l'insuline et potentialise l'apoptose induite par des cytokines proinflammatoires. A l'inverse, la surexpression de DLK augmente l'expression et la sécrétion d'insuline induites par le glucose. Par conséquent des niveaux d'expression appropriés de DLK sont déterminants pour la fonction et la survie de la cellule β pancréatique. L'obésité et la grossesse sont caractérisées par une hyperinsulinémie qui résulte d'une augmentation de la production et de la sécrétion de l'insuline. L'expression de DLK est augmentée dans des îlots de rattes gestantes et des souris obèses comparés à leurs contrôles respectifs. A l'inverse, dans des sujets diabétiques, l'expression de DLK est diminuée. Ensemble ces résultats montrent l'importance de DLK dans l'adaptation des îlots par un mécanisme qui pourrait impliquer la voie de signalisation de JNK. Des défauts dans cette voie régulée par DLK pourraient contribuer au dysfonctionnement et la mort de la cellule β pancréatique et par conséquent au développement du diabète. L'étude détaillée du mécanisme par lequel DLK active la voie de signalisation JNK et régule la fonction de la cellule β pancréatique pourrait ouvrir la voie des nouvelles thérapies ciblant l'amélioration de la fonction de la cellule β dans le diabète. - Pancreatic β-cells are evidently plastic in their ability to regulate insulin secretion. The quantity of insulin released by these cells varies according to the stimulus, and the prevailing glucose concentration, β-cell function is pivotal in glucose homeostasis, as their dysfunction, and death can lead to development of type 1 and type 2 diabetes. There are numerous reports so far underlying the role of inflammation in dysfunction, and destruction of β-cells, in both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Chronic excess of pro¬inflammatory cytokines promotes a β-cell decline, via induction of the c-Jun N-terminal Kinase (JNK) pathway. The activation of the JNK pathway is organized by a scaffold protein-mediated module in which, a three-step phosphorylation cascade occurs. The latter includes, Mitogen activated protein kinase kinase kinase (MAP3K), MAP2K and JNK. In this thesis, we unveil that the MAP3K Dual Leucine Zipper Bearing Kinase (DLK) is selectively, and highly expressed in pancreatic β-cells, as the result from the absence of the transcriptional repressor named, Repressor Element 1 Silencing Transcription (REST). We show that DLK regulates activation of JNK, and is required for β-cell function and survival by modulating the PDX-1 transcription factor. Silencing of DLK expression diminishes insulin expression, and potentiated cytokine-mediated apoptosis. Conversely, overexpression of DLK increased insulin expression, and glucose-induced insulin secretion. Therefore, an appropriate level of DLK is critical for β-cell function and survival. Obesity and pregnancy are characterized by hyperinsulinemia resulting from an increased production and secretion of insulin. In isolated islets of pregnant rats, and obese mice, the expression of DLK was elevated when compared to their respective controls. However, decreased expression of DLK was observed in islets of individuals with diabetes. Taken together, we highlight the importance of DLK in islet adaptation, and describe a mechanism that may involve the JNK signaling. Deficiency in the JNK pathway regulated by DLK may contribute to β-cell failure and death, and thereby development of diabetes. Unraveling the mechanism whereby DLK activates the JNK pathway, and β-cell function, may pave the way for the design of novel therapies, aiming to improve β-cell function and survival in diabetes in general.

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RESUME : Dans ce travail effectué chez le rat adulte, l'excitotoxicité rétinienne est élicitée par injection intravitréenne de NMDA. Les lésions en résultant sont localisées dans la rétine interne. Elles prennent la forme de pycnoses dans la couche des cellules ganglionnaires (corps cellulaires des cellules ganglionnaires et amacrines déplacées) et dans la partie interne de la couche nucléaire interne (cellules amacrines). Cette localisation est liée à la présence de récepteurs au glutamate de type NMDA sur ces cellules. L'activation de ces récepteurs entraîne un influx calcique et l'activation de diverses enzymes (phospholipase A, calpaïnes, calmoduline, synthase d'oxyde nitrique). La signalisation se poursuit en aval en partie par les voies des Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK) : ERK, p38, ]NK. Dans les expériences présentées, toutes trois sont activées après l'injection de NMDA. Dans les cascades de signalisation de JNK, trois kinases s'ancrent sur une protéine scaffold. Les MAPKKK phosphorylent MKK4 et MKK7, qui phosphorylent JNK. JNK a de nombreuses cibles nucléaires (dont le facteur de transcription c-Jun) et cytoplasmiques. La voie de JNK est bloquée par l'inhibiteur peptidique D-JNKI-1 en empêchant l'interaction de la kinase avec son substrat. L'inhibiteur est formé de 20 acides aminés du domaine de liaison JBD et de 10 acides aminés de la partie TAT du virus HIV. L'injection intravitréenne de D-JNKI-1 permet une diminution des taux de JNK et c-Jun phosphorylés dans les lysats de rétine. L'effet prépondérant est la restriction importante des altérations histologiques des couches internes de la rétine. L'évaluation par électrorétinogramme met en sus en évidence une sauvegarde de la fonction cellulaire. Ce travail a ainsi permis d'établir la protection morphologique et fonctionnelle des cellules de la rétine interne par inhibition spécifique de la voie de JNK lors d'excitotoxicité. SUMMARY Excitotoxicity in the retina associates with several pathologies like retinal ischemia, traumatic optic neuropathy and glaucoma. In this study, excitotoxicity is elicited by intravitreal NMDA injection in adult rats. Lesions localise in the inner retina. They present as pyknotic cells in the ganglion cell layer (ganglion cells and displaced amacrines) and the inner nuclear layer (amacrine cells). These cells express NMDA glutamate receptors. The receptor activation leads to a calcium flow into the cell and hence enzyme activation (phospholipase, calpains, calmodulin, nitric oxide synthase). The subsequent signaling pathways can involve the Mitogen Activated Protein Kinases (MAPK): ERK, p38 end JNK. These were all activated in our experiments. The signaling cascade organises around several scaffold proteins. The various MAPKKK phosphorylate MKK4 and MKK7, which phosphorylate JNK. JNK targets are of nuclear (c-Jun transcription factor) or cytoplasmic localisation. The peptidic inhibitor D-JNKI-1, 20 amino acids from the JNK binding domain JBD coupled to 10 amino acids of the TAT transporter, disrupts the binding of JNK with its substrate. Intravitreal injection of the inhibitor lowers phosphorylated forms of JNK and c-Jun in retinal extracts. It protects strongly against histological lesions in the inner retina and allows functional rescue.

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Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades regulate a wide variety of cellular processes that ultimately depend on changes in gene expression. We have found a novel mechanism whereby one of the key MAP3 kinases, Mekk1, regulates transcriptional activity through an interaction with p53. The tumor suppressor protein p53 down-regulates a number of genes, including the gene most frequently mutated in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (PKD1). We have discovered that Mekk1 translocates to the nucleus and acts as a co-repressor with p53 to down-regulate PKD1 transcriptional activity. This repression does not require Mekk1 kinase activity, excluding the need for an Mekk1 phosphorylation cascade. However, this PKD1 repression can also be induced by the stress-pathway stimuli, including TNFα, suggesting that Mekk1 activation induces both JNK-dependent and JNK-independent pathways that target the PKD1 gene. An Mekk1-p53 interaction at the PKD1 promoter suggests a new mechanism by which abnormally elevated stress-pathway stimuli might directly down-regulate the PKD1 gene, possibly causing haploinsufficiency and cyst formation.

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OBJECTIVE: The pro-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) generates pancreatic beta-cells apoptosis mainly through activation of the c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK) pathway. This study was designed to investigate whether the long-acting agonist of the hormone glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor exendin-4 (ex-4), which mediates protective effects against cytokine-induced beta-cell apoptosis, could interfere with the JNK pathway. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Isolated human, rat, and mouse islets and the rat insulin-secreting INS-1E cells were incubated with ex-4 in the presence or absence of IL-1 beta. JNK activity was assessed by solid-phase JNK kinase assay and quantification of c-Jun expression. Cell apoptosis was determined by scoring cells displaying pycnotic nuclei. RESULTS: Ex-4 inhibited induction of the JNK pathway elicited by IL-1 beta. This effect was mimicked with the use of cAMP-raising agents isobutylmethylxanthine and forskolin and required activation of the protein kinase A. Inhibition of the JNK pathway by ex-4 or IBMX and forskolin was concomitant with a rise in the levels of islet-brain 1 (IB1), a potent blocker of the stress-induced JNK pathway. In fact, ex-4 as well as IBMX and forskolin induced expression of IB1 at the promoter level through cAMP response element binding transcription factor 1. Suppression of IB1 levels with the use of RNA interference strategy impaired the protective effects of ex-4 against apoptosis induced by IL-1 beta. CONCLUSIONS: The data establish the requirement of IB1 in the protective action of ex-4 against apoptosis elicited by IL-1 beta and highlight the GLP-1 mimetics as new potent inhibitors of the JNK signaling induced by cytokines.

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D-JNKI1, a cell-permeable peptide inhibitor of the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) pathway, has been shown to be a powerful neuroprotective agent after focal cerebral ischemia in adult mice and young rats. We have investigated the potential neuroprotective effect of D-JNKI1 and the involvement of the JNK pathway in a neonatal rat model of cerebral hypoxia-ischemia. Seven-day-old rats underwent a permanent ligation of the right common carotid artery followed by 2h of hypoxia (8% oxygen). Treatment with D-JNKI1 (0.3mg/kg intraperitoneally) significantly reduced early calpain activation, late caspase-3 activation and, in the thalamus, autophagosome formation, indicating an involvement of JNK in different types of cell death: necrotic, apoptotic and autophagic. However the size of the lesion was unchanged. Further analysis showed that neonatal hypoxia-ischemia induced an immediate decrease in JNK phosphorylation (reflecting mainly P-JNK1) followed by a slow progressive increase (including P-JNK3 54kDa), whereas c-jun and c-fos expression were both strongly activated immediately after hypoxia-ischemia. In conclusion, unlike in adult ischemic models, JNK is only moderately activated after severe cerebral hypoxia-ischemia in neonatal rats and the observed positive effects of D-JNKI1 are insufficient to give neuroprotection. Thus, for perinatal asphyxia, D-JNKI1 can only be considered in association with other therapies.

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The alpha2ß1 integrin is a major collagen receptor that plays an essential role in the adhesion of normal and tumor cells to the extracellular matrix. Alternagin-C (ALT-C), a disintegrin-like protein purified from the venom of the Brazilian snake Bothrops alternatus, competitively interacts with the alpha2ß1 integrin, thereby inhibiting collagen binding. When immobilized in plate wells, ALT-C supports the adhesion of fibroblasts as well as of human vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) and does not detach cells previously bound to collagen I. ALT-C is a strong inducer of HUVEC proliferation in vitro. Gene expression analysis was done using an Affimetrix HU-95A probe array with probe sets of ~10,000 human genes. In human fibroblasts growing on collagen-coated plates, ALT-C up-regulates the expression of several growth factors including vascular endothelial growth factor, as well as some cell cycle control genes. Up-regulation of the vascular endothelial growth factor gene and other growth factors could explain the positive effect on HUVEC proliferation. ALT-C also strongly activates protein kinase B phosphorylation, a signaling event involved in endothelial cell survival and angiogenesis. In human neutrophils, ALT-C has a potent chemotactic effect modulated by the intracellular signaling cascade characteristic of integrin-activated pathways. Thus, ALT-C acts as a survival factor, promoting adhesion, migration and endothelial cell proliferation after binding to alpha2ß1 integrin on the cell surface. The biological activities of ALT-C may be helpful as a therapeutic strategy in tissue regeneration as well as in the design of new therapeutic agents targeting alpha2ß1 integrin.

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We have studied the molecular mechanism and signal transduction of pim-1, an oncogene encoding a serine-threonine kinase. This is a true oncogene which prolongs survival and inhibits apoptosis of hematopoietic cells. In order to determine whether the effects of Pim-1 occur by regulation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway, we used a transcriptional reporter assay by transient co-transfection as a screening method. In this study, we found that Pim-1 inhibited the Elk-1 and NFkappaB transcriptional activities induced by activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade in reporter gene assays. However, Western blots showed that the induction of Elk-1-regulated expression of endogenous c-Fos was not affected by Pim-1. The phosphorylation and activation of neither Erk1/2 nor Elk-1 was influenced by Pim-1. Also, in the gel shift assay, the pattern of endogenous NFkappaB binding to its probe was not changed in any manner by Pim-1. These data indicate that Pim-1 does not regulate the activation of Erk1/2, Elk-1 or NFkappaB. These contrasting results suggest a pitfall of the transient co-transfection reporter assay in analyzing the regulation of transcription factors outside of the chromosome context. It ensures that results from reporter gene expression assay should be verified by study of endogenous gene expression.

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Intrahippocampal administration of kainic acid (KA) induces synaptic release of neurotrophins, mainly brain-derived neurotrophic factor, which contributes to the acute neuronal excitation produced by the toxin. Two protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors, herbimycin A and K252a, were administered intracerebroventricularly, in a single dose, to attenuate neurotrophin signaling during the acute effects of KA, and their role in epileptogenesis was evaluated in adult, male Wistar rats weighing 250-300 g. The latency for the first Racine stage V seizure was 90 ± 8 min in saline controls (N = 4) which increased to 369 ± 71 and 322 ± 63 min in animals receiving herbimycin A (1.74 nmol, N = 4) and K252a (10 pmol, N = 4), respectively. Behavioral alterations were accompanied by diminished duration of EEG paroxysms in herbimycin A- and K252a-treated animals. Notwithstanding the reduction in seizure severity, cell death (60-90% of cell loss in KA-treated animals) in limbic regions was unchanged by herbimycin A and K252a. However, aberrant mossy fiber sprouting was significantly reduced in the ipsilateral dorsal hippocampus of K252a-treated animals. In this model of temporal lobe epilepsy, both protein kinase inhibitors diminished the acute epileptic activity triggered by KA and the ensuing morphological alterations in the dentate gyrus without diminishing cell loss. Our current data indicating that K252a, but not herbimycin, has an influence over KA-induced mossy fiber sprouting further suggest that protein tyrosine kinase receptors are not the only factors which control this plasticity. Further experiments are necessary to elucidate the exact signaling systems associated with this K252a effect.

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Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection results in the activation of numerous stress responses including oxidative stress, with the potential to induce an apoptotic state. Previously we have shown that HCV attenuates the stress-induced, p38MAPK-mediated up-regulation of the K+ channel Kv2.1, to maintain the survival of infected cells in the face of cellular stress. We demonstrated that this effect was mediated by HCV non-structural 5A (NS5A) protein, which impaired p38MAPK activity through a polyproline motif dependent interaction, resulting in reduction of phosphorylation activation of Kv2.1. In this study, we investigated the host cell proteins targeted by NS5A in order to mediate Kv2.1 inhibition. We screened a phage-display library expressing the entire complement of human SH3 domains for novel NS5A-host cell interactions. This analysis identified mixed lineage kinase 3 (MLK3) as a putative NS5A interacting partner. MLK3 is a serine/threonine protein kinase that is a member of the MAPK kinase kinase (MAP3K) family and activates p38MAPK. An NS5A-MLK3 interaction was confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation and western blot analysis. We further demonstrate a novel role of MLK3 in the modulation of Kv2.1 activity, whereby MLK3 overexpression leads to the up-regulation of channel activity. Accordingly, coexpression of NS5A suppressed this stimulation. Additionally we demonstrate that overexpression of MLK3 induced apoptosis which was also counteracted by NS5A. We conclude that NS5A targets MLK3 with multiple downstream consequences for both apoptosis and K+ homeostasis.

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Three well-characterized mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) subfamilies are expressed in rodent and rabbit hearts, and are activated by pathophysiological stimuli. We have determined and compared the expression and activation of these MAPKs in donor and failing human hearts. The amount and activation of MAPKs was assessed in samples from the left ventricles of 4 unused donor hearts and 12 explanted hearts from patients with heart failure secondary to ischaemic heart disease. Total MAPKs or dually phosphorylated (activated) MAPKs were detected by Western blotting and MAPK activities were measured by in gel kinase assays. As in rat heart, c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs) were detected in human hearts as bands corresponding to 46 and 54 kDa; p38-MAPK(s) was detected as a band corresponding to approximately 40 kDa, and extracellularly regulated kinases, ERK1 and ERK2, were detected as 44- and 42-kDa bands respectively. The total amounts of 54 kDa JNK, p38-MAPK and ERK2 were similar in all samples, although 46-kDa JNK was reduced in the failing hearts. However, the mean activities of JNKs and p38-MAPK(s) were significantly higher in failing heart samples than in those from donor hearts (P<0.05). There was no significant difference in phosphorylated (activated) ERKs between the two groups. In conclusion, JNKs, p38-MAPK(s) and ERKs are expressed in the human heart and the activities of JNKs and p38-MAPK(s) were increased in heart failure secondary to ischaemic heart disease. These data indicate that JNKs and p38-MAPKs may be important in human cardiac pathology.

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The mammalian Ste20 kinase Nck-interacting kinase (NIK) specifically activates the c-Jun amino-terminal kinase (JNK) mitogen-activated protein kinase module. NIK also binds the SH3 domains of the SH2/SH3 adapter protein Nck. To determine whether Nck functions as an adapter to couple NIK to a receptor tyrosine kinase signaling pathway, we determined whether NIK is activated by Eph receptors (EphR). EphRs constitute the largest family of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK), and members of this family play important roles in patterning of the nervous and vascular systems. In this report, we show that NIK kinase activity is specifically increased in cells stimulated by two EphRs, EphB1 and EphB2. EphB1 kinase activity and phosphorylation of a juxtamembrane tyrosine (Y594), conserved in all Eph receptors, are both critical for NIK activation by EphB1. Although pY594 in the EphB1R has previously been shown to bind the SH2 domain of Nck, we found that stimulation of EphB1 and EphB2 led predominantly to a complex between NIK/Nck, p62(dok), RasGAP, and an unidentified 145-kDa tyrosine-phosphorylated protein. Tyrosine-phosphorylated p62(dok) most probably binds directly to the SH2 domain of Nck and RasGAP and indirectly to NIK bound to the SH3 domain of Nck. We found that NIK activation is also critical for coupling EphB1R to biological responses that include the activation of integrins and JNK by EphB1. Taken together, these findings support a model in which the recruitment of the Ste20 kinase NIK to phosphotyrosine-containing proteins by Nck is an important proximal step in the signaling cascade downstream of EphRs.

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The ubiquitously expressed nonreceptor tyrosine kinase c-Abl contains three nuclear localization signals, however, it is found in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm of proliferating fibroblasts. A rapid and transient loss of c-Abl from the nucleus is observed upon the initial adhesion of fibroblasts onto a fibronectin matrix, suggesting the possibility of nuclear export [Lewis, J., Baskaran, R., Taagepera, S., Schwartz, M. & Wang, J. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93, 15174–15179]. Here we show that the C terminus of c-Abl does indeed contain a functional nuclear export signal (NES) with the characteristic leucine-rich motif. The c-Abl NES can functionally complement an NES-defective HIV Rev protein (RevΔ3NI) and can mediate the nuclear export of glutathione-S-transferase. The c-Abl NES function is sensitive to the nuclear export inhibitor leptomycin B. Mutation of a single leucine (L1064A) in the c-Abl NES abrogates export function. The NES-mutated c-Abl, termed c-Abl NES(−), is localized exclusively to the nucleus. Treatment of cells with leptomycin B also leads to the nuclear accumulation of wild-type c-Abl protein. The c-Abl NES(−) is not lost from the nucleus when detached fibroblasts are replated onto fibronectin matrix. Taken together, these results demonstrate that c-Abl shuttles continuously between the nucleus and the cytoplasm and that the rate of nuclear import and export can be modulated by the adherence status of fibroblastic cells.