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Prolonged nuclear retention of activated extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase promotes cell death generated by oxidative toxicity or proteasome inhibition in a neuronal cell line.
Authors:Madalina Stanciu  Donald B DeFranco
Institution:Department of Pharmacology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA.
Abstract:In the HT22 mouse hippocampal cell line and primary immature embryonic rat cortical neurons, glutamate-induced oxidative toxicity is associated with a delayed but chronic activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase-1/2 (ERK-1/2). ERK-1/2 is also activated in HT22 cells that undergo caspase-dependent cell death upon inhibition of proteasome-dependent protein degradation brought about by MG132 treatment. As in glutamate-treated HT22 cells and primary neurons, inhibition of MEK-1, an upstream activator of ERK-1/2 protects against MG132-induced toxicity. Furthermore, activated ERK-1/2 is retained within the nucleus in glutamate- and MG132-treated HT22 cells. Although previous studies suggested that ERK-1/2 activation was downstream of many cell death-inducing signals in HT22 cells, we show here that cycloheximide, the Z-vad caspase inhibitor, and a nonlethal heat shock protect against glutamate- and MG132-induced toxicity without diminishing ERK-1/2 activation. In these cases, ERK-1/2, although chronically activated, is not retained within the nucleus but accumulates within the cytoplasm. Thus, persistent nuclear retention of activated ERK-1/2 may be a critical factor in eliciting proapoptotic effects in neuronal cells subjected to oxidative stress or proteasome inhibition.
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