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Caveolin--an integral membrane protein--is the principal component of caveolae membranes in vivo. Multiple forms of caveolin have been identified: caveolin-1alpha, caveolin-1beta, caveolin-2 and caveolin-3. They differ in their specific properties and tissue distribution. When we studied the lysate of resident and elicited macrophages isolated from rat peritoneal cavity by Western blot analysis, we identified two different proteins (approximately 29 kDa and approximately 20 kDa) which were labelled with anti-caveolin antibodies. The approximately 20-kDa protein was labelled specifically only by anti-VIP21/caveolin-1, while the approximately 29-kDa protein was labelled by anti-VIP21/caveolin-1 and anti-caveolin-2. The presence of the approximately 29-kDa protein was characteristic of resident macrophages, and only a small amount of the approximately 20-kDa protein was detected in these cells. Elicitation resulted in a significant increase in the amount of the approximately 20-kDa protein labelled by anti-VIP21/caveolin-1 only. According to its molecular mass and antibody-specificity, this protein might be identical with the caveolin-1beta isoform. Our morphological (confocal and electron microscopical) studies have shown that in resident cells caveolin was present in the cytoplasm, in smaller vesicles and multivesicular bodies around the Golgi area. Only a very small amount of caveolae was found on the surface of these cells. In elicited macrophages, caveolae (labelled with the anti-VIP21/caveolin-1 antibody) appeared in large numbers on the cell surface, but caveolin detected by anti-caveolin-2 was also found in small vesicles and multivesicular bodies in the cytoplasm. According to these results, the absence of caveolae in resident cells can be explained by the absence of caveolin-1. The expression of the approximately 29-kDa (caveolin-related) protein in resident macrophages seems to be insufficient for caveolae formation. Elicitation significantly increased the expression of caveolin-1, and the increased amount of caveolin-1 resulted in caveolae formation on the cell surface.  相似文献   

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The potential role of glycogen synthase kinase-3beta in modulating apoptosis was examined in human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. Staurosporine treatment caused time- and concentration-dependent increases in the activities of caspase-3 and caspase-9 but not caspase-1, increased proteolysis of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, and induced morphological changes consistent with apoptosis. Overexpression of glycogen synthase kinase-3beta to levels 3.5 times that in control cells did not alter basal indices of apoptosis but potentiated staurosporine-induced activation of caspase-3, caspase-9, proteolysis of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, and morphological changes indicative of apoptosis. Inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase-3beta by lithium attenuated the enhanced staurosporine-induced activation of caspase-3 in cells overexpressing glycogen synthase kinase-3beta. In cells subjected to heat shock, caspase-3 activity was more than three times greater in glycogen synthase kinase-3beta-transfected than control cells, and this potentiated response was inhibited by lithium treatment. Thus, glycogen synthase kinase-3beta facilitated apoptosis induced by two experimental paradigms. These findings indicate that glycogen synthase kinase-3beta may contribute to pro-apoptotic-signaling activity, that inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase-3beta can contribute to anti-apoptotic-signaling mechanisms, and that the neuroprotective actions of lithium may be due in part to its inhibitory modulation of glycogen synthase kinase-3beta.  相似文献   

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Plasmalemmal caveolae are membrane microdomains that are specifically enriched in sphingolipids and contain a wide array of signaling proteins, including the endothelial isoform of nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS). EDG-1 is a G protein-coupled receptor for sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) that is expressed in endothelial cells and has been implicated in diverse vascular signal transduction pathways. We analyzed the subcellular distribution of EDG-1 in COS-7 cells transiently transfected with cDNA constructs encoding epitope-tagged EDG-1. Subcellular fractionation of cell lysates resolved by ultracentrifugation in discontinuous sucrose gradients revealed that approximately 55% of the EDG-1 protein was recovered in fractions enriched in caveolin-1, a resident protein of caveolae. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments showed that EDG-1 could be specifically precipitated by antibodies directed against caveolin-1 and vice versa. The targeting of EDG-1 to caveolae-enriched fractions was markedly increased (from 51 +/- 11% to 93 +/- 14%) by treatment of transfected cells with S1P (5 microm, 60 min). In co-transfection experiments expressing EDG-1 and eNOS cDNAs in COS-7 cells, we found that S1P treatment significantly and specifically increased nitric-oxide synthase activity, with an EC(50) of 30 nm S1P. Overexpression of transfected caveolin-1 cDNA together with EDG-1 and eNOS markedly diminished S1P-mediated eNOS activation; caveolin overexpression also attenuated agonist-induced phosphorylation of EDG-1 receptor by >90%. These results suggest that the interaction of the EDG-1 receptor with caveolin may serve to inhibit signaling through the S1P pathway, even as the targeting of EDG-1 to caveolae facilitates the interactions of this receptor with ligands and effectors that are also targeted to caveolae. The agonist-modulated targeting of EDG-1 to caveolae and its dynamic inhibitory interactions with caveolin identify new points for regulation of sphingolipid-dependent signaling in the vascular wall.  相似文献   

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Protein kinase B (Akt/PKB) is a Ser/Thr kinase that is involved in the regulation of cell proliferation/survival through mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) and the regulation of glycogen metabolism through glycogen synthase kinase 3beta (GSK-3beta) and glycogen synthase (GS). Rapamycin is an inhibitor of mTOR. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of rapamycin pretreatment on the insulin mediated phosphorylation of Akt/PKB phosphorylation and GS activity in parental HepG2 and HepG2 cells with overexpression of constitutively active Akt1/PKB-alpha (HepG2-CA-Akt/PKB). Rapamycin pretreatment resulted in a decrease (20-30%) in the insulin mediated phosphorylation of Akt1 (Ser 473) in parental HepG2 cells but showed an upregulation of phosphorylation in HepG2-CA-Akt/PKB cells. Rictor levels were decreased (20-50%) in parental HepG2 cells but were not significantly altered in the HepG2-CA-Akt/PKB cells. Furthermore, rictor knockdown decreased the phosphorylation of Akt (Ser 473) by 40-60% upon rapamycin pretreatment. GS activity followed similar trends as that of phosphorylated Akt and so with rictor levels in these cells pretreated with rapamycin; parental HepG2 cells showed a decrease in GS activity, whereas as HepG2-CA-Akt/PKB cells showed an increase in GS activity. The changes in the levels of phosphorylated Akt/PKB (Ser 473) correlated with GS and protein phoshatase-1 activity.  相似文献   

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Glucocorticoid hormones influence manifold neuronal processes including learning, memory, and emotion via the glucocorticoid receptor (GR). Catecholamines further modulate these functions, although the underlying molecular mechanisms are poorly understood. Here, we show that epinephrine and norepinephrine potentiate ligand-dependent GR transactivation in a hippocampal cell line (HT22) via beta(2)-adrenergic receptors. This enhancement was strongest at low concentrations of glucocorticoids and was accompanied by increased GR binding to a glucocorticoid-responsive element (GRE). beta(2)-Adrenergic receptor-mediated GR enhancement was relayed via G protein beta gamma-subunits, insensitive to pertussis toxin and independent of protein kinase A (PKA). In contrast, the catecholamine-evoked GR enhancement was strongly reduced by wortmannin, suggesting a critical role for phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3-K). In agreement, epinephrine directly activated PI3-K in vivo. Similarly, stimulation of tyrosine kinase receptors coupled to PI3-K activation, e.g. receptors for insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) or fibroblast growth factor (FGF), increased GR transactivation. Further analysis indicated that G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) and tyrosine kinase receptor signals converge on PI3-K through separate mechanisms. Blockade of GR enhancement by wortmannin was partially overcome by expression of the downstream-acting protein kinase B (PKB/Akt). Collectively, our findings demonstrate that GPCRs can regulate GR transactivation by stimulating PI3-K. This novel cross-talk may provide new insights into the molecular processes of learning and memory and the treatment of stress-related disorders.  相似文献   

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The ubiquitin/proteasome-dependent protein degradation pathway (UPP) is responsible for the accelerated down-regulation of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) levels in cells subjected to chronic glucocorticoid exposure. Whereas hormone-dependent down-regulation of GR operates in most cells, the receptor is not down-regulated after long-term glucocorticoid treatment of either cultured embryonic hippocampal neurons or the HT22 hippocampal cell line. In this report, we show that stable overexpression of the carboxy terminus of heat shock protein 70-interacting protein (CHIP) E3 ligase can restore hormone-dependent down-regulation of GR in HT22 cells. Proteasome inhibitor studies establish that ubiquitylated GR can be efficiently engaged with the proteasome upon CHIP overexpression, unlike the case in parental HT22 cells. In addition to its impact on GR down-regulation, CHIP overexpression alters the coupling between the UPP and GR transactivation. Unlike other steroid receptors whose transactivation properties are typically reduced upon proteasome inhibition, GR transactivation in HT22 cells and other cell lines is enhanced upon proteasome inhibition. However, in HT22 cells overexpressing CHIP, proteasome inhibition leads to a reduction in GR transactivation activity. Thus, the divergent response of a single transactivator (i.e. GR) to the UPP can be dictated by CHIP, an E3 ligase that also functions as a proteasome-targeting factor.  相似文献   

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Differential modes for beta(1)- and beta(2)-adrenergic receptor (AR) regulation of adenylyl cyclase in cardiomyocytes is most consistent with spatial regulation in microdomains of the plasma membrane. This study examines whether caveolae represent specialized subdomains that concentrate and organize these moieties in cardiomyocytes. Caveolae from quiescent rat ventricular cardiomyocytes are highly enriched in beta(2)-ARs, Galpha(i), protein kinase A RIIalpha subunits, caveolin-3, and flotillins (caveolin functional homologues); beta(1)-ARs, m(2)-muscarinic cholinergic receptors, Galpha(s), and cardiac types V/VI adenylyl cyclase distribute between caveolae and other cell fractions, whereas protein kinase A RIalpha subunits, G protein-coupled receptor kinase-2, and clathrin are largely excluded from caveolae. Cell surface beta(2)-ARs localize to caveolae in cardiomyocytes and cardiac fibroblasts (with markedly different beta(2)-AR expression levels), indicating that the fidelity of beta(2)-AR targeting to caveolae is maintained over a physiologic range of beta(2)-AR expression. In cardiomyocytes, agonist stimulation leads to a marked decline in the abundance of beta(2)-ARs (but not beta(1)-ARs) in caveolae. Other studies show co-immunoprecipitation of cardiomyocytes adenylyl cyclase V/VI and caveolin-3, suggesting their in vivo association. However, caveolin is not required for adenylyl cyclase targeting to low density membranes, since adenylyl cyclase targets to low buoyant density membrane fractions of HEK cells that lack prototypical caveolins. Nevertheless, cholesterol depletion with cyclodextrin augments agonist-stimulated cAMP accumulation, indicating that caveolae function as negative regulators of cAMP accumulation. The inhibitory interaction between caveolae and the cAMP signaling pathway as well as domain-specific differences in the stoichiometry of individual elements in the beta-AR signaling cascade represent important modifiers of cAMP-dependent signaling in the heart.  相似文献   

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PKB (protein kinase B), also known as Akt, is a key component of insulin signalling. Defects in PKB activation lead to insulin resistance and metabolic disorders, whereas PKB overactivation has been linked to tumour growth. Small-molecule PKB inhibitors have thus been developed for cancer treatment, but also represent useful tools to probe the roles of PKB in insulin action. In the present study, we examined the acute effects of two allosteric PKB inhibitors, MK-2206 and Akti 1/2 (Akti) on PKB signalling in incubated rat soleus muscles. We also assessed the effects of the compounds on insulin-stimulated glucose uptake, glycogen and protein synthesis. MK-2206 dose-dependently inhibited insulin-stimulated PKB phosphorylation, PKBβ activity and phosphorylation of PKB downstream targets (including glycogen synthase kinase-3α/β, proline-rich Akt substrate of 40?kDa and Akt substrate of 160?kDa). Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake, glycogen synthesis and glycogen synthase activity were also decreased by MK-2206?in a dose-dependent manner. Incubation with high doses of MK-2206 (10?μM) inhibited insulin-induced p70 ribosomal protein S6 kinase and 4E-BP1 (eukaryotic initiation factor 4E-binding protein-1) phosphorylation associated with increased eEF2 (eukaryotic elongation factor 2) phosphorylation. In contrast, Akti only modestly inhibited insulin-induced PKB and mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) signalling, with little or no effect on glucose uptake and protein synthesis. MK-2206, rather than Akti, would thus be the tool of choice for studying the role of PKB in insulin action in skeletal muscle. The results point to a key role for PKB in mediating insulin-stimulated glucose uptake, glycogen synthesis and protein synthesis in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

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Caveolin, the principal structural protein of caveolae membrane domains, has a cytosol-exposed N-terminal part that was cleaved off by trypsin treatment of caveolae vesicles isolated from primary human adipocytes. Sequencing of the released tryptic peptides by nanospray quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry revealed that both caveolin-1alpha and caveolin-1beta were processed by excision of the starting methionines. The N-terminus of the mature caveolin-1alpha was acetylated, while caveolin-1beta was found in acetylated as well as in non-acetylated forms. Fractional phosphorylation of serine-36 in the mature caveolin-1alpha and of the homologous serine-5 in caveolin-1beta was identified. This is the first experimental evidence for in vivo phosphorylation of caveolin-1 at the consensus site for phosphorylation by protein kinase C. The phosphorylation was found in both the acetylated and non-acetylated variants of caveolin-1beta. This variability in modifications is consistent with critical involvement of the N-terminal domain of caveolin in the regulation of caveolae.  相似文献   

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Elevated ceramide concentrations in adipocytes and skeletal muscle impair PKB (protein kinase B; also known as Akt)-directed insulin signalling to key hormonal end points. An important feature of this inhibition involves the ceramide-induced activation of atypical PKCzeta (protein kinase C-zeta), which associates with and negatively regulates PKB. In the present study, we demonstrate that this inhibition is critically dependent on the targeting and subsequent retention of PKCzeta-PKB within CEM (caveolin-enriched microdomains), which is facilitated by kinase interactions with caveolin. Ceramide also recruits PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homologue detected on chromosome 10), a 3'-phosphoinositide phosphatase, thereby creating a repressive membrane microenvironment from which PKB cannot signal. Disrupting the structural integrity of caveolae by cholesterol depletion prevented caveolar targeting of PKCzeta and PKB and suppressed kinase-caveolin association, but, importantly, also ameliorated ceramide-induced inhibition of PKB. Consistent with this, adipocytes from caveolin-1-/- mice, which lack functional caveolae, exhibit greater resistance to ceramide compared with caveolin-1+/+ adipocytes. We conclude that the recruitment and retention of PKB within CEM contribute significantly to ceramide-induced inhibition of PKB-directed signalling.  相似文献   

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Angiotensin II (Ang II) induces transactivation of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGF-R), which serves as a scaffold for various signaling molecules in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). Cholesterol and sphingomyelin-enriched lipid rafts are plasma membrane microdomains that concentrate various signaling molecules. Caveolae are specialized lipid rafts that are organized by the cholesterol-binding protein, caveolin, and have been shown to be associated with EGF-Rs. Angiotensin II stimulation promotes a rapid movement of AT(1) receptors to caveolae; however, their functional role in angiotensin II signaling has not been elucidated. Here we show that cholesterol depletion by beta-cyclodextrin disrupts caveolae structure and concomitantly inhibits tyrosine phosphorylation of the EGF-R and subsequent activation of protein kinase B (PKB)/Akt induced by angiotensin II. Similar inhibitory effects were obtained with other cholesterol-binding agents, filipin and nystatin. In contrast, EGF-R autophosphorylation and activation of Akt/PKB in response to EGF are not affected by cholesterol depletion. The early Ang II-induced upstream signaling events responsible for transactivation of the EGF-R, such as the intracellular Ca(2+) increase and c-Src activation, also remain intact. The EGF-R initially binds caveolin, but these two proteins rapidly dissociate following angiotensin II stimulation during the time when EGF-R transactivation is observed. The activated EGF-R is localized in focal adhesions together with tyrosine-phosphorylated caveolin. These findings suggest that 1) a scaffolding role of caveolin is essential for EGF-R transactivation by angiotensin II and 2) cholesterol-rich microdomains as well as focal adhesions are important signal-organizing compartments required for the spatial and temporal organization of angiotensin II signaling in VSMCs.  相似文献   

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It has been shown that IGF-1-induced pancreatic beta-cell proliferation is glucose-dependent; however, the mechanisms responsible for this glucose dependence are not known. Adenoviral mediated expression of constitutively active phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) in the pancreatic beta-cells, INS-1, suggested that PI3K was not necessary for glucose-induced beta-cell proliferation but was required for IGF-1-induced mitogenesis. Examination of the signaling components downstream of PI3K, 3-phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1, protein kinase B (PKB), glycogen synthase kinase-3, and p70-kDa-S6-kinase (p70(S6K)), suggested that a major part of glucose-dependent beta-cell proliferation requires activation of mammalian target of rapamycin/p70(S6K), independent of phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1/PKB activation. Adenoviral expression of the kinase-dead form of PKB in INS-1 cells decreased IGF-1-induced beta-cell proliferation. However, a surprisingly similar decrease was also observed in adenoviral wild type and constitutively active PKB-infected cells. Upon analysis of extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase 1 and 2 (ERK1/ERK2), an increase in ERK1/ERK2 phosphorylation activation by glucose and IGF-1 was observed in kinase-dead PKB-infected cells, but this phosphorylation activation was inhibited in the constitutively active PKB-infected cells. Hence, there is a requirement for the activation of both ERK1/ERK2 and mammalian target of rapamycin/p70(S6K) signal transduction pathways for a full commitment to glucose-induced pancreatic beta-cell mitogenesis. However, for IGF-1-induced activation, these pathways must be carefully balanced, because chronic activation of one (PI3K/PKB) can lead to dampening of the other (ERK1/2), reducing the mitogenic response.  相似文献   

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Glucocorticoids cause insulin resistance in skeletal muscle. The aims of the present study were to investigate the effects of contraction on glucose uptake, insulin signaling, and regulation of glycogen synthesis in skeletal muscles from rats treated with the glucocorticoid analog dexamethasone (1 mg x kg(-1) x day(-1) ip for 12 days). Insulin resistance in dexamethasone-treated rats was confirmed by reduced insulin-stimulated glucose uptake (approximately 35%), glycogen synthesis (approximately 70%), glycogen synthase activation (approximately 80%), and PKB Ser(473) phosphorylation (approximately 40%). Chronic dexamethasone treatment did not impair glucose uptake during contraction in soleus or epitrochlearis muscles. In epitrochlearis (but not in soleus), the presence of insulin during contraction enhanced glucose uptake to similar levels in control and dexamethasone-treated rats. Contraction also increased glycogen synthase fractional activity and dephosphorylated glycogen synthase at Ser(645), Ser(649), Ser(653), and Ser(657) normally in muscles from dexamethasone-treated rats. After contraction, insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis was completely restored in epitrochlearis and improved in soleus from dexamethasone-treated rats. Contraction did not increase insulin-stimulated PKB Ser(473) or glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) phosphorylation. Instead, contraction increased GSK-3beta Ser(9) phosphorylation in epitrochlearis (but not in soleus) in muscles from control and dexamethasone-treated rats. In conclusion, contraction stimulates glucose uptake normally in dexamethasone-induced insulin resistant muscles. After contraction, insulin's ability to stimulate glycogen synthesis was completely restored in epitrochlearis and improved in soleus from dexamethasone-treated rats.  相似文献   

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The effect of insulin on glycogen synthesis and key enzymes of glycogen metabolism, glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen synthase, was studied in HepG2 cells. Insulin stimulated glycogen synthesis 1.83-3.30 fold depending on insulin concentration in the medium. Insulin caused a maximum of 65% decrease in glycogen phosphorylase 'a' and 110% increase in glycogen synthase activities in 5 min. Although significant changes in enzyme activities were observed with as low as 0.5 nM insulin level, the maximum effects were observed with 100 nM insulin. There was a significant inverse correlation between activities of glycogen phosphorylase 'a' and glycogen synthase 'a' (R2 = 0.66, p < 0.001). Addition of 30 mM glucose caused a decrease in phosphorylase 'a' activity in the absence of insulin and this effect was additive with insulin up to 10 nM concentration. The inactivation of phosphorylase 'a' by insulin was prevented by wortmannin and rapamycin but not by PD98059. The activation of glycogen synthase by insulin was prevented by wortmannin but not by PD98059 or rapamycin. In fact, PD98059 slightly stimulated glycogen synthase activation by insulin. Under these experimental conditions, insulin decreased glycogen synthase kinase-3 activity by 30-50% and activated more than 4-fold particulate protein phosphatase-1 activity and 1.9-fold protein kinase B activity; changes in all of these enzyme activities were abolished by wortmannin. The inactivation of GSK-3 and activation of PKB by insulin were associated with their phosphorylation and this was also reversed by wortmannin. The addition of protein phosphatase-1 inhibitors, okadaic acid and calyculin A, completely abolished the effects of insulin on both enzymes. These data suggest that stimulation of glycogen synthase by insulin in HepG2 cells is mediated through the PI-3 kinase pathway by activating PKB and PP-1G and inactivating GSK-3. On the other hand, inactivation of phosphorylase by insulin is mediated through the PI-3 kinase pathway involving a rapamycin-sensitive p70s6k and PP-1G. These experiments demonstrate that insulin regulates glycogen phosphorylase and glycogen synthase through (i) a common signaling pathway at least up to PI-3 kinase and bifurcates downstream and (ii) that PP-1 activity is essential for the effect of insulin.  相似文献   

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The luminal surface of rat lung microvascular endothelial cells in situ is sensitive to changing hemodynamic parameters. Acute mechanosignaling events initiated in response to flow changes in perfused lung microvessels are localized within specialized invaginated microdomains called caveolae. Here we report that chronic exposure to shear stress alters caveolin expression and distribution, increases caveolae density, and leads to enhanced mechanosensitivity to subsequent changes in hemodynamic forces within cultured endothelial cells. Flow-preconditioned cells expressed a fivefold increase in caveolin (and other caveolar-residing proteins) at the luminal surface compared with no-flow controls. The density of morphologically identifiable caveolae was enhanced sixfold at the luminal cell surface of flow-conditioned cells. Laminar shear stress applied to static endothelial cultures (flow step of 5 dyn/cm2), enhanced the tyrosine phosphorylation of luminal surface proteins by 1.7-fold, including caveolin-1 by 1.3-fold, increased Ser1179 phosphorylation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) by 2.6-fold, and induced a 1.4-fold activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (ERK1/2) over no-flow controls. The same shear step applied to endothelial cells preconditioned under 10 dyn/cm2 of laminar shear stress for 6 h and induced a sevenfold increase of total phosphotyrosine signal at the luminal endothelial cell surface enhanced caveolin-1 tyrosine phosphorylation 5.8-fold and eNOS phosphorylation by 3.3-fold over static control values. In addition, phosphorylated caveolin-1 and eNOS proteins were preferentially localized to caveolar microdomains. In contrast, ERK1/2 activation was not detected in conditioned cells after acute shear challenge. These data suggest that cultured endothelial cells respond to a sustained flow environment by directing caveolae to the cell surface where they serve to mediate, at least in part, mechanotransduction responses.  相似文献   

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