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1.
Role of myosin light chain phosphorylation in the regulation of cytokinesis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Phosphorylation of regulatory light chain (RMLC) of myosin II at Ser19/Thr18 is likely to play important roles in controlling the morphological changes seen during cell division of cultured mammalian cells. Phosphorylation of RMLC regulates the activity of myosin II, an essntial motor for cytokinesis, and phosphorylation of RMLC shows dramatic changes during mitosis. Two exzymes, myosin phosphatase and kinase, control phosphorvlation of RMLC. Myosin phosphatase is activated during mitosis, apparently as a result of mitosis-specific phosphorylation of the myosin phosphatase targeting subunit (MYPT). This activation of myosin phosphatase is likely to result in RMLC dephosphorylation, causing the disassemly of stress fibers and focal adhesions during prophase. The phosphorylation of MYPT is lost in cyotokinesis, which would decrease myosin phosphatase activity. At the same time, ROCK (Rho-kinase) probably phosphorylates MYPT at its inhibitory sites, further decreasing the activity of myosin phosphatase. These changes in MYPT phosphorylation would raise RMLC phosphorylation, leading to the activation of myosin II for cyotokinesis. RMLC phosphorylation is also regulated by several RMLC kinases including ROCK (Rho-kinase), MLCK and citron kinase, all of which are localized at cleavage furrows. Future studies should examine whether these multiple kinases are redundant or whether they control distinct aspects of cell division.  相似文献   

2.
One model for the timing of cytokinesis is based on findings that p34(cdc2) can phosphorylate myosin regulatory light chain (LC20) on inhibitory sites (serines 1 and 2) in vitro (Satterwhite, L.L., M.H. Lohka, K.L. Wilson, T.Y. Scherson, L.J. Cisek, J.L. Corden, and T.D. Pollard. 1992. J. Cell Biol. 118:595-605), and this inhibition is proposed to delay cytokinesis until p34(cdc2) activity falls at anaphase. We have characterized previously several kinase activities associated with the isolated cortical cytoskeleton of dividing sea urchin embryos (Walker, G.R., C.B. Shuster, and D.R. Burgess. 1997. J. Cell Sci. 110:1373-1386). Among these kinases and substrates is p34(cdc2) and LC20. In comparison with whole cell activity, cortical H1 kinase activity is delayed, with maximum levels in cortices prepared from late anaphase/telophase embryos. To determine whether cortical-associated p34(cdc2) influences cortical myosin II activity during cytokinesis, we labeled eggs in vivo with [(32)P]orthophosphate, prepared cortices, and mapped LC20 phosphorylation through the first cell division. We found no evidence of serine 1,2 phosphorylation at any time during mitosis on LC20 from cortically associated myosin. Instead, we observed a sharp rise in serine 19 phosphorylation during anaphase and telophase, consistent with an activating phosphorylation by myosin light chain kinase. However, serine 1,2 phosphorylation was detected on light chains from detergent-soluble myosin II. Furthermore, cells arrested in mitosis by microinjection of nondegradable cyclin B could be induced to form cleavage furrows if the spindle poles were physically placed in close proximity to the cortex. These results suggest that factors independent of myosin II inactivation, such as the delivery of the cleavage stimulus to the cortex, determine the timing of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

3.
Phosphorylation on Ser 19 of the myosin II regulatory light chain by myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) regulates actomyosin contractility in smooth muscle and vertebrate nonmuscle cells. The smooth/nonmuscle MLCK gene locus produces two kinases, a high molecular weight isoform (long MLCK) and a low molecular weight isoform (short MLCK), that are differentially expressed in smooth and nonmuscle tissues. To study the relative localization of the MLCK isoforms in cultured nonmuscle cells and to determine the spatial and temporal dynamics of MLCK localization during mitosis, we constructed green fluorescent protein fusions of the long and short MLCKs. In interphase cells, localization of the long MLCK to stress fibers is mediated by five DXRXXL motifs, which span the junction of the NH(2)-terminal extension and the short MLCK. In contrast, localization of the long MLCK to the cleavage furrow in dividing cells requires the five DXRXXL motifs as well as additional amino acid sequences present in the NH(2)-terminal extension. Thus, it appears that nonmuscle cells utilize different mechanisms for targeting the long MLCK to actomyosin structures during interphase and mitosis. Further studies have shown that the long MLCK has twofold lower kinase activity in early mitosis than in interphase or in the early stages of postmitotic spreading. These findings suggest a model in which MLCK and the myosin II phosphatase (Totsukawa, G., Y. Yamakita, S. Yamashiro, H. Hosoya, D.J. Hartshorne, and F. Matsumura. 1999. J. Cell Biol. 144:735-744) act cooperatively to regulate the level of Ser 19-phosphorylated myosin II during mitosis and initiate cytokinesis through the activation of myosin II motor activity.  相似文献   

4.
Proper coordination of cytokinesis with chromosome separation during mitosis is crucial to ensure that each daughter cell inherits an equivalent set of chromosomes. It has been proposed that one mechanism by which this is achieved is through temporally regulated myosin regulatory light chain (RLC) phosphorylation (Satterwhite, L. L., and Pollard, T. D. (1992) Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 4, 43-52). A variety of evidence is consistent with this model. A direct test of the importance of RLC phosphorylation in vivo has been done only in Dictyostelium and Drosophila; phosphorylation of the RLC is essential in Drosophila (Jordan, P., and Karess, R. (1997) J. Cell Biol. 139, 1805-1819) but not essential in Dictyostelium (Ostrow, B. D., Chen, P., and Chisholm, R. L. (1994) J. Cell Biol. 127, 1945-1955). The Schizosaccharomyces pombe myosin light chain Cdc4p is essential for cytokinesis, but it was unknown whether phosphorylation played a role in its regulation. Here we show that the S. pombe myosin light chain Cdc4p is phosphorylated in vivo on either serine 2 or 6 but not both. Mutation of either or both of these sites to alanine did not effect the ability of Cdc4p to bind the type II myosin Myo2p, and cells expressing only these mutated versions of Cdc4p grew and divided normally. Similarly, mutation of Ser-2, Ser-6, or both residues to aspartic acid did not affect growth or division of cells. Thus we conclude that phosphorylation of Cdc4p is not essential in vivo for the function of the protein.  相似文献   

5.
Myosin II phosphorylation-dependent cell motile events are regulated by myosin light-chain (MLC) kinase and MLC phosphatase (MLCP). Recent studies have revealed myosin phosphatase targeting subunit (MYPT1), a myosin-binding subunit of MLCP, plays a critical role in MLCP regulation. Here we report the new regulatory mechanism of MLCP via the interaction between 14-3-3 and MYPT1. The binding of 14-3-3beta to MYPT1 diminished the direct binding between MYPT1 and myosin II, and 14-3-3beta overexpression abolished MYPT1 localization at stress fiber. Furthermore, 14-3-3beta inhibited MLCP holoenzyme activity via the interaction with MYPT1. Consistently, 14-3-3beta overexpression increased myosin II phosphorylation in cells. We found that MYPT1 phosphorylation at Ser472 was critical for the binding to 14-3-3. Epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulation increased both Ser472 phosphorylation and the binding of MYPT1-14-3-3. Rho-kinase inhibitor inhibited the EGF-induced Ser472 phosphorylation and the binding of MYPT1-14-3-3. Rho-kinase specific siRNA also decreased EGF-induced Ser472 phosphorylation correlated with the decrease in MLC phosphorylation. The present study revealed a new RhoA/Rho-kinase-dependent regulatory mechanism of myosin II phosphorylation by 14-3-3 that dissociates MLCP from myosin II and attenuates MLCP activity.  相似文献   

6.
Phosphorylation of caldesmon by cdc2 kinase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
A recent report that mitosis-specific phosphorylation causes the nonmuscle caldesmon to dissociate from microfilaments (Yamashiro, S., Yamakita, Y., Ishikawa, R., and Matsumura, F. (1990) Nature 344, 675-678) suggests that this process may contribute to the major structural reorganization of the eukaryotic cell at mitosis. In this study we have demonstrated that smooth muscle caldesmon is phosphorylated in vitro by cdc2 kinase from mitotic phase HeLa cells to 1.2 mol of phosphate/mol of caldesmon. Tryptic maps showed three major phosphorylated spots and approximately equal amounts of phosphorylated Ser and Thr were identified. F-actin or calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ blocks the phosphorylation of caldesmon. Phosphorylation of caldesmon greatly reduced its binding to F-actin. The phosphorylation sites were located in a 10,000-Da CnBr fragment at the COOH-terminal end of the caldesmon molecule known to house the binding sites for actin and calmodulin (Bartegi A., Fattoum, A., Derancourt, J., and Kassab, R. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 15231-15238). Our finding supports the model that phosphorylation of caldesmon by cdc2 kinase at mitosis may contribute to the disassembly of the microfilament bundles during prophase.  相似文献   

7.
Myosins are a superfamily of actin-dependent molecular motor proteins, among which the bipolar filament forming myosins II have been the most studied. The activity of smooth muscle/non-muscle myosin II is regulated by phosphorylation of the regulatory light chains, that in turn is modulated by the antagonistic activity of myosin light chain kinase and myosin light chain phosphatase. The phosphatase activity is mainly regulated through phosphorylation of its myosin binding subunit MYPT. To identify the function of these phosphorylation events, we have molecularly characterized the Drosophila homologue of MYPT, and analyzed its mutant phenotypes. We find that Drosophila MYPT is required for cell sheet movement during dorsal closure, morphogenesis of the eye, and ring canal growth during oogenesis. Our results indicate that the regulation of the phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chains, or dynamic activation and inactivation of myosin II, is essential for its various functions during many developmental processes.  相似文献   

8.
Previously we reported that 67-kDa laminin receptor (67LR) mediates epigallocatechin-3-O-gallate (EGCG)-induced cell growth inhibition and reduction of myosin regulatory light chain (MRLC) phosphorylation at Thr-18/Ser-19, which is important for cytokinesis. Here, we found that human colon adenocarcinoma Caco-2 cells exhibited higher expression level of 67LR and EGCG at a physiologically achievable concentration (1 microM) significantly accumulated the cells in G(2)/M phase without affecting expression of Wnt-signaling components. We also found that myosin phosphatase targeting subunit 1 (MYPT1) phosphorylation at Thr-696, which inhibits myosin phosphatase and promotes MRLC phosphorylation, was reduced in response to 1 microM EGCG. 67LR knockdown by RNA interference abolished the inhibitory effects of 1 microM EGCG on cell cycle progression and the phosphorylation of MRLC and MYPT1. These results suggest that through 67LR, EGCG at a physiological concentration can activate myosin phosphatase by reducing MYPT1 phosphorylation and that may be involved in EGCG-induced cell growth inhibition.  相似文献   

9.
To understand how cytokinesis is regulated during mitosis, we tested cyclin-p34cdc2 for myosin-II kinase activity, and investigated the mitotic-specific phosphorylation of myosin-II in lysates of Xenopus eggs. Purified cyclin-p34cdc2 phosphorylated the regulatory light chain of cytoplasmic and smooth muscle myosin-II in vitro on serine-1 or serine-2 and threonine-9, sites known to inhibit the actin-activated myosin ATPase activity of smooth muscle and nonmuscle myosin (Nishikawa, M., J. R. Sellers, R. S. Adelstein, and H. Hidaka. 1984. J. Biol. Chem. 259:8808-8814; Bengur, A. R., A. E. Robinson, E. Appella, and J. R. Sellers. 1987. J. Biol. Chem. 262:7613-7617; Ikebe, M., and S. Reardon. 1990. Biochemistry. 29:2713-2720). Serine-1 or -2 of the regulatory light chain of Xenopus cytoplasmic myosin-II was also phosphorylated in Xenopus egg lysates stabilized in metaphase, but not in interphase. Inhibition of myosin-II by cyclin-p34cdc2 during prophase and metaphase could delay cytokinesis until chromosome segregation is initiated and thus determine the timing of cytokinesis relative to earlier events in mitosis.  相似文献   

10.
Phosphorylation of the regulatory light chain of myosin II (RMLC) at Serine 19 by a specific enzyme, MLC kinase, is believed to control the contractility of actomyosin in smooth muscle and vertebrate nonmuscle cells. To examine how such phosphorylation is regulated in space and time within cells during coordinated cell movements, including cell locomotion and cell division, we generated a phosphorylation-specific antibody.

Motile fibroblasts with a polarized cell shape exhibit a bimodal distribution of phosphorylated myosin along the direction of cell movement. The level of myosin phosphorylation is high in an anterior region near membrane ruffles, as well as in a posterior region containing the nucleus, suggesting that the contractility of both ends is involved in cell locomotion. Phosphorylated myosin is also concentrated in cortical microfilament bundles, indicating that cortical filaments are under tension. The enrichment of phosphorylated myosin in the moving edge is shared with an epithelial cell sheet; peripheral microfilament bundles at the leading edge contain a higher level of phosphorylated myosin. On the other hand, the phosphorylation level of circumferential microfilament bundles in cell–cell contacts is low. These observations suggest that peripheral microfilaments at the edge are involved in force production to drive the cell margin forward while microfilaments in cell–cell contacts play a structural role. During cell division, both fibroblastic and epithelial cells exhibit an increased level of myosin phosphorylation upon cytokinesis, which is consistent with our previous biochemical study (Yamakita, Y., S. Yamashiro, and F. Matsumura. 1994. J. Cell Biol. 124:129–137). In the case of the NRK epithelial cells, phosphorylated myosin first appears in the midzones of the separating chromosomes during late anaphase, but apparently before the formation of cleavage furrows, suggesting that phosphorylation of RMLC is an initial signal for cytokinesis.

  相似文献   

11.
Protein phosphatase-1M (PP1M, myosin phosphatase) consists of a PP1 catalytic subunit (PP1c) and the myosin phosphatase target subunit-1 (MYPT1). RhoA-activated kinase (ROK) regulates PP1M via inhibitory phosphorylation of MYPT1. Using multidisciplinary approaches, we have studied the roles of PP1M and ROK in neurotransmission. Electron microscopy demonstrated the presence of MYPT1 and ROK in both pre- and post-synaptic terminals. Tautomycetin (TMC), a PP1-specific inhibitor, decreased the depolarization-induced exocytosis from cortical synaptosomes. trans-4-[(1R)-1-aminoethyl]-N-4-pyridinylcyclohexanecarboxamide dihydrochloride, a ROK-specific inhibitor, had the opposite effect. Mass spectrometry analysis identified several MYPT1-bound synaptosomal proteins, of which interactions of synapsin-I, syntaxin-1, calcineurin-A subunit, and Ca(2+) /calmodulin-dependent kinase II with MYPT1 were confirmed. In intact synaptosomes, TMC increased, whereas Y27632 decreased the phosphorylation levels of MYPT1(Thr696) , myosin-II light chain(Ser19) , synapsin-I(Ser9) , and syntaxin-1(Ser14) , indicating that PP1M and ROK influence their phosphorylation status. Confocal microscopy indicated that MYPT1 and ROK are present in the rat ventral cochlear nucleus both pre- and post-synaptically. Analysis of the neurotransmission in an auditory glutamatergic giant synapse demonstrated that PP1M and ROK affect neurotransmission via both pre- and post-synaptic mechanisms. Our data suggest that both PP1M and ROK influence synaptic transmission, but further studies are needed to give a full account of their mechanism of action.  相似文献   

12.
The cell cycle is exquisitely controlled by multiple sequential regulatory inputs to ensure fidelity. Here we demonstrate that the final step in division, the physical separation of daughter cells, is controlled by a member of the PKC gene superfamily. Specifically, we have identified three phosphorylation sites within PKCepsilon that control its association with 14-3-3. These phosphorylations are executed by p38 MAP kinase (Ser 350), GSK3 (Ser 346) and PKC itself (Ser 368). Integration of these signals is essential during mitosis because mutations that prevent phosphorylation of PKCepsilon and/or PKCepsilon binding to 14-3-3 also cause defects in the completion of cytokinesis. Using chemical genetic and dominant-negative approaches it is shown that selective inhibition of PKCepsilon halts cells at the final stages of separation. This arrest is associated with persistent RhoA activation at the midbody and a delay in actomyosin ring dissociation. This study therefore identifies a new regulatory mechanism that controls exit from cytokinesis, which has implications for carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
It has been recently proposed that AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) might indirectly promote the phosphorylation of MRLC (myosin II regulatory light chain) at Ser19 to regulate the transition from metaphase to anaphase and the completion of cytokinesis. Although these findings provide biochemical support for our earlier observations showing that the active form of the α catalytic AMPK subunit associates dynamically with essential mitotic regulators, several important issues remained unexplored. Does glucose starvation alter the ability of AMPK to bind to the mitotic apparatus and travel from centrosomes to the spindle midzone during mitosis and cytokinesis? Does AMPK activate MRLC exclusively at the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis? What is the mitosis-specific stimulus that activates the mito-cytokinetic AMPK/MRLC axis regardless of energy deprivation? First, we confirm that exogenous glucose deprivation fails to alter the previously described distribution of phospho-AMPKαThr172 in all of the mitotic phases and does not disrupt its apparent association with the mitotic spindle and other structures involved in cell division. Second, we establish for the first time that phospho-AMPKαThr172 colocalizes exclusively with Ser19-phosphorylated MRLC at the cleavage furrow of dividing cells, a previously unvisualized interaction between phospho-AMPKαThr172 and phospho-MRLCSer19 that occurs in cleavage furrows, intercellular bridges and the midbody during cell division that appears to occur irrespective of glucose availability. Third, we reveal for the first time that the inhibition of AMPK mitotic activity in response to PLK1 inhibition completely prevents the co-localization of phospho-AMPKαThr172 and phospho-MRLCSer19 during the final stages of cytokinesis and midbody ring formation. Because PLK1 inhibition efficiently suppresses the AMPK-mediated activation of MRLC at the cytokinetic cleavage furrow, we propose a previously unrecognized role for AMPK in ensuring that cytokinesis occurs at the proper place and time by establishing a molecular dialog between PLK1 and MRLC in an energy-independent manner.  相似文献   

14.
Smooth muscle calcium sensitization reflects an inhibition of myosin light chain phosphatase (SMPP-1m) activity; however, the underlying mechanisms are not well understood. SMPP-1m activity can be modulated through phosphorylation of the myosin targeting subunit (MYPT1) by the endogenous myosin phosphatase-associated kinase, MYPT1 kinase (MacDonald, J. A., Borman, M. A., Muranyi, A., Somlyo, A. V., Hartshorne, D. J., and Haystead, T. A. (2001) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 98, 2419-2424). Recombinant chicken gizzard MYPT1 (M130) was phosphorylated in vitro by a recombinant MYPT1 kinase, and the sites of phosphorylation were identified as Thr(654), Ser(808), and Thr(675). Introduction of recombinant MYPT1 kinase elicited a calcium-independent contraction in beta-escin-permeabilized rabbit ileal smooth muscle. Using an antibody that specifically recognizes MYPT1 phosphorylated at Thr(654) (M130 numbering), we determined that this calcium-independent contraction was correlated with an increase in MYPT1 phosphorylation. These results indicate that SMPP-1m phosphorylation by MYPT1 kinase is a mechanism of smooth muscle calcium sensitization.  相似文献   

15.
Reversible phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein (pRb) is an important regulatory mechanism in cell cycle progression. The role of protein phosphatases is less understood in this process, especially concerning the regulatory/targeting subunits involved. It is shown that pretreatment of THP-1 leukemic cells with calyculin-A (CL-A), a cell-permeable phosphatase inhibitor, attenuated daunorubicin (DNR)-induced cell death and resulted in increased pRb phosphorylation and protection against proteolytic degradation. Protein phosphatase-1 catalytic subunits (PP1c) dephosphorylated the phosphorylated C-terminal fragment of pRb (pRb-C) slightly, whereas when PP1c was complexed to myosin phosphatase target subunit-1 (MYPT1) in myosin phosphatase (MP) holoenzyme dephosphorylation was stimulated. The pRb-C phosphatase activity of MP was partially inhibited by anti-MYPT1(1-296) implicating MYPT1 in targeting PP1c to pRb. MYPT1 became phosphorylated on both inhibitory sites (Thr695 and Thr850) upon CL-A treatment of THP-1 cells resulting in the inhibition of MP activity. MYPT1 and pRb coprecipitated from cell lysates by immunoprecipitation with either anti-MYPT1 or anti-pRb antibodies implying that pRb-MYPT1 interaction occurred at cellular levels. Surface plasmon resonance-based experiments confirmed binding of pRb-C to both PP1c and MYPT1. In control and DNR-treated cells, MYPT1 and pRb were predominantly localized in the nucleus exhibiting partial colocalization as revealed by immunofluorescence using confocal microscopy. Upon CL-A treatment, nucleo-cytoplasmic shuttling of both MYPT1 and pRb, but not PP1c, was observed. The above data imply that MP, with the targeting role of MYPT1, may regulate the phosphorylation level of pRb, thereby it may be involved in the control of cell cycle progression and in the mediation of chemoresistance of leukemic cells.  相似文献   

16.
Myosin phosphatase-targeting subunit 1 (MYPT1) binds to the catalytic subunit of protein phosphatase 1 (PP1C). This binding is believed to target PP1C to specific substrates including myosin II, thus controlling cellular contractility. Surprisingly, we found that during mitosis, mammalian MYPT1 binds to polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1). MYPT1 is phosphorylated during mitosis by proline-directed kinases including cdc2, which generates the binding motif for the polo box domain of PLK1. Depletion of PLK1 by small interfering RNAs is known to result in loss of gamma-tubulin recruitment to the centrosomes, blocking centrosome maturation and leading to mitotic arrest. We found that codepletion of MYPT1 and PLK1 reinstates gamma-tubulin at the centrosomes, rescuing the mitotic arrest. MYPT1 depletion increases phosphorylation of PLK1 at its activating site (Thr210) in vivo, explaining, at least in part, the rescue phenotype by codepletion. Taken together, our results identify a previously unrecognized role for MYPT1 in regulating mitosis by antagonizing PLK1.  相似文献   

17.
Myosin light chain phosphatase with its regulatory subunit, myosin phosphatase target subunit 1 (MYPT1) modulates Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation of myosin light chain by myosin light chain kinase, which is essential for smooth muscle contraction. The role of MYPT1 in vascular smooth muscle was investigated in adult MYPT1 smooth muscle specific knock-out mice. MYPT1 deletion enhanced phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chain and contractile force in isolated mesenteric arteries treated with KCl and various vascular agonists. The contractile responses of arteries from knock-out mice to norepinephrine were inhibited by Rho-associated kinase (ROCK) and protein kinase C inhibitors and were associated with inhibition of phosphorylation of the myosin light chain phosphatase inhibitor CPI-17. Additionally, stimulation of the NO/cGMP/protein kinase G (PKG) signaling pathway still resulted in relaxation of MYPT1-deficient mesenteric arteries, indicating phosphorylation of MYPT1 by PKG is not a major contributor to the relaxation response. Thus, MYPT1 enhances myosin light chain phosphatase activity sufficient for blood pressure maintenance. Rho-associated kinase phosphorylation of CPI-17 plays a significant role in enhancing vascular contractile responses, whereas phosphorylation of MYPT1 in the NO/cGMP/PKG signaling module is not necessary for relaxation.  相似文献   

18.
Cell migration is important to the integrity of the gastrointestinal tract for the normal movement of cells from crypt to villi and the healing of wounds. Polyamines are essential to cell migration, mucosal restitution, and, hence, healing. Polyamine depletion by α-difluoromethyl ornithine (DFMO) inhibited migration by decreasing lamellipodia and stress fiber formation and preventing the activation of Rho-GTPases. Polyamine depletion increased the association of the thick F-actin cortex with phosphorylated myosin regulatory light chain (pMRLC). In this study, we determined why MRLC is constitutively phosphorylated as part of the actin cortex. Inhibition of myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) decreased RhoA and Rac1 activities and significantly inhibited migration. Polyamine depletion increased phosphorylation of MRLC (Thr18/Ser19) and stabilized the actin cortex and focal adhesions. The Rho-kinase inhibitor Y27632 increased spreading and migration by decreasing the phosphorylation of MRLC, remodeling focal adhesions, and by activating Rho-GTPases. Thus phosphorylation of MRLC appears to be the rate-limiting step during the migration of IEC-6 cells. In addition, increased localization of RhoA with the actin cortex in polyamine-depleted cells appears to activate Rho-kinase. In the absence of polyamines, activated Rho-kinase phosphorylates myosin phosphatase targeting subunit 1 (MYPT1) at serine-668 leading to its inactivation and preventing the recruitment of phosphatase (protein phosphastase, PP1cδ) to the actomyosin cortex. In this condition, MRLC is constitutively phosphorylated and cycling does not occur. Thus activated myosin binds F-actin stress fibers and prevents focal adhesion turnover, Rho-GTPase activation, and the remodeling of the cytoskeleton required for migration.  相似文献   

19.
Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM)-dependent phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chain (RLC) in smooth muscle by myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and dephosphorylation by myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP) are subject to modulatory cascades that influence the sensitivity of RLC phosphorylation and hence contraction to intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)). We designed a CaM-sensor MLCK containing smooth muscle MLCK fused to two fluorescent proteins linked by the MLCK CaM-binding sequence to measure kinase activation in vivo and expressed it specifically in mouse smooth muscle. In phasic bladder muscle, there was greater RLC phosphorylation and force relative to MLCK activation and [Ca(2+)](i) with carbachol (CCh) compared with KCl treatment, consistent with agonist-dependent inhibition of MLCP. The dependence of force on MLCK activity was nonlinear such that at higher concentrations of CCh, force increased with no change in the net 20% activation of MLCK. A significant but smaller amount of MLCK activation was found during the sustained contractile phase. MLCP inhibition may occur through RhoA/Rho-kinase and/or PKC with phosphorylation of myosin phosphatase targeting subunit-1 (MYPT1) and PKC-potentiated phosphatase inhibitor (CPI-17), respectively. CCh treatment, but not KCl, resulted in MYPT1 and CPI-17 phosphorylation. Both Y27632 (Rho-kinase inhibitor) and calphostin C (PKC inhibitor) reduced CCh-dependent force, RLC phosphorylation, and phosphorylation of MYPT1 (Thr694) without changing MLCK activation. Calphostin C, but not Y27632, also reduced CCh-induced phosphorylation of CPI-17. CCh concentration responses showed that phosphorylation of CPI-17 was more sensitive than MYPT1. Thus the onset of agonist-induced contraction in phasic smooth muscle results from the rapid and coordinated activation of MLCK with hierarchical inhibition of MLCP by CPI-17 and MYPT1 phosphorylation.  相似文献   

20.
Major sites for Rho-kinase on the myosin phosphatase target subunit (MYPT1) are Thr695 and Thr850. Phosphorylation of Thr695 inhibits phosphatase activity but the role of phosphorylation at Thr850 is not clear and is evaluated here. Phosphorylation of both Thr695 and Thr850 by Rho-kinase inhibited activity of the type 1 phosphatase catalytic subunit. Rates of phosphorylation of the two sites were similar and efficacy of inhibition following phosphorylation was equivalent for each site. Phosphorylation of each site on MYPT1 was detected in A7r5 cells, but Thr850 was preferred by Rho-kinase and Thr695 was phosphorylated by an unidentified kinase(s).  相似文献   

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