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1.
Pancreatic cancer (PC) is a continuously high lethal disease, and the tumour microenvironment plays a pivotal role during PC progression. Herein, we focus on that the Nerve growth factor (NGF)/Tropomyosin-related kinase A (TrkA), in pancreatic stellate cells-pancreatic cancer cells (PSCs-PC cells) co-culture system, influences PC proliferation and invasion. The model of PC cells and PSCs was directly co-cultured in a no-touch manner, using the Transwell as the co-culture system. NGF and TrkA expression was measured in cultured system by real-time PCR, immunofluorescence, Western blotting analysis or ELISA. Small interfering RNA transfection was used to regulate the expression of TrkA in PC cells. The promotion of cancer invasion was investigated using Matrigel Transwell assay. In our study, NGF/TrkA is overexpressed in PSCs-PC cells co-culture system and promotes the invasion and proliferation of PC cells. And the epithelial-mesenchymal transition-related genes are influenced by si-TrkA. What's more, NGF/TrkA regulates the PC cell proliferation and invasion via activation of PI3K/AKT/GSK signalling. The present study demonstrated NGF/TrkA promoted the PC cell proliferation and invasion in the co-culture system by the activation of the PI3K/AKT/GSK signal cascade, providing a potential therapeutic target for PC patients.  相似文献   

2.
The specific binding of various concentrations of 125I-labeled nerve growth factor (NGF) to PC12 cells at 37 degrees C reached maxima after 90 min and then declined to 25% of maximal binding after 10 h. Decreased binding was accompanied by degradation of 125I-NGF and the appearance of acid-soluble biologically inactive 125I (mainly 125I-monoiodotyrosine) in the medium as well as a decrease in the number of surface NGF receptors. The time-dependent decrease in binding and the degradation of 125I-NGF were inhibited by low temperature and the lysosomotropic agent chloroquine while degradation was inhibited by metabolic energy inhibitors in the absence of glucose. Chloroquine also produced an increase in the accumulation of 125I-NGF which was not readily removed from the cells. These data suggest that 125I-NGF bound to PC12 cells is efficiently internalized by receptor-mediated endocytosis and degraded by the lysosomes. It appears from other data that this process does not produce the intracellular signals regulating neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

3.
Rat PC12 pheochromocytoma and human A875 melanoma cells express nerve growth factor (NGF) receptors on their surfaces. Covalent crosslinking of bound 125I-NGF to PC12 or A875 intact cells or plasma membrane-enriched fractions resulted in labelling of a peptide doublet at Mr = 110,000 and a single labelled peptide at Mr = 200,000 for each of the cell and membrane preparations. However, a difference between equilibrium binding properties of NGF-receptor on PC12 and A875 cells was observed. PC12 cells exhibited biphasic binding properties with two apparent binding sites: KD = 5.2 nM sites and KD = 0.3 nM sites. The high-affinity PC12 binding sites were trypsin resistant, and 125I-NGF dissociated slowly from them. A875 cells exhibited sites with homogeneous properties (KD = 1.0 nM), all binding sites were trypsin sensitive, and 125I-NGF dissociated rapidly in the presence of unlabelled NGF. Membrane-enriched fractions from either cell type contained binding sites with a uniform low affinity (KD = 3 nM) that were trypsin sensitive, and 125I-NGF rapidly dissociated from them. Sixty to 80 percent of binding sites in membranes could be converted to the high-affinity, trypsin-resistant state by addition of wheat germ agglutinin (WGA). The loss of high-affinity, trypsin-resistant sites from PC12 cells during preparation of plasma membrane fractions does not appear to be the result of selective isolation of low-affinity sites or proteolytic degradation since there is a loss of 125I-NGF binding immediately after cell lysis which is not blocked by protease inhibitors. Also, high-affinity, trypsin-resistant binding sites are not found associated with other cell fractions. The differences between receptor properties on PC12 cells and on A875 cells apparently are the result of differences in the respective intracellular environments. Thus, significant structural homology exists between receptors on A875 and PC12 cells. Cell components other than the binding unit of the NGF receptor may be responsible for the different properties of receptor.  相似文献   

4.
We have recently shown that nerve growth factor (NGF) induces the phosphorylation of the microtubule-associated protein 1B (MAP1B) by activating the serine/threonine kinase glycogen synthase kinase 3beta (GSK3beta) in a spatio-temporal pattern in PC12 cells that correlates tightly with neurite growth. PC12 cells express two types of membrane receptor for NGF: TrkA receptors and p75NTR receptors, and it was not clear from our studies which receptor was responsible. We show here that brain-derived neurotrophic factor, which activates p75NTR but not TrkA receptors, does not stimulate GSK3beta phosphorylation of MAP1B in PC12 cells. Similarly, NGF fails to activate GSK3beta phosphorylation of MAP1B in PC12 cells that lack TrkA receptors but express p75NTR receptors (PC12 nnr). Chick ciliary ganglion neurons in culture lack TrkA receptors but express p75NTR and also fail to show NGF-dependent GSK3beta phosphorylation of MAP1B, whereas in rat superior cervical ganglion neurons in culture, NGF activation of TrkA receptors elicits GSK3beta phosphorylation of MAP1B. Finally, inhibition of TrkA receptor tyrosine kinase activity in PC12 cells and superior cervical ganglion neurons with K252a potently and dose-dependently inhibits neurite elongation while concomitantly blocking GSK3beta phosphorylation of MAP1B. These results suggest that the activation of GSK3beta by NGF is mediated through the TrkA tyrosine kinase receptor and not through p75NTR receptors.  相似文献   

5.
Rap1 transduces nerve growth factor (NGF)/tyrosine receptor kinase A (TrkA) signaling in early endosomes, leading to sustained activation of the p44/p42 mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK1/2). However, the mechanisms by which NGF, TrkA and Rap1 are trafficked to early endosomes are poorly defined. We investigated trafficking and signaling of NGF, TrkA and Rap1 in PC12 cells and in cultured rat dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons. Herein, we show a role for both microtubule- and dynein-based transport in NGF signaling through MAPK1/2. NGF treatment resulted in trafficking of NGF, TrkA and Rap1 to early endosomes in the perinuclear region of PC12 cells where sustained activation of MAPK1/2 was observed. Disruption of microtubules with nocodazole in PC12 cells had no effect on the activation of TrkA and Ras. However, it disrupted intracellular trafficking of TrkA and Rap1. Moreover, NGF-induced activation of Rap1 and sustained activation of MAPK1/2 were markedly suppressed. Inhibition of dynein activity through overexpression of dynamitin (p50) blocked trafficking of Rap1 and the sustained phase of MAPK1/2 activation in PC12 cells. Remarkably, even in the continued presence of NGF, mature DRG neurons that overexpressed p50 became atrophic and most (>80%) developing DRG neurons died. Dynein- and microtubule-based transport is thus necessary for TrkA signaling to Rap1 and MAPK1/2.  相似文献   

6.
Cultured neural crest cells undergoing differentiation have been shown to contain a subpopulation of cells with specific receptors for nerve growth factor (NGF). These cells are the potential targets of NGF during differentiation and development. This study was done to pharmacologically characterize the binding of NGF to long-term (1- to 3-week) cultures of quail neural crest cells. The data indicate that 125I-NGF binding was specific and saturable, with less than 20% nonspecific binding. Scatchard analysis revealed the presence of one type (class) of receptors with a binding constant (Kd) similar to that of the low-affinity binding site described for embryonic dorsal root and sympathetic ganglia (approximately 3.2 nM). This was corroborated by displacement experiments (Kd of 1.3 nM), in which 125I-NGF binding was measured in the presence of increasing concentrations of nonradioactive NGF. In addition, affinity labeling revealed that the 125I-NGF-receptor complex had a molecular weight of about 93K, characteristic of the low-affinity NGF receptor of PC12 cells. The NGF receptor of cultured neural crest cells was trypsin-sensitive, as is typical of the low-affinity NGF binding sites. These findings indicate that differentiating neural crest cells lack high-affinity 125I-NGF binding sites. In contrast, embryonic dorsal root and sympathetic ganglia cells, known NGF targets, have both high- and low-affinity receptors. Measurements of the differential release of surface-bound 125I-NGF indicated that a relatively small amount (about 14%) of NGF is internalized over a 1-hr period. Cultured neural crest cells which bear NGF receptors were also shown by light microscopic radioautographic techniques to incorporate [3H]thymidine. I suggest, therefore, that cultured neural crest cells which have not terminally differentiated, as judged by morphological criteria and continued proliferation, may express an early developmental form of the NGF receptor.  相似文献   

7.
Membrane protein sorting is mediated by interactions between proteins and lipids. One mechanism that contributes to sorting involves patches of lipids, termed lipid rafts, which are different from their surroundings in lipid and protein composition. Although the nerve growth factor (NGF) receptors, TrkA and p75(NTR) collaborate with each other at the plasma membrane to bind NGF, these two receptors are endocytosed separately and activate different cellular responses. We hypothesized that receptor localization in membrane rafts may play a role in endocytic sorting. TrkA and p75(NTR) both reside in detergent-resistant membranes (DRMs), yet they responded differently to a variety of conditions. The ganglioside, GM1, caused increased association of NGF, TrkA, and microtubules with DRMs, but a decrease in p75(NTR). When microtubules were induced to polymerize and attach to DRMs by in vitro reactions, TrkA, but not p75(NTR), was bound to microtubules in DRMs and in a detergent-resistant endosomal fraction. NGF enhanced the interaction between TrkA and microtubules in DRMs, yet tyrosine phosphorylated TrkA was entirely absent in DRMs under conditions where activated TrkA was detected in detergent-sensitive membranes and endosomes. These data indicate that TrkA and p75(NTR) partition into membrane rafts by different mechanisms, and that the fraction of TrkA that associates with DRMs is internalized but does not directly form signaling endosomes. Rather, by attracting microtubules to lipid rafts, TrkA may mediate other processes such as axon guidance.  相似文献   

8.
Nerve growth factor (NGF) acts through its receptor, TrkA, to elicit the neuronal differentiation of PC12 cells through the action of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1) and ERK2. Upon NGF binding, TrkA translocates and concentrates in cholesterol-rich membrane microdomains or lipid rafts, facilitating formation of receptor-associated signaling complexes, activation of downstream signaling pathways, and internalization into endosomes. We have investigated the mechanisms responsible for the localization of TrkA within lipid rafts and its ability to activate ERK1 and ERK2. We report that NGF treatment results in the translocation of activated forms of TrkA to lipid rafts, and this localization is important for efficient activation of the ERKs. TrkA is recruited and retained within lipid rafts through its association with flotillin, an intrinsic constituent of these membrane microdomains, via the adapter protein, c-Cbl associated protein (CAP). Mutant forms of CAP that lack protein interaction domains block TrkA localization to lipid rafts and attenuate ERK activation. Importantly, suppression of endogenous CAP expression inhibited NGF-stimulated neurite outgrowth from primary dorsal root ganglion neurons. These data provide a mechanism for the lipid raft localization of TrkA and establish the importance of the CAP adaptor protein for NGF activation of the ERKs and neuronal differentiation.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Abstract: GM1 enhances nerve growth factor (NGF)-stimulated neuritogenesis and prevents apoptotic death of PC12 cells; both may be due to enhancement of TrkA dimerization. In this study, we examined the effect of GM1 on NGF-induced TrkA dimerization in Trk-PC12 (6–24) cells. NGF increased tyrosine phosphorylation of the 140-kDa protein (TrkA monomer), and preincubation with GM1 potentiated this effect. Adding the protein cross-linker bis(sulfosuccinimidyl) suberate with NGF resulted in the appearance of two major bands (220 and 330 kDa) when probed with antibodies against TrkA or phosphotyrosine, and GM1 also enhanced this effect. We interpret the 330-kDa band as being a homodimer of TrkA. The identity of the 220-kDa band is still not certain but may consist of a posttranslationally modified form of TrkA. Our results suggest that GM1 is augmenting the effects of NGF on PC12 cells by enhancing the dimerization and activation of the TrkA receptor.  相似文献   

11.
Spleen cells from BALB/c mice immunized with a plasma membrane-enriched fraction from rabbit sympathetic ganglia were fused with the mouse myeloma NS1. A hybrid clone was obtained that produced monoclonal antibody directed against the receptor for nerve growth factor (NGF). The antibody, identified as IgG, was able to immunoprecipitate solubilized NGF receptor in the presence or absence of bound NGF. The antibody bound specifically to sympathetic membranes with high affinity but did not affect the binding of 125I-NGF to its receptor in sympathetic or sensory neurons or PC12 cells.  相似文献   

12.
Relationship among types of nerve growth factor receptors on PC12 cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We analyzed the kinetics and thermodynamics of 125I-nerve growth factor (125I-NGF) binding to NGF-receptor on PC12 cells. We used conditions of pseudo-first order kinetics and techniques to quantitate internalized complexes, "slow" or high affinity binding complexes, and cell surface "fast" or low affinity complexes. Two possible models were examined: binding to two independent receptors at the cell surface (i.e. high and low affinity forms of NGF-receptor) and a model for consecutive formation of fast, low affinity binding followed by slow, high affinity binding or internalization. Our data are consistent with the consecutive model only. The rates of association and dissociation of NGF with slow, high affinity sites and internalized, acid wash-resistant sites are indistinguishable from each other. We also analyzed, in detail, the two assays primarily used to distinguish slow binding complexes from internalized complexes. Scatchard analysis of total binding and dissociation of pre-equilibrated 125I-NGF in the presence of unlabeled NGF at high concentration (cold wash). Neither of these assays shows any evidence that the slow, high affinity binding step is different from internalization of the 125I-NGF-receptor complex. Based on this analysis, there are only two detectable forms of NGF-receptor on PC12 cells: complexes on the surface of the cells with a binding affinity of 0.5 nM at 37 degrees C and complexes internalized by the cells. Furthermore, the data are consistent with a model in which NGF-receptor is internalized constitutively and independently of occupancy by NGF. We also examined the fate of internalized 125I-NGF. In the first 60 min after contact with PC12 cells, no degradation of 125I-NGF was observed. Moreover, a significant amount of 125I-NGF recirculates to the cell surface and is released as intact, Mr = 13,000 NGF. The cells were also stimulated by NGF in a primary neurite outgrowth assay with an ED50 of 2-16 pM under conditions of low initial cell numbers in a large extracellular volume of NGF-containing medium. Thus, low level occupancy of the cell surface receptors, Kd = 0.5 nM, for several days is sufficient to stimulate neurite outgrowth. This indicates the presence of spare NGF-receptors on the surface PC12 cells.  相似文献   

13.
The binding and internalization of 125I-nerve growth factor (NGF) by PC12 pheochromocytoma cells was studied as a function of extracellular potassium concentration. Both surface-bound and internalized fractions of 125I-NGF associated with the cells under depolarizing conditions (50 mM K+) increased to 144 +/- 28% (average +/- SEM, six different cell preparations) and to 176 +/- 12% (n = 6), respectively, of those observed at 6.0 mM K+. Scatchard-type analysis of the data indicates increased sites for the binding and internalization of iodinated NGF by the cells. Similar enhancement was observed for cells treated with NGF as well. This voltage-dependent phenomenon was reversible, and also observed in the presence of veratridine. Moreover, withdrawal of extracellular Ca2+ abolished high K+-induced modulation of 125I-NGF binding and internalization, indicating that this effect may be mediated by Ca2+.  相似文献   

14.
Molecular characteristics of nerve growth factor receptors on PC12 cells   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
Cross-linking of 125I-nerve growth factor (NGF) to PC12 cells with the photoreactive heterobifunctional agent N-hydroxysuccinimidyl-4-azidobenzoate results in the labeling of two major bands with Mr 158,000 and 100,000 and a minor band with Mr 225,000 as determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under denaturing and reducing conditions. Binding of 125I-NGF to and cross-linking into all these species is abolished in the presence of excess unlabeled NGF but not in the presence of unlabeled epidermal growth factor, insulin, or bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor. When PC12 cells with bound 125I-NGF are incubated in excess unlabeled NGF at 0 degree C prior to cross-linking, only the Mr 158,000 species remains. In addition, binding of 125I-NGF to the Mr 158,000 complex is trypsin-resistant, whereas binding to the Mr 100,000 complex is not. These experiments identify the Mr 158,000 species as the slow NGF-receptor complex (chase stable at 0 degree C) and the smaller Mr 100,000 species as the fast NGF-receptor complex (trypsin sensitive). Furthermore, 125I-NGF bound to the former but not to the latter species is displaced by very-low concentrations of NGF, showing that at least a significant fraction of the high-molecular-weight slow receptor is also a high-affinity receptor. This identification is supported by the finding that chick sensory neurons which possess both high- and low-affinity receptors exhibit two major labeled bands with Mr 145,000 and 105,000 as a result of cross-linking with 125I-NGF, whereas a cell population enriched in non-neuronal cells, which possess only low-affinity receptors, exhibits only the Mr 105,000 component. A shift in molecular weight of both species after pretreatment with neuraminidase indicates that both complexes contain sialoglycoproteins and rules out the possibility that differences in sialic acid content are responsible for the difference in molecular weight of the two complexes. The relative amount of the labeling of these two complexes is not affected by the presence of protease inhibitors nor by a variation of 5000-fold in cross-linker concentration. These results place some limits on possible models for the NGF receptors and their interconversion.  相似文献   

15.
The human neuroblastoma cell line SH-SY5Y/TrkA differentiates in vitro and acquires a sympathetic phenotype in response to phorbolester (activator of protein kinase C, PKC) in the presence of serum or growth factors, or nerve growth factor (NGF). We have now investigated to what extent phorbolester and NGF cause activation of Ras and Raf-1 and the involvement of PKC in this response in differentiating SH-SY5Y/TrkA cells. NGF stimulated increased accumulation of Ras-GTP and a threefold activation of Raf-1. In contrast, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) had no effect on the amount of Ras-GTP but led to a smaller activation of Raf-1. NGF caused a limited increase in phosphorylation of Raf-1 compared with TPA, and NGF-induced Raf activity was independent of PKC. Analysis of phosphorylation of the endogenous PKC substrate myristoylated alanine-rich C-kinase substrate (MARCKS), and of subcellular distribution of PKC-alpha, -delta, and -epsilon revealed that NGF only caused a very small activation of PKC in SH-SY5Y/TrkA cells. The results identify Raf-1 as a target for both TPA- and NGF-induced signals in differentiating SH-SY5Y/TrkA cells and demonstrate that signalling to Raf-1 was mediated via distinct mechanisms.  相似文献   

16.
Nerve growth factor (NGF) initiates the activation of TrkA tyrosine kinase receptors and numerous subsequent signaling cascades. However, the dynamics of the process including the translocation of TrkA is still unclear. In this study, the effect of NGF or membrane depolarization on the endocytic process and TrkA localization in the neuronal cell line PC12 was analyzed by live-cell imaging and immunoelectron tomography using an ultra-high voltage electron microscope (UHVEM). Both NGF re-stimulation and high potassium-induced depolarization enhanced the endocytic uptake of the fluorescent indicator into acidic organelles within varicosities as well as cell bodies. However, the transition of uptake differed completely. NGF also significantly increased the number of TrkA-containing varicosities. Immunoelectron tomography in whole-mounted cells showed that NGF induced the recruitment of TrkA to the surface membrane of neurite varicosities as well as the multivesicular bodies (MVBs) and lysosomal complexes inside the varicosities. Three-dimensional analysis revealed that invagination pits and intralumenal vesicles of MVBs contained TrkA immunoreactivity. In addition, TrkA immunoreactivity was scattered in the lysosomal matrices after NGF treatment. These results suggest that the neurite varicosities are intensely active in intracellular membrane trafficking, and play an important role in the degradation and accumulation of the NGF receptor, TrkA, after ligand stimulation.  相似文献   

17.
TrkA is a cell surface transmembrane receptor tyrosine kinase for nerve growth factor (NGF). TrkA has an NPXY motif and kinase regulatory loop similar to insulin receptor (INSR) suggesting that NGF→TrkA signaling might overlap with insulin→INSR signaling. During insulin or NGF stimulation TrkA, insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1), INSR (and presumably other proteins) forms a complex in PC12 cells. In PC12 cells, tyrosine phosphorylation of INSR and IRS-1 is dependent upon the functional TrkA kinase domain. Moreover, expression of TrkA kinase-inactive mutant blocked the activation of Akt and Erk5 in response to insulin or NGF. Based on these data, we propose that TrkA participates in insulin signaling pathway in PC12 cells.  相似文献   

18.
Neurotrophins promote multiple actions on neuronal cells including cell survival and differentiation. The best-studied neurotrophin, nerve growth factor (NGF), is a major survival factor in sympathetic and sensory neurons and promotes differentiation in a well-studied model system, PC12 cells. To mediate these actions, NGF binds to the TrkA receptor to trigger intracellular signaling cascades. Two kinases whose activities mediate these processes include the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase (or extracellular signal-regulated kinase [ERK]) and phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3-K). To examine potential interactions between the ERK and PI3-K pathways, we studied the requirement of PI3-K for NGF activation of the ERK signaling cascade in dorsal root ganglion cells and PC12 cells. We show that PI3-K is required for TrkA internalization and participates in NGF signaling to ERKs via distinct actions on the small G proteins Ras and Rap1. In PC12 cells, NGF activates Ras and Rap1 to elicit the rapid and sustained activation of ERKs respectively. We show here that Rap1 activation requires both TrkA internalization and PI3-K, whereas Ras activation requires neither TrkA internalization nor PI3-K. Both inhibitors of PI3-K and inhibitors of endocytosis prevent GTP loading of Rap1 and block sustained ERK activation by NGF. PI3-K and endocytosis may also regulate ERK signaling at a second site downstream of Ras, since both rapid ERK activation and the Ras-dependent activation of the MAP kinase kinase kinase B-Raf are blocked by inhibition of either PI3-K or endocytosis. The results of this study suggest that PI3-K may be required for the signals initiated by TrkA internalization and demonstrate that specific endocytic events may distinguish ERK signaling via Rap1 and Ras.  相似文献   

19.
A cDNA encoding the full-length 75-kD human nerve growth factor receptor was transfected into MDCK cells and its product was found to be expressed predominantly (80%) on the apical membrane, as a result of vectorial targeting from an intracellular site. Apical hNGFR bound NGF with low affinity and internalized it inefficiently (6% of surface bound NGF per hour). Several mutant hNGFRs were analyzed, after transfection in MDCK cells, for polarized surface expression, ligand binding, and endocytosis. Deletionof juxta-membrane attachment sites for a cluster of O-linked sugars did not alter apical localization. A mutant receptor lacking the entire cytoplasmic tail (except for the five proximal amino acids) was also expressed on the apical membrane, suggesting that information for apical sorting was contained in the ectoplasmic or transmembrane domains. However, a 58 amino acid deletion in the hNGFR tail that moved a cytoplasmic tyrosine (Tyr 308) closer to the membrane into a more charged environment resulted in a basolateral distribution of the mutant receptor and reversed vectorial (basolateral) targeting. The basolateral mutant receptor also internalized 125I-NGF rapidly (90% of surface bound NGF per hour), exhibited a larger intracellular fraction and displayed a considerably shortened half-life (approximately 3 h). We suggest that hNGFR with the internal cytoplasmic deletion expresses a basolateral targeting signal, related to endocytic signals, that is dominant over apical targeting information in the ecto/transmembrane domains. These results apparently contradict a current model that postulates that basolateral targeting is a default mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
Cucurbitacin B (CuB) isolated from Cucumis melo by using a PC12 cell bioassay system exhibited significant nerve growth factor (NGF)‐mimic or NGF‐enhancing activity in PC12 and primary neuron cells. It was also demonstrated pro‐neurogenesis effects in ICR and APP/PS1 mice and improved memory deficit of APP/PS1 mice. Its possible mechanism includes significant induction of the phosphorylation of glucocorticoid receptor (GR), protein kinase C (PKC), phospholipase C (PLC) and inhibition of cofilin. ChemProteoBase profiling, binding assay and cellular thermal shift assay (CETSA) were used to determine the target protein. Results revealed that CuB could affect actin dynamics as an actin inhibitor but did not bind with GR. The protein level of cofilin in PC12 cells after treating 0.3 μM and different temperatures was significantly higher than that of control group. Other neurotrophic signalling pathways, such as TrkA/TrkB, were analysed with specific inhibitors and Western blot. The inhibitors of TrkA, PLC, PKC, Ras, Raf and ERK1/2 significantly decreased the percentage of PC12 cells with neurite outgrowth and shortened the length of neurite outgrowth induced by CuB. CuB significantly induced the phosphorylation of TrkA, ERK and CREB. The phosphorylation of these proteins was obviously decreased by their specific inhibitors. These results suggest that cofilin is a candidate target protein of CuB in PC12 cells and that the GR/PLC/PKC and TrkA/Ras/Raf/ERK signalling pathways play important roles in the neuroprotective effect of CuB.  相似文献   

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