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1.
Nanosecond pulsed electric fields (nsPEFs) are increasingly recognized as a novel and unique tool in various life science fields, including electroporation and cancer therapy, although their mode of action in cells remains largely unclear. Here, we show that nsPEFs induce strong and transient activation of a signaling pathway involving c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK). Application of nsPEFs to HeLa S3 cells rapidly induced phosphorylation of JNK1 and MKK4, which is located immediately upstream of JNK in this signaling pathway. nsPEF application also elicited increased phosphorylation of c-Jun protein and dramatically elevated c-jun and c-fos mRNA levels. nsPEF-inducible events downstream of JNK were markedly suppressed by the JNK inhibitor SP600125, which confirmed JNK-dependency of these events in this pathway. Our results provide novel mechanistic insights into the mode of nsPEF action in human cells.  相似文献   

2.
Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) are rapidly and transiently activated when both quiescent Go-arrested cells and G2-arrested oocytes are stimulated to reenter the cell cycle. We previously developed a cell-free system from lysates of quiescent Xenopus oocytes that responds to oncogenic H-ras protein by activating a MAPK, p42MAPK. Here, we show that the oncogenic protein kinase mos is also a potent activator of p42MAPK in these lysates. Mos also induces p42MAPK activation in lysates of activated eggs taken at a time when neither mos nor p42MAPK is normally active, showing that the mos-responsive MAPK activation pathway persists beyond the stage where mos normally functions. Similarly, lysates of somatic cells (rabbit reticulocytes) also retain a mos-inducible MAPK activation pathway. The mos-induced activation of MAPKs in all three lysates leads to phosphorylation of the pp90rsk proteins, downstream targets of the MAPK signaling pathway in vivo. The in vitro activation of MAPKs by mos in cell-free systems derived from oocytes and somatic cells suggests that mos contributes to oncogenic transformation by inappropriately inducing the activation of MAPKs.  相似文献   

3.
We investigated the activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) pathways by purinergic stimulation in cardiac myocytes from adult rat hearts. ATPS increased the phosphorylation (activation) of the extracellular signal regulated kinase 1 and 2 (ERK1/2) and p38 MAPK. ERK1/2 and p38 MAPK activation was differential, ERK1/2 being rapid and transient while that of p38 MAPK slow and sustained. Using selective inhibitors, activation of ERK1/2 was shown to involve protein kinase C and MEK1/2 while that of p38 MAPK was regulated by both protein kinase C and protein kinase A. Furthermore, we show that purinergic stimulation induces the phosphorylation of the MAPK downstream target, mitogen- and stress-activated protein kinase 1 (MSK1), in cardiac myocytes. The time course of MSK1 phosphorylation closely follows that of ERK activation. Inhibitors of the ERK and p38 MAPK pathways were tested on the phosphorylation of MSK1 at two different time points. The results suggest that ERKs initiate the response but both ERKs and p38 MAPK are required for the maintenance of the complete phosphorylation of MSK1. The temporal relationship of MSK1 phosphorylation and cPLA2 translocation induced by purinergic stimulation, taken together with previous findings, is an indication that cPLA2 may be a downstream target of MSK1.  相似文献   

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We have shown previously that phenol/water extracts derived from two novel Treponema species, Treponema maltophilum, and Treponema brennaborense, resembling lipoteichoic acid (LTA), induce cytokines in mononuclear cells. This response was lipopolysaccharide binding-protein (LBP)-dependent and involved Toll-like receptors (TLRs). Here we show that secretion of tumor necrosis factor-alpha induced by Treponema culture supernatants and extracted LTA was paralleled by an LBP-dependent phosphorylation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) p42 and p44, and p38, as well as the stress-activated protein kinases c-Jun N-terminal kinases 1 and 2. Phosphorylation of p42/44 correlated with an increase of activity, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha levels were significantly reduced by addition of inhibitors of p42/44 and p38, PD 98059 and SB 203580, respectively. Treponeme LTA differed from bacterial lipopolysaccharide regarding time course of p42/44 phosphorylation, exhibiting a prolonged activation of MAPKs. Furthermore, MAPK activation and cytokine induction failed to be strictly correlated. Involvement of TLR-4 for phosphorylation of p42/44 was shown employing the neutralizing anti-murine TLR-4 antibody MTS 510. In TLR-2-negative U373 cells, the compounds studied differed regarding MAPK activation with T. maltophilum leading to a stronger activation. In summary, the data presented here show that treponeme LTA are able to activate the MAPK and stress-activated protein kinase pathway involving LBP and TLR-4.  相似文献   

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Analyses of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) in a mouse hepatitis virus (MHV)-infected macrophage-derived J774.1 cell line showed activation of two MAPKs, p38 MAPK and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), but not of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). Activation of MAPKs was evident by 6 h postinfection. However, UV-irradiated MHV failed to activate MAPKs, which demonstrated that MHV replication was necessary for their activation. Several other MHV-permissive cell lines also showed activation of both p38 MAPK and JNK, which indicated that the MHV-induced stress-kinase activation was not restricted to any particular cell type. The upstream kinase responsible for activating MHV-induced p38 MAPK was the MAPK kinase 3. Experiments with a specific inhibitor of p38 MAPK, SB 203580, demonstrated that MHV-induced p38 MAPK activation resulted in the accumulation of interleukin-6 (IL-6) mRNAs and an increase in the production of IL-6, regardless of MHV-induced general host protein synthesis inhibition. Furthermore, MHV production was suppressed in SB 203580-treated cells, demonstrating that activated p38 MAPK played a role in MHV replication. The reduced MHV production in SB 203580-treated cells was, at least in part, due to a decrease in virus-specific protein synthesis and virus-specific mRNA accumulation. Interestingly, there was a transient increase in the amount of phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor 4E (eIF4E) in infected cells, and this eIF4E phosphorylation was p38 MAPK dependent; it is known that phosphorylated eIF4E enhances translation rates of cap-containing mRNAs. Furthermore, the upstream kinase responsible for eIF4E phosphorylation, MAPK-interacting kinase 1, was also phosphorylated and activated in response to MHV infection. Our data suggested that host cells, in response to MHV replication, activated p38 MAPK, which subsequently phosphorylated eIF4E to efficiently translate certain host proteins, including IL-6, during virus-induced severe host protein synthesis inhibition. MHV utilized this p38 MAPK-dependent increase in eIF4E phosphorylation to promote virus-specific protein synthesis and subsequent progeny virus production. Enhancement of virus-specific protein synthesis through virus-induced eIF4E activation has not been reported in any other viruses.  相似文献   

9.
Classical mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) play a pivotal role in a variety of cellular signal transduction pathways. MAPKs are activated by phosphorylation at specific threonine and tyrosine residues catalyzed by upstream MAPK kinases (MAPKKs). Mutations of these two activation phosphorylation sites into acidic amino acids, however, do not convert MAPKs into constitutively active forms. Here, we report an approach to make a molecule with constitutive MAPK activity. The nuclear export signal-disrupted, constitutively active MAPKK was fused to the N-terminal end of wild-type MAPK. When the resulting fusion protein was expressed in Escherichia coli, the MAPK moiety became phosphorylated and the fusion protein was constitutively active as MAPK. Moreover, when expressed in mammalian cultured cells, the fusion protein was also activated as MAPK and was able to induce marked morphological changes in NIH-3T3 cells. These results suggest that the fusion protein can work as constitutively active MAPK and that this approach may be applicable to other members of the MAPK family to make constitutively active forms.  相似文献   

10.
Redox signaling and the MAP kinase pathways   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
The mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases are a large family of proline-directed, serine/threonine kinases that require tyrosine and threonine phosphorylation of a TxY motif in the activation loop for activation through a phosphorylation cascade involving a MAPKKK, MAPKK and MAPK, often referred to as the MAP kinase module. Three separate such modules have been identified, based on the TxY motif of the MAP kinase and the dual-specificity kinases that strictly phosphorylate their specific TxY sequence. They are the extracellular signal regulated kinases (ERKs), c-jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs) and p38 MAPKs. The ERKs are mainly associated with proliferation and differentiation while the JNKs and p38MAP kinases regulate responses to cellular stresses. Redox homeostasis is critical for proper cellular function. While reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidative stress have been implicated in injury, a rapidly growing literature suggests that a transient increase in ROS levels is an important mediator of proliferation and results in activation of various signaling molecules and pathways, among which the MAP kinases. This review will summarize the role of ROS in MAP kinase activation in various systems, including in macrophages, cells of myeloid origin that play an essential role in inflammation and express a multi-component NADPH oxidase that catalyzes the receptor-regulated production of ROS.  相似文献   

11.
Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) are a family of Ser/Thr protein kinases that transmit various extracellular signals to the nucleus inducing gene expression, cell proliferation, and apoptosis. Recent studies have revealed that organotin compounds induce apoptosis and MAPK phosphorylation/activation in mammal cells. In this study, we elucidated the cytotoxic mechanism of tributyltin (TBT), a representative organotin compound, in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) RTG-2 cells. TBT treatment resulted in significant caspase activation, characteristic morphological changes, DNA fragmentation, and consequent apoptotic cell death in RTG-2 cells. TBT exposure induced the rapid and sustained accumulation of phosphorylated MAPKs, including extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), and p38 MAP kinase (p38 MAPK). Further analysis using pharmacological inhibitors against caspases and MAPKs showed that TBT also induced cell death in a caspase-independent manner and that p38 MAPK is involved in TBT-induced caspase-independent cell death, whereas JNK is involved in the caspase-dependent apoptotic pathway. Thus, TBT employs at least two independent signaling cascades to mediate cell death in RTG-2 cells. To our knowledge, this is the first study revealing the relationship between MAPK activation and TBT cytotoxicity in RTG-2 cells.  相似文献   

12.
Angiotensin II activates a variety of signaling pathways in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), including the MAPKs and Akt, both of which are required for hypertrophy. However, little is known about the relationship between these kinases or about the upstream activators of Akt. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the reactive oxygen species (ROS)-sensitive kinase p38 MAPK and its substrate MAPKAPK-2 mediate Akt activation in VSMCs. In unstimulated VSMCs, Akt and p38 MAPK are constitutively associated and remain so after angiotensin II stimulation. Inhibition of p38 MAPK activity with SB-203580 dose-dependently inhibits Akt phosphorylation on Ser473, but not Thr308. Angiotensin II-induced phosphorylation of MAPKAPK-2 is also attenuated by SB-203580, as well as by inhibitors of ROS. In addition, angiotensin II stimulates the association of MAPKAPK-2 with the Akt-p38 MAPK complex, and an in vitro kinase assay shows that MAPKAPK-2 immunoprecipitates of VSMC lysates phosphorylate recombinant Akt in an angiotensin II-inducible manner. Finally, intracellular delivery of a MAPKAPK-2 peptide inhibitor blocks Akt phosphorylation on Ser473. These results suggest that the p38 MAPK-MAPKAPK-2 pathway mediates Akt activation by angiotensin II in these cells by recruiting active MAPKAPK-2 to a signaling complex that includes both Akt and p38 MAPK. Through this mechanism, p38 MAPK confers ROS sensitivity to Akt and facilitates downstream signaling. These results provide evidence for a novel signaling complex that may help to spatially organize hypertrophy-related, ROS-sensitive signaling in VSMCs. mitogen-activated protein kinase; reactive oxygen species  相似文献   

13.
Kim WH  Goo SY  Shin MH  Chun SJ  Lee H  Lee KH  Park SJ 《Cellular immunology》2008,253(1-2):81-91
Vibrio vulnificus, a pathogenic bacterium causing primary septicemia, exhibited cytotoxicity towards Jurkat cells of T-lymphocytes through intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Pretreatment of Jurkat T-cells with diphenyleneiodonium chloride (DPI) abolished V. vulnificus-induced ROS generation and bacterial ability to cause cell death. Jurkat T-cells expressing dominant-negative protein of Rac subunit of NADPH oxidase (NOX) did not show increased ROS production and cell death by V. vulnificus. Vibrio vulnificus also triggered phosphorylation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) including p38 and ERK1/2 in Jurkat T-cells. Experiments using inhibitors or small interfering RNAs for each MAPK showed that both MAPKs are involved in V. vulnificus-induced cell death. DPI only blocked the phosphorylation of p38 MAPK in Jurkat T-cells exposed by V. vulnificus. This study demonstrates that V. vulnificus induces death of Jurkat T-cells via ROS-dependent activation of p38 MAPK, and that NOX plays a major role in ROS generation in V. vulnificus-exposed cells.  相似文献   

14.
Mitogen-activated protein kinases and cerebral ischemia   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) have crucial roles in signal transduction from the cell surface to the nucleus and regulate cell death and survival. Recent papers support the hypothesis that neuronal apoptosis and cerebral ischemia induce the robust activation of MAPK cascades. Although extracellular signal-regulated kinases pathways promote cell survival and proliferation, and c-Jun N-terminal protein kinases/p38 pathways induce apoptosis in general, the roles of MAPK cascades in neuronal death and survival seem to be complicated and altered by the type of cells and the magnitude and timing of insults. Some specific inhibitors of MAPK cascades provide important information in clarifying the roles of each molecule in neuronal death and survival, but the results are still controversial. Further studies are necessary to elucidate the activated signal transduction upstream and downstream of the cascades in cerebral ischemia, and to define the crosstalk between the cascades and other signaling pathways, before MAPK cascades can be candidate molecules in the treatment of cerebral ischemia.  相似文献   

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Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) are common signal transducers in all eukaryotic organisms. MAPKs are activated by protein kinase cascades consisting of MAPK kinases (MAP2Ks) and MAPK kinase kinases (MAP3Ks). Extracellular-signal regulated kinases 1 and 2 (ERK1/2) are the best characterized MAPKs. Like other MAPKs their activity is regulated by dual phosphorylation as well as dephosphorylation by a host of phosphoprotein phosphatases. The ability to phosphorylate or thiophosphorylate ERK2 in vitro, as described here, is valuable for use in downstream applications designed to investigate MAPK signaling networks.  相似文献   

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Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) participate in signaling initiated by a wide variety of extracellular stimuli. MAPKs are most commonly activated by a series of phosphorylation events in which one kinase phosphorylates another, the “MAPK cascade”. The cascade concludes with the dual phosphorylation of MAPKs on a conserved Thr-X-Tyr motif. In the case of the p38 MAPK, an exception to this paradigm has been found when signaling via the T cell antigen receptor (TCR). Rather than trigger the MAPK cascade, TCR-mediated stimulation activates proximal tyrosine kinases, which results in the phosphorylation of p38 on a noncanonical activating residue, Tyr-323. This phosphorylation activates p38 to phosphorylate third party substrates as well as its own Thr-X-Tyr motif. Here we discuss the structural and functional implications of this alternative p38 activation pathway, which may provide a new target for tissue-specific pharmacologic inhibition.  相似文献   

20.
MAPKs (mitogen-activated protein kinases) are key components in cell signalling pathways. Under optimal growth conditions, their activity is kept off, but in response to stimulation it is dramatically evoked. Because of the high degree of evolutionary conservation at the levels of sequence and mode of activation, MAPKs are believed to share similar regulatory mechanisms in all eukaryotes and to be functionally substitutable between them. To assess the reliability of this notion, we systematically analysed the activity, regulation and phenotypic effects of mammalian MAPKs in yeast. Unexpectedly, all mammalian MAPKs tested were spontaneously phosphorylated in yeast. JNKs (c-Jun N-terminal kinases) lost their phosphorylation in pbs2Delta cells, but p38s and ERKs (extracellular-signal-regulated kinases) maintained their spontaneous phosphorylation even in pbs2Deltaste7Deltamkk1Deltamkk2Delta cells. Kinase-dead variants of ERKs and p38s were phosphorylated in strains lacking a single MEK (MAPK/ERK kinase), but not in pbs2Deltaste7Deltamkk1Deltamkk2Delta cells. Thus, in yeast, p38 and ERKs are phosphorylated via a combined mechanism of autophosphorylation and MEK-mediated phosphorylation (any MEK). We further addressed the mechanism allowing mammalian MAPKs to exploit yeast MEKs in the absence of any activating signal. We suggest that mammalian MAPKs lost during evolution a C-terminal region that exists in some yeast MAPKs. Indeed, removal of this region from Hog1 and Mpk1 rendered them spontaneously and highly phosphorylated. It implies that MAPKs possess an efficient inherent autoposphorylation capability that is suppressed in yeast MAPKs via a C-terminal domain and in mammalian MAPKs via as yet unknown means.  相似文献   

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