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1.
2.
Synaptosomes isolated from the adult rat hippocampus contain the alpha- and beta-subspecies of protein kinase C (PKC), but not the gamma-subspecies which is abundantly expressed in the pyramidal cells in this brain region. Although the gamma-subspecies is known to respond significantly to free arachidonic acid, it is found that both the alpha- and beta-subspecies are also activated dramatically by arachidonic acid in synergistic action with diacylglycerol. Oleic, linoleic, and linolenic acids are all active. It is possible that unsaturated fatty acids may take part in the activation of alpha- and beta-subspecies of PKC which are present in the presynaptic nerve endings terminating at the hippocampal pyramidal cells.  相似文献   

3.
Activation of rat brain protein kinase C by lipid oxidation products   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The unsaturated fatty acid components of membrane lipids are susceptible to oxidation in vitro and in vivo. The initial oxidation products are hydroperoxy fatty acids that are converted spontaneously or enzymatically to a variety of products. Hydroperoxy derivatives of oleic, linoleic, or arachidonic acids stimulate the activity of protein kinase C (PKC) purified from rat brain. The hydroperoxy acids satisfy the requirement of PKC for phospholipid (e.g., phosphatidylserine). Activation is observed in the presence or absence of 1 mM Ca2+. Reduction of the hydroperoxides to alcohols or dehydration of the hydroperoxides to ketones increases the Ka for activation three- to fourfold but does not significantly reduce the maximal extent of PKC activation. The Ka's for activation by hydroperoxy acids are approximately half the values exhibited by the unoxidized fatty acids. Since oxidation of unsaturated fatty acids to hydroperoxides is the first event in lipid peroxidation, activation of PKC by hydroperoxy fatty acids may be an early cellular response to oxidative stress.  相似文献   

4.
Arachidonic acid (AA) is an essential fatty acid that is metabolized by cyclooxygenase (COX), lipoxygenase (LOX) or cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes to generate eicosanoids which in turn mediate a number of biological activities including regulation of angiogenesis. While much information on the effects of COX and LOX products is known, the physiological relevance of the CYP-derived products of AA are less well understood. CYP enzymes are highly expressed in the liver and kidney, but have also been detected at lower levels in the brain, heart and vasculature. A number of these enzymes, including members of the CYP 4 family, predominantly catalyze conversion of AA to 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE) while the CYP epoxygenases generate mainly epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs). This review will focus on the emerging roles of inhibitors of eicosanoid production with emphasis on the CYP pathways, in the regulation of angiogenesis and tumor growth. We also discuss current observations describing the protective effects of EETs for survival of the endothelium.  相似文献   

5.
The cGMP-dependent protein kinases (PKG) are emerging as important components of mainstream signal transduction pathways. Nitric oxide-induced cGMP formation by stimulation of soluble guanylate cyclase is generally accepted as being the most widespread mechanism underlying PKG activation. In the present study, PKG was found to be a target for phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)-responsive protein kinase C (PKC). PKG1alpha became phosphorylated in HEK-293 cells stimulated with PMA and also in vitro using purified components. PKC-dependent phosphorylation was found to activate PKG as measured by phosphorylation of vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein, and by in vitro kinase assays. Although there are 11 potential PKC substrate recognition sites in PKG1alpha, threonine 58 was examined due to its proximity to the pseudosubstrate domain. Antibodies generated against the phosphorylated form of this region were used to demonstrate phosphorylation in response to PMA treatment of the cells with kinetics similar to vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein phosphorylation. A phospho-mimetic mutation at this site (T58E) generated a partially activated PKG that was more sensitive to cGMP levels. A phospho-null mutation (T58A) revealed that this residue is important but not sufficient for PKG activation by PKC. Taken together, these findings outline a novel signal transduction pathway that links PKC stimulation with cyclic nucleotide-independent activation of PKG.  相似文献   

6.
Soybean lipoxygenase converted arachidonic acid to a group of polar products (lambda max, 300-301 nm), which were increasingly formed during the continued incubation at 20 degrees C after the initial incubation (2 hrs, at 4 degrees C). These products were identified as lipoxin A and B isomers, based on the chromatographic and spectrometric analyses. In further chromatographic analyses, the lipoxin A and B isomers were separated into at least three isomers, respectively. The exposure of 5,15-dihydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid to the soybean lipoxygenase produced the identical product profile of chromatography, substantiating the intermediacy of 5,15-dihydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid in the soybean lipoxygenase-catalyzed formation of lipoxins. Based on these results, it is proposed that the conversion of arachidonic acid into lipoxins by soybean lipoxygenase may bear a mechanistic resemblance to the formation of lipoxins in the human leukocytes.  相似文献   

7.
The activity of soluble guanylate cyclase can be increased by exposure of the enzyme to arachidonic acid or to some oxidized metabolites of the fatty acid. We have tried to determine whether activation of the enzyme by arachidonate requires that the fatty acid be converted to an oxidized metabolite, either by a possible trace contaminant of a lipoxygenase or by guanylate cyclase itself, which contains a heme moiety. Soluble guanylate cyclase purified from bovine lung was activated 4-6-fold by arachidonic acid. This activation was not dependent on the presence of oxygen in the incubation medium. No detectable metabolites of arachidonic acid were formed during incubation with soluble guanylate cyclase. Addition of soybean lipoxygenase to the incubation did not increase activation by arachidonic acid. The inhibitors of lipoxygenase activity, nordihydroguaiaretic acid and eicosatetraynoic acid, had direct effects on soluble guanylate cyclase and interfered with its activation by arachidonate, whereas another lipoxygenase inhibitor, BW 755 C, did not. The data suggest that arachidonic acid increases the activity of guanylate cyclase by direct interaction with the enzyme rather than by being converted to an active metabolite.  相似文献   

8.
Transfer RNA-guanine ribosyltransferase (TGRase) irreversibly incorporates queuine into the first position in the anticodon of four tRNA isoacceptors. Rat brain protein kinase C (PKC) was shown to stimulate rat liver TGRase activity. TGRase preparations derived from rat liver have been observed to decrease in activity over time in storage at -20 or -70 degrees C. Contamination of the samples by phosphatases was indicated by a p-nitrophenylphosphate conversion test. The addition of micromolar concentrations of the phosphatase inhibitors sodium pyrophosphate and sodium fluoride into TGRase isolation buffers resulted in a greater return of TGRase activity than without these inhibitors. Inactive TGRase preparations were reactivated to their original activity with the addition of PKC. In assays combining both TGRase and PKC enzymes, inhibitors of protein kinase C (sphingosine, staurosporine, H-7 and calphostin C) all blocked the reactivation of TGRase, whereas activators of protein kinase C (calcium, diacylglycerol and phosphatidyl serine) increased the activity of TGRase. None of the PKC modulators affected TGRase activity directly. Alkaline phosphatase, when added to assays, decreased the activity of TGRase and also blocked the reactivation of TGRase with PKC. Denaturing PAGE and autoradiography was performed on TGRase isolates that had been labelled with 32P by PKC. The resulting strong 60 kDa band (containing the major site for phosphorylation) and weak 34.5 kDa band (containing the TGRase activity) are suggested to associate to make up a 104 kDa heterodimer that comprises the TGRase enzyme. This was corroberated by native and denaturing size-exclusion chromatography. These results suggest that PKC-dependent phosphorylation of TGRase is tied to efficient enzymatic function and therefore control of the queuine modification of tRNA.  相似文献   

9.
Chromaffin granules, the secretory vesicles of the adrenal medulla, have a Na+/H+ exchange activity in their membranes which brings their proton gradient into equilibrium with a Na+ gradient. This explains why Na+ is mildly inhibitory to amine transport (which is driven by the H+ gradient) The activity can be demonstrated by using accumulation of 22Na+ in response to a pH gradient that is either imposed by diluting membrane 'ghosts' into alkaline media, or generated by ATP hydrolysis. It can also be monitored indirectly by fluorescence measurements in which the pH inside 'ghost' is monitored by quenching of a fluorescent weak base. This method has been used to monitor Na+ entry into acid-loaded 'ghosts' of H+ entry into methylamine accumulation. The exchanger appears to be reversible and non-electrogenic, with a stoichiometry of 1:1. Using an indirect assay we measured an apparent Km for Na+ of 4.7 mM, and a Ki for amiloride, a competitive inhibitor, of 0.26 mM. Direct assays using 22Na+ suggested a higher Km. Ethylisopropylamiloride was not inhibitory.  相似文献   

10.
We found previously that stimulation of c-fos and c-myc mRNA expression are early events in hydrogen peroxide-induced growth in rat aortic smooth muscle (RASM) cells. In the present study, we investigated the role of phospholipase A2 (PLA2) and protein kinase C (PKC) in mediating hydrogen peroxide-induced c-fos mRNA expression in RASM cells. Mepacrine and p-bromophenacylbromide, potent inhibitors of PLA2 activity, blocked hydrogen peroxide-induced c-fos mRNA expression. Arachidonic acid, a product of PLA2 activity, stimulated the expression of c-fos mRNA with a time course similar to that of hydrogen peroxide. PKC down-regulation attenuated both hydrogen peroxide and arachidonic acid-induced c-fos mRNA expression by 50%. Nordihydroguaiaretic acid (a lipoxygenase-cytochrome P450 monooxygenase inhibitor) significantly inhibited both hydrogen peroxide and arachidonic acid-induced c-fos mRNA expression, whereas indomethacin (a cyclooxygenase inhibitor) had no effect. Together, these findings indicate that 1) hydrogen peroxide-induced c-fos mRNA expression is mediated by PLA2-dependent arachidonic acid release, 2) both PKC-dependent and independent mechanisms are involved in hydrogen peroxide-induced expression of c-fos mRNA and 3) arachidonic acid metabolism via the lipoxygenase-cytochrome P450 monooxygenase pathway appears to be required for hydrogen peroxide-induced expression of c-fos mRNA.  相似文献   

11.
In rat PC12 pheochromocytoma cells, melittin, a phospholipase A2 activator, stimulated the release of arachidonic acid in a dose-dependent manner in the range between 0.1 and 1 microM. 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), a protein kinase C-activating phorbol ester, inhibited the melittin-induced release of arachidonic acid dose-dependently in the range between 0.1 nM and 0.1 microM, whereas 4 alpha-phorbol 12, 13-didecanoate, which is inactive for protein kinase C, was ineffective in this capacity. Staurosporine, a protein kinase C inhibitor, recovered the inhibitory effect of TPA on the melittin-induced release of arachidonic acid. These results suggest that the activation of protein kinase C inhibits phospholipase A2 activity in PC12 pheochromocytoma cells.  相似文献   

12.
The involvement of protein kinase C (PKC) and protein kinase A (PKA) in cholinergic signalling in CHO cells expressing the M3 subtype of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor was examined. Muscarinic signalling was assessed by measuring carbachol-induced activation of phospholipase C (PLC), arachidonic acid release, and calcium mobilisation. Carbachol activation of PLC was not altered by inhibition of PKC with chelerythrine chloride, bisindolylmaleimide or chronic treatment with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). Activation of PKC by acute treatment with PMA was similarly without effect. In contrast, inhibition of PKC blocked carbachol stimulation of arachidonic acid release. Likewise, PKC inhibition resulted in a decreased ability of carbachol to mobilise calcium, whereas PKC activation potentiated calcium mobilisation. Inhibition of PKA with H89 or Rp-cAMP did not alter the ability of carbachol to activate PLC. Similarly, PKA activation with Sp-cAMP or forskolin had no effect on PLC stimulation by carbachol. Carbachol-mediated release of arachidonic acid was decreased by H89 but only slightly increased by forskolin. Forskolin also increased calcium mobilisation by carbachol. These results suggest a function for PKC and PKA in M3 stimulation of arachidonic acid release and calcium mobilisation but not in PLC activation.  相似文献   

13.
Activation of IkappaB kinase beta by protein kinase C isoforms   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The atypical protein kinase C (PKC) isotypes (lambda/iotaPKC and zetaPKC) have been shown to be critically involved in important cell functions such as proliferation and survival. Previous studies have demonstrated that the atypical PKCs are stimulated by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and are required for the activation of NF-kappaB by this cytokine through a mechanism that most probably involves the phosphorylation of IkappaB. The inability of these PKC isotypes to directly phosphorylate IkappaB led to the hypothesis that zetaPKC may use a putative IkappaB kinase to functionally inactivate IkappaB. Recently several groups have molecularly characterized and cloned two IkappaB kinases (IKKalpha and IKKbeta) which phosphorylate the residues in the IkappaB molecule that serve to target it for ubiquitination and degradation. In this study we have addressed the possibility that different PKCs may control NF-kappaB through the activation of the IKKs. We report here that alphaPKC as well as the atypical PKCs bind to the IKKs in vitro and in vivo. In addition, overexpression of zetaPKC positively modulates IKKbeta activity but not that of IKKalpha, whereas the transfection of a zetaPKC dominant negative mutant severely impairs the activation of IKKbeta but not IKKalpha in TNF-alpha-stimulated cells. We also show that cell stimulation with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate activates IKKbeta, which is entirely dependent on the activity of alphaPKC but not that of the atypical isoforms. In contrast, the inhibition of alphaPKC does not affect the activation of IKKbeta by TNF-alpha. Interestingly, recombinant active zetaPKC and alphaPKC are able to stimulate in vitro the activity of IKKbeta but not that of IKKalpha. In addition, evidence is presented here that recombinant zetaPKC directly phosphorylates IKKbeta in vitro, involving Ser177 and Ser181. Collectively, these results demonstrate a critical role for the PKC isoforms in the NF-kappaB pathway at the level of IKKbeta activation and IkappaB degradation.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Lipoxins (LX) areeicosanoids generated via transcellular biosynthetic routes duringinflammation, hypersensitivity reaction, and after angioplasty. LXs aremodulators of leukocyte trafficking and vascular tone. Their influenceon the coagulation cascade has not been determined. In this study, weevaluated the influence of LXs on the expression of tissue factor (TF),a key regulator of coagulation. TF activity was measured in lysates ofmonocytes, human umbilical vein endothelial cells, and ECV304 cellsusing a one-stage clotting assay. LXA4 stimulated TFactivity in each cell type. The influence of LXA4 on TFactivity by ECV304 cells was studied further to explore the mechanismof induction of TF expression. LXA4-induced TF activity wasdose dependent, cycloheximide sensitive, and associated with increasedTF mRNA levels. Induction of TF activity was specific forLXA4 and was not observed with LXB4, the othermajor lipoxin generated by mammalian cells. Furthermore, ECV304 cell TFexpression was not influenced by15(R/S)-methyl-LXA4 or16-phenoxy-LXA4, synthetic analogs of LXA4 thatactivate the myeloid LXA4 receptor, and was not modulatedby SKF-104353, which blocks LXA4 bioactivities transducedthrough the putative shared LXA4/LTD4 receptor.LXA4-stimulated TF expression was blunted by pertussistoxin and by GF-109203X, an inhibitor of protein kinase C, and was notassociated with degradation of IB. Our results establish thatLXA4 induces TF activity via cell signaling pathways withdifferent structural and receptor requirements from those described forinhibition of leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions. They suggest arole for LXA4 as a modulator of TF-related vascular eventsduring inflammation and thrombosis.

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16.
The effect of lipid A, a residue of the lipopolysaccharide molecule, on protein kinase C from B lymphocytes has been studied. Lipid A activates and promotes the translocation of protein kinase C from the soluble to the particulate membrane fraction in a cell-free system reconstituted with purified enzyme and membranes isolated from B lymphocytes. These results demonstrate that the activating effect of lipopolysaccharide on protein kinase C from B cells is due to the lipid moieties of this molecule.  相似文献   

17.
A potential role of arachidonic acid in the modulation of insulin secretion was investigated by measuring its effects on calmodulin-dependent protein kinase and protein kinase C in islet subcellular fractions. The results were interpreted in the light of arachidonic acid effects on insulin secretion from intact islets. Arachidonic acid could replace phosphatidylserine in activation of cytosolic protein kinase C (K0.5 of 10 microM) and maximum activation was observed at 50 microM arachidonate. Arachidonic acid did not affect the Ca2+ requirement of the phosphatidylserine-stimulated activity. Arachidonic acid (200 microM) inhibited (greater than 90%) calmodulin-dependent protein kinase activity (K0.5 = 50-100 microM) but modestly increased basal phosphorylation activity (no added calcium or calmodulin). Arachidonic acid inhibited glucose-sensitive insulin secretion from islets (K0.5 = 24 microM) measured in static secretion assays. Maximum inhibition (approximately 70%) was achieved at 50-100 microM arachidonic acid. Basal insulin secretion (3 mM glucose) was modestly stimulated by 100 microM arachidonic acid but in a non-saturable manner. In perifusion secretion studies, arachidonic acid (20 microM) had no effect on the first phase of glucose-induced secretion but nearly completely suppressed second phase secretion. At basal glucose (4 mM), arachidonic acid induced a modest but reproducible biphasic insulin secretion response which mimicked glucose-sensitive secretion. However, phosphorylation of an 80 kD protein substrate of protein kinase C was not increased when intact islets were incubated with arachidonic acid, suggesting that the small increases in insulin secretion seen with arachidonic acid were not mediated by protein kinase C. These data suggest that arachidonic acid generated by exposure of islets to glucose may influence insulin secretion by inhibiting the activity of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase but probably has little effect on protein kinase C activity.  相似文献   

18.
The activity of protein kinase C is dependent on communication between a catalytic domain and a Ca2+- and lipid-binding regulatory domain in the kinase molecule. It is shown here that acidic reaction conditions can bypass the calcium and lipid requirement in the autophosphorylation of protein kinase C. Acidic pH does not entirely deregulate the kinase, though, since only autophosphorylation is favored between pH 4 and 6 and not the phosphorylation of alternative substrate proteins. Interestingly, low pH stably activated protein kinase C: when restored to neutral pH, the autophosphorylation reaction remained independent of Ca2+ and lipid. These observations suggest that protonation of functional groups in the protein kinase C molecule, with their pKa suggestive of histidine imidazole, can produce a stable conformation where regulatory constraints on enzyme activity have been removed.  相似文献   

19.
Activation of adipocyte adenylate cyclase by protein kinase C   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Adenylate cyclase activity in purified rat adipocyte membranes is stimulated by the calcium- and phospholipid-dependent enzyme protein kinase C. Over the concentration range of 100-1000 milliunits/ml, both highly purified (approximately 3000 units/mg of protein) protein kinase C from rat brain and partially purified (14 units/mg of protein) protein kinase C from guinea pig pancreas stimulate cyclase activity. The actions of both protein kinase C preparations on adenylate cyclase activity are dependent on added calcium, which is effective at concentrations less than 10 microM. Exogenous phospholipids are not required for stimulation of adenylate cyclase by protein kinase C; but, under typical cyclase assay conditions, the adipocyte membranes satisfy the lipid requirement for protein kinase C phosphorylation of histone. The tumor-promoting phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate enhances the kinase action on cyclase, and the phorbol ester is effective at concentrations equimolar with the kinase (less than 10 nM). With the brain protein kinase C, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate effects are especially evident at limiting calcium concentrations. Inhibitors of protein kinase C activity, such as chlorpromazine, palmitoylcarnitine, and polymyxin B, inhibit selectively that adenylate cyclase activity which is stimulated by protein kinase C plus calcium. It is concluded that protein kinase C acts directly on the adipocyte adenylate cyclase system.  相似文献   

20.
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