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1.
Receptors for activated protein kinase C (RACKs) have been isolated from the particulate cell fraction of heart and brain. We previously demonstrated that binding of protein kinase C (PKC) to RACKs requires PKC activators and is via a site on PKC that is distinct from the substrate binding site. Here, we examine the possibility that the C2 region in the regulatory domain of PKC is involved in binding of PKC to RACKs. The synaptic vesicle-specific p65 protein contains two regions homologous to the C2 region of PKC. We found that three p65 fragments, containing either one or two of these PKC C2 homologous regions, bound to highly purified RACKs. Binding of the p65 fragments and PKC to RACKs was mutually exclusive; preincubation of RACKs with the p65 fragments inhibited PKC binding, and preincubation of RACKs with PKC inhibited binding of the p65 fragments. Preincubation of the p65 fragments with a peptide resembling the PKC binding site on RACKs also inhibited p65 binding to RACKs, suggesting that PKC and p65 bind to the same or nearby regions on RACKs. Since the only homologous region between PKC and the p65 fragments is the C2 region, these results suggest that the C2 region on PKC contains at least part of the RACK binding site.  相似文献   

2.
We tested the hypothesis that the translocation and function of protein kinase C (PKC) requires the binding of PKC to its intracellular receptors (RACKs), using insulin-induced maturation of Xenopus oocytes. We show that after exposure of oocytes to insulin, PKC translocated from the cytosol to the particulate fraction. PKC is also required for insulin-induced oocyte maturation: microinjection of a PKC inhibitory peptide delayed maturation. To determine whether translocation of PKC was a result of the binding of PKC to the RACKs in the particulate fraction, we microinjected purified rat brain RACKs into oocytes before insulin exposure. Microinjection of RACKs, but not inactive phosphorylated RACKS, inhibited PKC translocation and delayed oocyte maturation. These results suggest an in vivo role for RACKs in a function mediated by PKC.  相似文献   

3.
Disruption of intramolecular interactions, translocation from one intracellular compartment to another, and binding to isozyme-specific anchoring proteins termed RACKs, accompany protein kinase C (PKC) activation. We hypothesized that in inactive epsilonPKC, the RACK-binding site is engaged in an intramolecular interaction with a sequence resembling its RACK, termed psiepsilonRACK. An amino acid difference between the psiepsilonRACK sequence in epsilonPKC and its homologous sequence in epsilonRACK constitutes a change from a polar non-charged amino acid (asparagine) in epsilonRACK to a polar charged amino acid (aspartate) in epsilonPKC. Here we show that mutating the aspartate to asparagine in epsilonPKC increased intramolecular interaction as indicated by increased resistance to proteolysis, and slower hormone- or PMA-induced translocation in cells. Substituting aspartate for a non-polar amino acid (alanine) resulted in binding to epsilonRACK without activators, in vitro, and increased translocation rate upon activation in cells. Mathematical modeling suggests that translocation is at least a two-step process. Together our data suggest that intramolecular interaction between the psiepsilonRACK site and RACK-binding site within epsilonPKC is critical and rate limiting in the process of PKC translocation.  相似文献   

4.
Receptors for activated C kinase (RACKs) are a group of PKC binding proteins that have been shown to mediate isoform-selective functions of PKC and to be crucial in the translocation and subsequent functioning of the PKC isoenzymes on activation. RACK1 cDNA from the shrimp Penaeus japonicus was isolated by homology cloning. The hepatopancreas cDNA from this shrimp was found to encode a 318-residue polypeptide whose predicted amino acid sequence shared 91% homology with human G(beta2)-like proteins. Expression of the cDNA of shrimp RACK1 in vitro yielded a 45-kDa polypeptide with positive reactivity toward the monoclonal antibodies against RACK1 of mammals. The shrimp RACK1 was biotinylated and used to compare the effects of geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate and farnesyl pyrophosphate on its binding with PKCgamma in anti-biotin-IgG precipitates. PKCgammas were isolated from shrimp eyes and mouse brains. Both enzyme preparations were able to inhibit taxol-induced tubulin polymerization. Interestingly, when either geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate or farnesyl pyrophosphate was reduced to the submicrogram level, the recruitment activity of RACK1 with purified PKCgamma was found to increase dramatically. The activation is especially significant for RACK1 and PKCgamma from different species. The observation implies that the deprivation of prenyl pyrophosphate might function as a signal for RACK1 to switch the binding from the conventional isoenzymes of PKC (cPKC) to the novel isoenzymes of PKC (nPKC). A hydrophobic binding pocket for geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate in RACK1 is further revealed via prenylation with protein geranylgeranyl transferase I of shrimp P. japonicus.  相似文献   

5.
Receptors for activated C kinase (RACKs) are a group of protein kinase C (PKC) binding proteins that have been shown to be crucial in the translocation and subsequent functioning of PKC on activation. RACK1 isolated from BALB/3T3 cells transformed with S-ras(Q61K) exhibits receptor activity for PKCgamma as competent as that of RACK1 from BALB/3T3 cells without transformation. However, the ability of RACK1 from transformed cells to bind with beta-tubulin peptide specific for Taxol (PEPtaxol) is defective. Interestingly, when farnesyl pyrophosphate was added at the submicrogram level, the association between RACK1 and PEPtaxol was enhanced significantly in a dosage-dependent manner. A parallel finding for the enhanced effect of farnesyl pyrophosphate on tubulin binding was established with mice RACK1 expressed in vitro. On the other hand, geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate, and retinoic acid failed to modulate the binding between RACK1 and tubulin. The dissociation of RACK1 and tubulin was not effective at damaging the binding between RACK1 and membrane receptor integrin beta1 in transformed cells. These findings indicate that depletion of farnesyl pyrophosphate provides a mechanism to seal PKC signaling on the membrane with immobile RACK1 and to divert cells to aberrant growth, such as transformation.  相似文献   

6.
Protein kinase C (PKC) isozymes move upon activation from one intracellular site to another. PKC-binding proteins, such as receptors for activated C kinase (RACKs), play an important role in regulating the localization and diverse functions of PKC isozymes. RACK1, the receptor for activated betaIIPKC, determines the localization and functional activity of betaIIPKC. However, the mechanism by which RACK1 localizes activated betaIIPKC is not known. Here, we provide evidence that the intracellular localization of RACK1 changes in response to PKC activation. In Chinese hamster ovary cells transfected with the dopamine D2L receptor and in NG108-15 cells, PKC activation by either phorbol ester or a dopamine D2 receptor agonist caused the movement of RACK1. Moreover, PKC activation resulted in the in situ association and movement of RACK1 and betaIIPKC to the same intracellular sites. Time course studies indicate that PKC activation induces the association of the two proteins prior to their co-movement. We further show that association of RACK1 and betaIIPKC is required for the movement of both proteins. Our results suggest that RACK1 is a PKC shuttling protein that moves betaIIPKC from one intracellular site to another.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Protein kinase C (PKC) regulation of cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) chloride function has been demonstrated in several cell lines, including Calu-3 cells that express native, wild-type CFTR. We demonstrated previously that PKC epsilon was required for cAMP-dependent CFTR function. The goal of this study was to determine whether PKC epsilon interacts directly with CFTR. Using overlay assay, immunoprecipitation, pulldown and binding assays, we show that PKC epsilon does not bind to CFTR, but does bind to a receptor for activated C kinase (RACK1), a 37-kDa scaffold protein, and that RACK1 binds to Na(+)/H(+) exchange regulatory factor (NHERF1), a binding partner of CFTR. In vitro binding assays demonstrate dose-dependent binding of PKC epsilon to RACK1 which is inhibited by an 8-amino acid peptide based on the sequence of the sixth Trp-Asp repeat in RACK1 or by an 8-amino acid sequence in the V1 region of PKC epsilon, epsilon V1-2. A 4-amino acid sequence INAL (70-73) expressed in CFTR shares 50% homology to the RACK1 inhibitory peptide, but it does not bind PKC epsilon. NHERF1 and RACK1 bind in a dose-dependent manner. Immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy of RACK1 and CFTR revealed colocalization of the proteins to the apical and lateral regions of Calu-3 cells. The results indicate the RACK1 binds PKC epsilon and NHERF1, thus serving as a scaffold protein to anchor the enzyme in proximity to CFTR.  相似文献   

9.
Protein kinase C (PKC) isozymes comprise a family of related enzymes that play a central role in many intracellular eukaryotic signaling events. Isozyme specificity is mediated by association of each PKC isozyme with specific anchoring proteins, termed RACKs. The C2 domain of betaPKC contains at least part of the RACK-binding sites. Because the C2 domain contains also a RACK-like sequence (termed pseudo-RACK), it was proposed that this pseudo-RACK site mediates intramolecular interaction with one of the RACK-binding sites in the C2 domain itself, stabilizing the inactive conformation of betaPKC. BetaPKC depends on calcium for its activation, and the C2 domain contains the calcium-binding sites. The x-ray structure of the C2 domain of betaPKC shows that three Ca(2+) ions can be coordinated by two opposing loops at one end of the domain. Starting from this x-ray structure, we have performed molecular dynamics (MD) calculations on the C2 domain of betaPKC bound to three Ca(2+) ions, to two Ca(2+) ions, and in the Ca(2+)-free state, in order to analyze the effect of calcium on the RACK-binding sites and the pseudo-RACK sites, as well as on the loops that constitute the binding site for the Ca(2+) ions. The results show that calcium stabilizes the beta-sandwich structure of the C2 domain and thus affects two of the three RACK-binding sites within the C2 domain. Also, the interactions between the third RACK-binding site and the pseudo-RACK site are not notably modified by the removal of Ca(2+) ions. On that basis, we predict that the pseudo-RACK site within the C2 domain masks a RACK-binding site in another domain of betaPKC, possibly the V5 domain. Finally, the MD modeling shows that two Ca(2+) ions are able to interact with two molecules of O-phospho-l-serine. These data suggest that Ca(2+) ions may be directly involved in PKC binding to phosphatidylserine, an acidic lipid located exclusively on the cytoplasmic face of membranes, that is required for PKC activation.  相似文献   

10.
Protein kinase C (PKC), a phospholipid-dependent serine/threonine kinase, appears to be involved in the signal transduction response to many hormones and growth factors; there are 11 different PKC isozymes. Because PKC isozymes directly and/or indirectly participate in signal transduction pathways of normal and transformed cells through phosphorylation of target proteins, it is critical to understand the diversity of the intracellular signaling pathways regulated by each PKC isozyme. Thus, PKC isozyme-specific substrates are useful to understand the characterization of the intracellular signaling pathways for each PKC isozyme. Consensus sequences and sequence information obtained from PKC target proteins are very important to design PKC isozyme-specific peptide substrates. Moreover, computational prediction programs of phosphorylation sites using a library of peptide substrates aid in the fast design of PKC isozyme-specific peptide substrates. Although a large number of target proteins and synthetic peptides for PKCs are known, only two peptide substrates (peptide 422–426 of murine elongation factor-1α and Alphatomega peptide) have been reported as PKC isozyme-specific peptide substrates. This discussion will review the literature concerning these native and synthetic PKC isozyme-specific peptide substrates and their design.  相似文献   

11.
We have compared the transmembrane signals generated in human basophils by two distinct stimuli, anti-IgE antibody and FMLP (f-met peptide). Although both stimuli resulted in the activation of protein kinase C (PKC) and an increase in intracellular free calcium, there were substantial differences between the two which suggested that distinct signal transduction mechanisms were operating. We have confirmed an earlier observation that the cross-linking of IgE led to an increase in membrane PKC activity with no apparent concomitant loss of cytosolic PKC and established that in contrast, the univalent stimulus, f-met peptide, resulted in the canonical translocation of cytosolic PKC to the membrane. Furthermore, unlike anti-IgE-stimulated basophils, there was no clear relationship between the increase in PKC activity and the subsequent release of histamine. Two PKC inhibitors, staurosporine (0.1 to 1 nM) and sphingosine (25 to 50 microM), inhibited anti-IgE induced release, yet, potentiated the release of mediators after a challenge with 1 microM f-met peptide. Both stimuli led to an increase in the intracellular Ca2+ levels that correlated well with the release of histamine, however, the anti-IgE-induced responses were typically only 50% of those required to give equivalent histamine release when f-met peptide initiated release. Pharmacologic evidence suggested that the up-regulation of PKC was required for a full IgE-mediated Ca2+ response and that PKC contributed to the elevated Ca2+ levels that persist for up to 15 min after the addition of anti-IgE. In contrast, the PKC inhibitor, staurosporine, did not affect the initial increase in Ca2+ after the addition of f-met peptide but reduced the rate at which Ca2+ was removed from the cytosol. Experiments with the phorbol ester, PMA, suggested that substantial degranulation can occur in the absence of any increase in intracellular Ca2+. The addition of 10 ng/ml PMA 10 min before the addition of f-met peptide did not affect the magnitude of the initial Ca2+ transient but increased the rate at which Ca2+ levels returned to a stable baseline. Similar pretreatment with PMA almost completely abolished the anti-IgE antibody-induced Ca2+ response. These experiments, together with other previous data, suggest that the activation of PKC is a prodegranulatory component of the IgE-mediated signal transduction pathway, yet serves principally to modulate the Ca2+ signal when f-met peptide initiates release.  相似文献   

12.
We have analysed the effect of mitogenic lectins on c-Fos and c-Jun protein levels as well as on activator protein-1 (AP-1) binding and enhancer activity in Jurkat T-cells. Both c-Fos and c-Jun protein levels were increased after Con A and PHA stimulation. Since T-cell stimulation increases both intracellular Ca2+ and cAMP levels and activates protein kinase C (PKC), the possible involvement of these intracellular messengers in c-Fos and c-Jun induction was tested. PMA, which directly activates PKC, mimicked the effect of the lectins on c-Fos and c-Jun, but elevation of either intracellular Ca2+ or cAMP levels had little or no effect. The mitogen-induced increase of c-Fos and c-Jun immunoreactivity was inhibited by H-7, a kinase inhibitor with relatively high specificity for PKC, and less efficiently by H-8, a structurally related kinase inhibitor less active on PKC, but more active on cyclic nucleotide-dependent kinases. Con A stimulation was found to increase both binding of AP-1 to the AP-1 consensus sequence, TRE, and AP-1 enhancer activity, in Jurkat cells. PMA was also found to increase the AP-1 enhancer activity, whereas elevation of Ca2+ or cAMP had only minor effects. We conclude that stimulation with mitogenic lectins is sufficient to increase both c-Fos and c-Jun protein levels, AP-1 binding and AP-1 enhancer activity in Jurkat cells and that they act via mechanisms that could involve the activation of PKC.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract: The γ2 subunit of the GABAA receptor (GABAA-R) is alternatively spliced. The long variant (γ2L) contains eight additional amino acids that possess a consensus sequence site for protein phosphorylation. Previous studies have demonstrated that a peptide or fusion protein containing these eight amino acids is a substrate for protein kinase C (PKC), but not cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA)-stimulated phosphorylation. We have examined the ability of PKA, PKC, and Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CAM kinase II) to phosphorylate a synthetic peptide corresponding to residues 336–351 of the intracellular loop of the γ2L subunit and inclusive of the alternatively spliced phosphorylation consensus sequence site. PKC and CAM kinase II produced significant phosphorylation of this peptide, but PKA was ineffective. The K m values for PKC-and CAM kinase II-stimulated phosphorylation of this peptide were 102 and 35 μM , respectively. Maximal velocities of 678 and 278 nmol of phosphate/min/mg were achieved by PKC and CAM kinase II, respectively. The phosphorylation site in the eight-amino-acid insert of the γ2L subunit has been shown to be necessary for ethanol potentiation of the GABAA-R. Thus, our results suggest that PKC, CAM kinase II, or both may play a role in the effects of ethanol on GABAergic function.  相似文献   

14.
H L Wu  C Albrightson  P Nambi 《Peptides》1999,20(6):675-678
RACK (receptor for activated C-kinase) is a protein that binds and translocates protein kinase C (PKC) to the appropriate cellular organelles. The binding of RACK has been mapped to C2 region of PKC. A number of peptides from the C2 region of PKCbeta have been shown to inhibit the translocation and activation of PKCbeta. This investigation was undertaken to study the role of PKCbeta in rat mesangial cell proliferation mediated by a number of mitogens. Exposure of rat mesangial cells to thrombin, endothelin, epidermal growth factor, and phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate resulted in increased [3H]thymidine incorporation. Pretreatment of mesangial cells with Ro 32-0432 (selective PKC inhibitor) inhibited the proliferation mediated by all the above mitogens, suggesting that these mitogens mediated proliferation through PKC. Experiments were performed to further evaluate the involvement of PKCbeta in this process by using the peptide derived from the C-2 region of PKCbeta as a tool. The data suggest that although the peptide (P) alone had no effect on basal- or mitogen-mediated proliferation, the peptide in the presence of a carrier peptide (PC) inhibited proliferation mediated by endothelin. In the same experiment, proliferation mediated by epidermal growth factor, thrombin and phorbol dibutyrate was unaffected, suggesting that in rat mesangial cells, endothelin mediated proliferation through the activation of PKCbeta.  相似文献   

15.
The growth stimulating-/cholecystokinin (CCK) releasing-peptide (monitor peptide) is a peptide purified from rat bile-pancreatic juice on the basis of its stimulatory activity toward pancreatic enzyme secretion. Its multiple functions and peptide sequence suggested that it is distinct from epidermal growth factor (EGF). However, we found that the peptide competes with [125I]-EGF in the binding to Swiss 3T3 fibroblast cells to almost the same extent as unlabeled EGF does. [125I]-EGF binding was inhibited by 50% by the peptide at 82.8 ng/ml and by unlabeled EGF at 71.4 ng/ml. This suggests that the growth stimulating effect of the peptide on 3T3 fibroblasts is mediated via the EGF receptor, and also suggests that the partial homologous sequence between monitor peptide and EGF is required for the receptor binding, or that the EGF receptor has a broad ligand specificity.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: Several laboratories have reported a lack of protein kinase C (PKC) activation in response to various stimuli in the brain of aged rats. It has been suggested that changes in lipid membrane composition could be related to this functional deficit. However, recent evidence has indicated that the translocation of PKC to the different subcellular compartments is controlled by protein-protein interactions. Recently, a class of proteins, termed receptors for activated C kinase (RACKs), have been described that bind PKC. The present study was conducted to determine whether alterations in RACK1, the best-characterized member of RACKs, were associated with changes in translocation and expression of PKC. Quantitative immunoblotting revealed that RACK1 content was decreased by ∼50% in aged rat brain cortex, compared with that in adult and middle-aged animals. The levels of calcium-independent PKCδ and ε, interacting with RACK1, and related calcium-independent PKC activity were not modified by the aging process. By comparison, phorbol ester-stimulated translocation of this activity and of PKCδ and ε immunoreactivity was absent in cortex from aged animals, as well as the translocation of the calcium-dependent PKCβ, also known to interact with RACK1. These results indicate that a deficit in RACK1 may contribute to the functional impairment in PKC activation observed in aged rat brain.  相似文献   

17.
A recently cloned mouse cDNA designated F52 encodes a putative protein with striking sequence similarity to the MARCKS protein, a major cellular substrate for protein kinase C (PKC). Major regions of sequence similarity include the amino-terminal myristoylation consensus sequence and the central calmodulin-binding/PKC phosphorylation site domain. The F52 protein was expressed in Escherichia coli with apparent M(r) 50,000; it was a substrate for PKC and comigrated on two-dimensional electrophoresis with a myristoylated protein whose phosphorylation was stimulated by phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate in mouse neuroblastoma cells. The F52 protein also was myristoylated in E. coli by co-expression with N-myristoyltransferase. A 24-amino acid peptide derived from the protein's phosphorylation site domain was a good substrate for PKC; like the cognate MARCKS peptide, it was phosphorylated with high affinity (S0.5 = 173 nM) and positive cooperativity (KH = 5.4). The F52 peptide also bound calmodulin with high affinity (Kd = less than 3 nM); this binding could be disrupted by phosphorylation of the peptide with PKC, with a half-time of 8 min. The F52 protein is clearly a member of the MARCKS family as defined by primary sequence; in addition, the two proteins share several key attributes that may be functionally important.  相似文献   

18.
To isolate collagen-binding cell surface proteins, detergent extracts of surface-iodinated MG-63 human osteosarcoma cells were chromatographed on affinity matrices of either type I collagen-Sepharose or Sepharose carrying a collagen-like triple-helical peptide. The peptide was designed to be triple helical and to contain the sequence Arg-Gly-Asp, which has been implicated as the cell attachment site of fibronectin, vitronectin, fibrinogen, and von Willebrand factor, and is also present in type I collagen. Three radioactive polypeptides having apparent molecular masses of 250 kD, 70 kD, and 30 kD were distinguishable in that they showed affinity toward the collagen and collagen-like peptide affinity columns, and could be specifically eluted from these columns with a solution of an Arg-Gly-Asp-containing peptide, Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Thr-Pro. These collagen-binding polypeptides associated with phosphatidylcholine liposomes, and the resulting liposomes bound specifically to type I collagen or the collagen-like peptide but not to fibronectin or vitronectin or heat-denatured collagen. The binding of these liposomes to type I collagen could be inhibited with the peptide Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Thr-Pro and with EDTA, but not with a variant peptide Gly-Arg-Gly-Glu-Ser-Pro. We conclude from these data that these three polypeptides are membrane molecules that behave as a cell surface receptor (or receptor complex) for type I collagen by interacting with it through the Arg-Gly-Asp tripeptide adhesion signal. The lack of binding to denatured collagen suggests that the conformation of the Arg-Gly-Asp sequence is important in the recognition of collagen by the receptor complex.  相似文献   

19.
A 25-amino acid peptide, containing the four protein kinase C (PKC) phosphorylation sites and the calmodulin (CaM) binding domain of the myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS) protein, has been synthesized and used to determine the effects of phosphorylation on its binding and regulation of CaM. PKC phosphorylation of this peptide (3.0 mol of Pi/mol of peptide) produced a 200-fold decrease in its affinity for CaM. PKC phosphorylation of the peptide resulted in its dissociation from CaM over a time course that paralleled the phosphorylation of 1 mol of serine/mol of peptide. The peptide inhibited CaM's binding to myosin light chain kinase and CaM's stimulation of phosphodiesterase and calcineurin. PKC phosphorylation of the peptide resulted in a rapid release of bound CaM, allowing its subsequent binding to myosin light chain kinase (t1/2 = 1.6 min), stimulation of phosphodiesterase (t1/2 = 1.2 min) and calcineurin (t1/2 = 1.7 min). Partially purified MARCKS protein produced a similar inhibition of CaM-phosphodiesterase which was reversed by PKC phosphorylation. PKC phosphorylation of the peptide occurred primarily at serine 8 and serine 12, and phosphorylation of serine 12 regulated peptide affinity for CaM. Thus, PKC phosphorylation of the peptide and the MARCKS protein results in the rapid release of CaM and the subsequent activation of CaM-dependent enzymes. This process might allow for interplay between PKC and CaM-dependent signal transduction pathways.  相似文献   

20.
The protein kinase C (PKC) family has been clearly implicated in T-cell activation as have several nonreceptor protein-tyrosine kinases associated with the T-cell receptor, including p59fyn. This report demonstrates that thetaPKC and p59fyn specifically interact in vitro, in the yeast two-hybrid system, and in T-cells. Further indications of direct interaction are that p59fyn potentiates thetaPKC catalytic activity and that thetaPKC is a substrate for tyrosine phosphorylation by p59fyn. This interaction may account for the localization of thetaPKC following T-cell activation, pharmacological disruption of which results in specific cell-signaling defects. The demonstration of a physical interaction between a PKC and a protein-tyrosine kinase expands the class of PKC-anchoring proteins (receptors for activated C kinases (RACKs)) and demonstrates a direct connection between these two major T-cell-signaling pathways.  相似文献   

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