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1.
The changes in the levels of protein kinase C [PKC(alpha, beta II, gamma)] were studied in cytosolic and particulate fractions of striatal homogenates from rats subjected to 15 min of cerebral ischemia induced by bilateral occlusion of the common carotid arteries and following 1 h, 6 h, and 48 h of reperfusion. During ischemia the levels of PKC(beta II) and -(gamma) increased in the particulate fraction to 390% and 590% of control levels, respectively, concomitant with a decrease in the cytosolic fraction to 36% and 20% of control, respectively, suggesting that PKC is redistributed from the cytosol to cell membranes. During reperfusion the PKC(beta II) levels in the particulate fraction remained elevated at 1 h postischemia and decreased to below control levels after 48 h reperfusion, whereas PKC(gamma) rapidly decreased to subnormal levels. In the cytosol PKC(beta II) and -(gamma) decreased to 25% and 15% of control levels at 48 h, respectively. The distribution of PKC(alpha) did not change significantly during ischemia and early reperfusion. The PKC activity in the particulate fraction measured in vitro by histone IIIS phosphorylation in the presence of calcium, 4 beta-phorbol 13-myristate 12-acetate, and phosphatidylserine (PS) significantly decreased by 52% during ischemia, and remained depressed over the 48-h reperfusion period. In the cytosolic fraction PKC activity was unchanged at the end of ischemia, and decreased by 47% after 6 h of reperfusion. The appearance of a stable cytosolic 50-kDa PKC-immunoreactive peptide or an increase in the calcium- and PS-independent histone IIIS phosphorylation was not observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Hyperammonemia is responsible for most neurological alterations in patients with hepatic encephalopathy by mechanisms that remain unclear. Hyperammonemia alters phosphorylation of neuronal protein kinase C (PKC) substrates and impairs NMDA receptor-associated signal transduction. The aim of this work was to analyse the effects of hyperammonemia on the amount and intracellular distribution of PKC isoforms and on translocation of each isoform induced by NMDA receptor activation in cerebellar neurons. Chronic hyperammonemia alters differentially the intracellular distribution of PKC isoforms. The amount of all isoforms (except PKC zeta) was reduced (17-50%) in the particulate fraction. The contents of alpha, beta1, and epsilon isoforms decreased similarly in cytosol (65-78%) and membranes (66-83%), whereas gamma, delta, and theta; isoforms increased in cytosol but decreased in membranes, and zeta isoform increased in membranes and decreased in cytosol. Chronic hyperammonemia also affects differentially NMDA-induced translocation of PKC isoforms. NMDA-induced translocation of PKC alpha and beta is prevented by ammonia, whereas PKC gamma, delta, epsilon, or theta; translocation is not affected. Inhibition of phospholipase C did not affect PKC alpha translocation but reduced significantly PKC gamma translocation, indicating that NMDA-induced translocation of PKC alpha is mediated by Ca2+, whereas PKC gamma translocation is mediated by diacylglycerol. Chronic hyperammonemia reduces Ca+2-mediated but not diacylglycerol-mediated translocation of PKC isoforms induced by NMDA.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract: The time course for the ischemia-induced changes in the subcellular distribution of protein kinase C (PKC) (α), (β311). and (γ) and the activity of PKC were studied in the neocortex of rats subjected to 1, 2, 3, 5, 10, and 15 min of global cerebral ischemia. In the particulate fraction, a 14-fold increase in PKC (γ) levels was seen at 3 min of ischemia, which further increased at 5–15 min of ischemia. At 15 min of ischemia, PKC (γ) and (βll) levels had increased two- and six-fold, respectively. In the cytosolic fraction, a transient early 1.4-fold increase in PKC (βll) and PKC (γ) levels was seen, whereas no change in the levels PKC (α) was noted. PKC (γ) levels then progressively declined, reaching 50% at 15 min of ischemia. At 5 min of ischemia, a 43% decrease in PKC activity was seen in the particulate fraction, reaching 50% at 15 min of ischemia concomitant with a 27% decrease in the cytosolic fraction. There was no change in the activator-independent PKC activity. Pretreatment with the ganglioside AGF2 prevented the redistribution of PKC (γ) in the particulate fraction at 5 min. but not at 10 min of ischemia. The observed time course for the translocation of PKC (γ) parallels the ischemia-induced release of neurotransmitters and increased levels of diacylglycerols, arachidonate, and intra-cellular calcium and delineates this subspecies as especially ischemia-sensitive. Ganglioside pretreatment delayed the translocation of PKC (γ), possibly by counteracting the effects of ischemia-induced factors that favor PKC binding to cell membranes.  相似文献   

4.
Total PKC activity in BAEC incubated for 24 hrs in either 10% serum (FBS) or serum-deprived media (SDM) was similar. However, most of the activity (69%) in the FBS group was detected in the particulate fraction, while it was mainly in the cytosolic fraction (66%) in the SDM group. By confocal microscopy, there was diffuse cytoplasmic localization of the antibodies to the alpha and beta PKC isoforms. gamma PKC was not detected. Treatment of FBS or SDM cells with a phorbol ester resulted in an increase in PKC activity with translocation to the particulate fraction. PKC alpha immunofluorescence redistributed to the perinuclear region whereas PKC beta staining remained mostly cytosolic. Calphostin C, a PKC inhibitor, prevented the phorbol ester-induced increase in PKC activity and translocation.  相似文献   

5.
Effect of Brain Ischemia on Protein Kinase C   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
We examined the influence of brain ischemia on the activity and subcellular distribution of protein kinase C (PKC). Two different models of ischemic brain injury were used: postdecapitative ischemia in rat forebrain and transient (6-min) cerebral ischemia in gerbil hippocampus. In the rat forebrain model, at 5 and 15 min postdecapitation there was a steady decrease of total PKC activity to 60% of control values. This decrease occurred without changes in the proportion of the particulate to the soluble enzyme pools. Isolated rat brain membranes also exhibited a concomitant decrease of [3H]phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate ([3H]PDBu) binding with an apparent increase of the ligand affinity to the postischemic membranes. On the other hand, the ischemic gerbil hippocampus model displayed a 40% decrease of total PKC activity, which was accompanied by a relative increase of PKC activity in its membrane-bound form. This resulted in an increase in the membrane/total activity ratio, indicating a possible enzyme translocation from cytosol to the membranes after ischemia. Moreover, after 1 day of recovery, a statistically significant enhancement of membrane-bound PKC activity resulted in a further increase of its relative activity up to 162% of control values. In vitro experiments using a synaptoneurosomal particulate fraction were performed to clarify the mechanism of the rapid PKC inhibition observed in cerebral tissue after ischemia. These experiments showed a progressive, Ca(2+)-dependent, antiprotease-insensitive down-regulation of PKC during incubation. This down-regulation was significantly enhanced by prior phorbol (PDBu) treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Five rabbit cDNAs, encoding four conventional protein kinase Cs (PKCs), alpha, beta I, beta II, and gamma, and a novel PKC-related protein (nPKC epsilon) were transfected into COS cells. Antisera raised against a bacterially synthesized fragment of PKC alpha or nPKC epsilon and against a chemically synthesized peptide of PKC beta I or beta II, specifically identified the corresponding species in the transfected cells. All four PKCs and nPKC epsilon expressed by transfection served as phorbol ester receptors. Phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu)-binding activities of all PKCs and nPKC epsilon required phospholipid but not magnesium. The phosphatidylserine requirement for the activity of nPKC epsilon is independent of Ca2+ and similar to that for PKC alpha observed at 0.03 mM Ca2+. Calcium dependence of the binding activity was observed only for the four conventional PKCs. Scatchard plot analysis clearly showed that the dissociation constants of PDBu for all four PKCs were nearly the same (approximately 25 nM) in the presence of Ca2+, and that the value for nPKC epsilon was slightly higher (84 nM) and independent of Ca2+. The latter value is comparable to those observed in several cell types under conditions of Ca2+ chelation. Translocation of conventional PKC alpha to the membranes was induced with phorbol ester in a Ca2+-dependent manner, whereas the PDBu-stimulated translocation of nPKC epsilon did not require Ca2+. These results, together with previous studies on the enzymological characteristics of nPKC epsilon (Ohno, S., Akita, Y., Konno, Y., Imajoh, S., and Suzuki, K. (1988) Cell 53, 731-741), suggest that nPKC epsilon plays an important role in a transmembrane signaling pathway distinct from that involving conventional PKCs.  相似文献   

7.
The subcellular redistribution of protein kinase C family members (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, epsilon and zeta isoforms) was examined in response to treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13 acetate (TPA) or nerve growth factor (NGF) in a synaptosomal-enriched P2 fraction from rat brain. Treatment with TPA affected members of the classical-PKC family (alpha, beta and gamma), resulting in a final loss of total protein of each isoenzyme. The kinetics of changes of members of the novel-PKC family are different, the delta isoform being translocated, but not down-regulated, while the epsilon isoform showing only a slight diminishing of immunoreactivity in the soluble and particulate fractions. The atypical-PKC zeta isoform was not translocated in response to TPA. Incubation with NGF induced a loss of immunoreactivity of the cytosolic alpha, beta and epsilon isoforms, but the membrane fractions of these isoforms were not appreciably affected. In contrast, a marked translocation from cytosol to membrane was observed in the case of the gamma and delta isoforms. The zeta isoform presented a slight translocation from the particulate fraction to the soluble fraction. Thus, the results show that the effects of TPA and NGF on PKC isoforms are not coincident in synaptosomes, the 6 isoform being activated and not down-regulated by both treatments, whereas the gamma isoform is only down-regulated in the case of TPA, but presents sustained translocation with NGF, indicating that PKC isoform-specific degradation pathways exist in synaptic terminals. The effects of NGF on PKC isoforms coexist with an increase in NGF-induced polyphosphoinositide hydrolysis, suggesting the participation of phospholipases.  相似文献   

8.
Treatment of human promyelocytic leukemia cells U937 with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (TPA) induces them to differentiate into monocytic cells [Harris, P., & Ralph, P. (1985) J. Leukocyte Biol. 37, 407-422]. Here we investigated the effects of TPA on interleukin 1 gene expression and the possible role of protein kinase C (PKC) in this process. Addition of TPA to serum-starved U937 cells induced the expression of the interleukin 1 beta (IL-1 beta) gene. This effect was apparent as early as 2 h and peaked at 24 h in the presence of 5 X 10(-8) M TPA. Higher concentrations of TPA, which partially or totally depleted protein kinase C levels in the cells (10(-9)-2 X 10(-5) M), had an inhibitory effect on IL-1 beta mRNA expression. Cell-permeable 1,2-dioctanoyl-sn-glycerol (diC8), a diacylglycerol that activates PKC in intact cells and cell-free systems, did not mimic the effect of TPA on the IL-1 beta mRNA induction. To determine the protein kinase C isozymes present in the control and TPA- (5 X 10(-8) M) treated U937 cells, we prepared antipeptide antibodies that specifically recognize the alpha, beta, and gamma isoforms of protein kinase C in rat brain cytosol and U937 cell extracts. In "control" U937 cells, 30% of PKC alpha was particulate, and PKC beta was cytosolic, while there was no detectable PKC gamma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Evidence suggests that protein kinase C (PKC) and intracellular calcium are important for amphetamine-stimulated outward transport of dopamine in rat striatum. In this study, we examined the effect of select PKC isoforms on amphetamine-stimulated dopamine efflux, focusing on Ca(2+)-dependent forms of PKC. Efflux of endogenous dopamine was measured in superfused rat striatal slices; dopamine was measured by high performance liquid chromatography. The non-selective classical PKC inhibitor G?6976 inhibited amphetamine-stimulated dopamine efflux, whereas rottlerin, a specific inhibitor of PKC delta, had no effect. A highly specific PKC beta inhibitor, LY379196, blocked dopamine efflux that was stimulated by either amphetamine or the PKC activator, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate. None of the PKC inhibitors significantly altered [3H]dopamine uptake. PKC beta(I) and PKC beta(II), but not PKC alpha or PKC gamma, were co-immunoprecipitated from rat striatal membranes with the dopamine transporter (DAT). Conversely, antisera to PKC beta(I) and PKC beta(II) but not PKC alpha or PKCg amma were able to co-immunoprecipitate DAT. Amphetamine-stimulated dopamine efflux was significantly enhanced in hDAT-HEK 293 cells transfected with PKC beta(II) as compared with hDAT-HEK 293 cells alone, or hDAT-HEK 293 cells transfected with PKCa lpha or PKC beta(I). These results suggest that classical PKC beta(II) is physically associated with DAT and is important in maintaining the amphetamine-stimulated outward transport of dopamine in rat striatum.  相似文献   

10.
We investigated ATP hydrolysis by a mutant (DeltaNC) alpha3beta3gamma subcomplex of F0F1-ATP synthase from the thermophilic Bacillus PS3 that is defective in the noncatalytic nucleotide binding sites. This mutant subcomplex was activated by inorganic phosphate ions (Pi) and did not show continuous ATP hydrolysis activity in the absence of Pi. Pi also activated the wild-type alpha3beta3gamma subcomplex in a similar manner. Sulphate activated wild-type alpha3beta3gamma but not DeltaNC alpha3beta3gamma, indicating that Pi activation did not involve noncatalytic sites but that sulphate activation did. Pi also activated ATP hydrolysis and coupled proton translocation by the wild-type and DeltaNC F0F1-ATP synthases reconstituted into vesicle membranes.  相似文献   

11.
Polyclonal isoenzyme-specific antisera were developed against four calcium-independent protein kinase C (PKC) isoenzymes (delta, epsilon, epsilon', and zeta) as well as the calcium-dependent isoforms (alpha, beta I, beta II, and gamma). These antisera showed high specificities, high titers, and high binding affinities (3-370 nM) for the peptide antigens to which they were raised. Each antiserum detected a species of the predicted molecular weight by Western blot that could be blocked with the immunizing peptide. PKC was sequentially purified from rat brain, and the calcium-dependent forms were finally resolved by hydroxyapatite chromatography. Peak I reacted exclusively with antisera to PKC gamma, peak II with PKC beta I and -beta II, and peak III with PKC alpha. These same fractions, however, were devoid of immunoreactivity for the calcium-independent isoenzymes. The PKC isoenzymes demonstrated a distinctive tissue distribution when evaluated by Western blot and immunocytochemistry. PCK delta was present in brain, heart, spleen, lung, liver, ovary, pancreas, and adrenal tissues. PKC epsilon was present in brain, kidney, and pancreas, whereas PKC epsilon' was present predominantly in brain. PKC zeta was present in most tissues, particularly the lung, brain, and liver. Both PKC delta and PKC zeta showed some heterogeneity of size among the different tissues. PKC alpha was present in all organs and tissues examined. PKC beta I and -beta II were present in greatest amount in brain and spleen. Although the brain contained the most PKC gamma immunoreactivity, some immunostaining was also seen in adrenal tissue. These studies provide the first evidence of selective organ and tissue distributions of the calcium-independent PKC isoenzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Protein kinase C (PKC) molecular species of GH4C1 cells were analyzed after separation by hydroxyapatite column chromatography. A novel Ca2(+)-independent PKC, nPKC epsilon, was identified together with two conventional Ca2(+)-dependent PKCs, PKC alpha and beta II by analysis of kinase and phorbol ester-binding activities, immunoblotting using isozyme-specific antibodies, and Northern blotting. These PKCs are down-regulated differently when cells are stimulated by outer stimuli; phorbol esters deplete PKC beta II and nPKC epsilon from the cells more rapidly than PKC alpha, whereas thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) at 200 nM depletes nPKC epsilon exclusively with a time course similar to that induced by phorbol esters. However, translocation of PKC alpha and beta II to the membranes is elicited by both TRH and phorbol esters. These results suggest that TRH and phorbol ester activate PKC alpha and beta II differently but that nPKC epsilon is stimulated similarly by both stimuli. Thus, in GH4C1 cells, Ca2(+)-independent nPKC epsilon may play a crucial role distinct from that mediated by Ca2(+)-dependent PKC alpha and beta II in a cellular response elicited by both TRH and phorbol esters.  相似文献   

13.
The possible activation of protein kinase C (PKC) during total cerebral ischemia was investigated in the rat. Translocation of PKC activity from the soluble to the particulate fraction was used as an index of PKC activation. There was a drop in the proportion of particulate PKC activity from 30% for controls to 20% by 30 min of ischemia (p less than 0.01). By 20 min of cardiac arrest, there was a 40% decline of the total cellular PKC activity (p less than 0.01). This was not accompanied by an increase in activator-independent activity, a finding indicating PKC was not being converted to protein kinase M. These data suggest that PKC was not activated during ischemia, but rather that ischemia causes a reduction in cellular PKC activity. Translocation of PKC activity to the particulate fraction was not observed in the cerebral cortex or hippocampus of reperfused brain for up to 6 h of recovery following 11-13 min of total cerebral ischemia. The level of total, soluble, and particulate PKC activity in the cerebral cortex was reduced (p less than 0.05), corresponding to the decrease observed by 15 min of ischemia without reflow. A similar decline in activity was also observed in the hippocampus. No increase in activator-independent activity was observed. These data suggest that PKC was inhibited during cerebral ischemia and that this reduced level of PKC activity was maintained throughout 6 h of recovery. We conclude that pathological activation of PKC was not responsible for the evolution of ischemic brain damage.  相似文献   

14.
Individual protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms fulfill distinct roles in the regulation of the commitment to differentiation, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis in both monocytes and T-cells. The human monocyte like cell line U937 and T-cells were exposed to microgravity, during spaceflight and the translocation (a critical step in PKC signaling) of individual isoforms to cell particulate fraction examined. PKC activating phorbol esters induced a rapid translocation of several PKC isoforms to the particulate fraction of U937 monocytes under terrestrial gravity (1 g) conditions in the laboratory. In microgravity, the translocation of PKC beta II, delta, and epsilon in response to phorbol esters was reduced in microgravity compared to 1 g, but was enhanced in weak hypergravity (1.4 g). All isoforms showed a net increase in particulate PKC following phorbol ester stimulation, except PKC delta which showed a net decrease in microgravity. In T-cells, phorbol ester induced translocation of PKC delta was reduced in microgravity, compared to 1 g, while PKC beta II translocation was not significantly different at the two g-levels. These data show that microgravity differentially alters the translocation of individual PKC isoforms in monocytes and T-cells, thus providing a partial explanation for the modifications previously observed in the activation of these cell types under microgravity.  相似文献   

15.
Protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms are key mediators in hormone, growth factor, and neurotransmitter triggered pathways of cell activation (Nishizuka: Science 233:305-312, 1986; Nature 334:661-665, 1988). Stimulation of kinase activity by diacylglycerol and calcium often leads to translocation of PKC from the cytosol to a particulate fraction (Kraft and Anderson: Nature 301:621-623, 1983). The beta isoform of PKC is translocated and degraded much more rapidly than the alpha isoform in phorbolester-stimulated rat basophilic leukemia (RBL) cells (Huang et al.: J. Biol. Chem. 264:4238-4243, 1989). We report here immunofluorescence evidence that the distributions of PKC alpha and beta are strikingly different in antigen-activated RBL cells. PKC beta associates with perinuclear filaments and filaments that extend from the perinuclear area to the cell periphery whereas PKC alpha concentrates in regions of the cell periphery. This distribution of PKC beta is distinctly different from that of actin filaments and microtubules as determined by phalloidin staining and by anti-tubulin antibody labeling. In contrast, the staining patterns obtained with antibodies to PKC beta and to the intermediate filament protein vimentin are almost identical, indicating that PKC beta associates with vimentin filaments. These bundles of 100 A filaments may provide docking sites for interactions of PKC beta with its substrates and thus confer specificity to the actions of this isoform.  相似文献   

16.
The independently folding C2 domain motif serves as a Ca(2+)-dependent membrane docking trigger in a large number of Ca(2+) signaling pathways. A comparison was initiated between three closely related C2 domains from the conventional protein kinase C subfamily (cPKC, isoforms alpha, beta, and gamma). The results reveal that these C2 domain isoforms exhibit some similarities but are specialized in important ways, including different Ca(2+) stoichiometries. In the absence of membranes, Ca(2+) affinities of the isolated C2 domains are similar (2-fold difference) while Hill coefficients reveal cooperative Ca(2+) binding for the PKC beta C2 domain but not for the PKC alpha or PKC gamma C2 domain (H = 2.3 +/- 0.1 for PKC beta, 0.9 +/- 0.1 for PKC alpha, and 0.9 +/- 0.1 for PKC gamma). When phosphatidylserine-containing membranes are present, Ca(2+) affinities range from the sub-micromolar to the micromolar (7-fold difference) ([Ca(2+)](1/2) = 0.7 +/- 0.1 microM for PKC gamma, 1.4 +/- 0.1 microM for PKC alpha, and 5.0 +/- 0.2 microM for PKC beta), and cooperative Ca(2+) binding is observed for all three C2 domains (Hill coefficients equal 1.8 +/- 0.1 for PKC beta, 1.3 +/- 0.1 for PKC alpha, and 1.4 +/- 0.1 for PKC gamma). The large effects of membranes are consistent with a coupled Ca(2+) and membrane binding equilibrium, and with a direct role of the phospholipid in stabilizing bound Ca(2+). The net negative charge of the phospholipid is more important to membrane affinity than its headgroup structure, although a slight preference for phosphatidylserine is observed over other anionic phospholipids. The Ca(2+) stoichiometries of the membrane-bound C2 domains are detectably different. PKC beta and PKC gamma each bind three Ca(2+) ions in the membrane-associated state; membrane-bound PKC alpha binds two Ca(2+) ions, and a third binds weakly or not at all under physiological conditions. Overall, the results indicate that conventional PKC C2 domains first bind a subset of the final Ca(2+) ions in solution, and then associate weakly with the membrane and bind additional Ca(2+) ions to yield a stronger membrane interaction in the fully assembled tertiary complex. The full complement of Ca(2+) ions is needed for tight binding to the membrane. Thus, even though the three C2 domains are 64% identical, differences in Ca(2+) affinity, stoichiometry, and cooperativity are observed, demonstrating that these closely related C2 domains are specialized for their individual functions and contexts.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The effect of HIV-1 Tat protein on the production of IL-10, an immunosuppressive cytokine, was examined in human primary monocytes obtained from healthy HIV-1-negative blood donors. As expected and in agreement with our previous data, a dose-dependent induction of IL-10 was observed. In addition, we showed that this induction is mediated by the PKC pathway: in the presence of Ro 31-8220, an inhibitor of all PKC isozymes, or after 48 h of PMA treatment, Tat protein becomes unable to stimulate IL-10 production. Among the 11 PKC isozymes, eight (PKC alpha, beta(I), beta(II), delta, epsilon, eta, zeta, mu) are expressed in monocytes. In this study, by analyzing the translocation to the membrane after Tat stimulation, we showed that PKC alpha, beta(I), beta(II), delta and epsilon isozymes are activated by Tat. Moreover, by combining different approaches including selective PKC inhibitors (G?6983, G?6976, hispidin and rottlerin), we showed that PKC beta(II) and delta isozymes are essential for the activation of IL-10 production in human monocytes following stimulation by HIV-1 Tat protein.  相似文献   

19.
Protein kinase C (PKC) has been proposed to be involved in the regulation of vascular smooth muscle (VSM) contractile activity. However, little is known in detail about the activation of this kinase or specific isozymes of this kinase by contractile stimuli in VSM. As an index of PKC activation, Ca(2+)- and phospholipid-dependent histone IIIS kinase activity was measured in the particulate fraction from individual strips of isometrically contracting carotid arterial smooth muscle. Phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDB) increased PKC activity in the particulate fraction (155% over resting value by 15 min) with a time course which paralleled or preceded force development. Stimulation with the agonist histamine (10(-5) M) resulted in rapid increases in both force and particulate fraction PKC activity which was maximal by 2 min (increase of 139%) and partially sustained over 45 min (increase of 41%). KCl (109 mM), which evokes a sustained contractile response, caused a slow increase (124% by 45 min) in particulate fraction PKC activity. No significant increases in activator-independent histone kinase activity were observed in response to any stimulus tested. PKC alpha and PKC beta were identified as the principal Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent PKC isozymes expressed in this tissue. In unstimulated arterial tissue, the ratio of immunodetectable isozyme content (alpha:beta) was estimated to be 1:1 in the particulate and 1.5:1 in the cytosolic fractions. Upon stimulation with each of the three contractile stimuli, particulate fraction PKC content assessed by immunoblotting increased with a time course and to an extent comparable to the observed changes in PKC activity. There was no evidence of differential regulation of the PKC alpha or -beta isozymes by PDB compared to the other contractile stimuli. These results indicate that diverse contractile stimuli are capable of tonically activating PKC in preparations of functional smooth muscle, and are consistent with a functional role for PKC alpha and/or -beta in the regulation of normal smooth muscle contractile activity.  相似文献   

20.
蛋白激酶C亚型在HL—60细胞诱导分化中的变化   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
用全反式维甲酸(ATRA)或佛波酯(PMA)处理人早幼粒白血病细胞(HL-60)3天,用形态学,NBT还原实验,特异性和非特异性酯酶测定,证明细胞分别向粒细胞或单核/巨噬细胞分化。通过免疫组化法观察了蛋白激酶C(PKC)α,βⅠ和βⅡ亚型在分化后的变化。结果显示,ATRA可引起HL-60细胞PKCα,βⅠ和βⅡ的含量升高,分别为对照的5.0,2.8和4.2倍,并存在从胞膜向胞质转位。PMA则使PC  相似文献   

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