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1.
This study investigated the effects of two putative bombesin antagonists, [D-Arg1,D-Pro2,D-Trp7,9,Leu11]substance P and [Leu13-psi-CH2NH-Leu14]bombesin, on bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from isolated canine G cells following short-term culture. Canine antral tissue was dispersed by sequential collagenase and EDTA treatment, and counterflow elutriation was used to enrich for G cells. Plates were seeded with 2 x 10(6) cells/mL in each well and cultured for 2 days prior to testing. Gastrin-containing and somatostatin-containing cells were identified by immunocytochemistry using the biotin-avidin-peroxidase method and accounted for 8.5 and 1%, respectively, of adhered cells. Basal gastrin secretion was 1.91 +/- 0.48% of total cell content. After a 2-h incubation period, bombesin (0.01-100 pM) stimulated gastrin release in a concentration-dependent fashion. The substance P analog, at a concentration of 1 microM, modestly inhibited bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from canine G cells. This analog also produced weak stimulation of basal gastrin release. In contrast, the bombesin analog, at a concentration of 1 microM, did not affect basal gastrin secretion. The bombesin analog completely blocked bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from 0.01 to 1 pM and produced greater than 50% inhibition at higher doses. The ability of the bombesin analog to directly inhibit bombesin-stimulated gastrin release from cultured canine G cells underscores its usefulness in studies involving the role of bombesin and its mammalian counterpart, gastrin-releasing peptide, in the control of gastrin cell function.  相似文献   

2.
We have recently reported that bombesin (BBS)-stimulated gastrin release is principally dependent on a Ca2+/calmodulin intracellular pathway, and that it is independent of the cyclic AMP-mediated pathway. Recently it was demonstrated that stimulation of protein kinase C (PK-C) resulted in increased gastrin release from the isolated canine G-cells in cultures. The role of PK-C in the BBS-evoked gastrin release, however, remains unexamined. In this study we examined a possible role of PK-C in the secretion of BBS-stimulated gastrin from isolated perfused rat stomach. The effect of phosphorylation on gastrin release, in response to BBS, was also determined. Administration of phorbol ester (PMA 10-100 nM, a PK-C activator) alone significantly provoked gastrin release, but markedly inhibited the BBS (1 nM) stimulated gastrin secretion in a dose-dependent manner. Molybdic acid (phosphatase inhibitor), caused an enhancement of BBS-evoked gastrin response at doses of 5 or greater than 5 mM. These results suggest that: (1) diacylglycerol/PK-C pathway may exert a negative feedback control over BBS-induced gastrin release; (2) phosphorylation step is required for gastrin secretion in response to BBS.  相似文献   

3.
Bombesin-related peptides stimulate a rapid increase in polyphosphoinositide hydrolysis in Swiss-mouse 3T3 cells. These peptides generate an increase in the efflux of 45Ca2+ from pre-labelled cells, a response consistent with an inositol trisphosphate-mediated mobilization of intracellular Ca2+. The bombesin-stimulated release of cellular 45Ca2+ is inhibited by tumour-promoting phorbol esters (e.g. 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate, TPA). Although there are several possible sites of action at which this effect might occur, our results indicate that TPA induces an uncoupling of bombesin-stimulated hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) without decreasing cellular binding of bombesin. In cultured cells, protein kinase C can be down-modulated by a prolonged incubation of the cells with phorbol esters. Such pretreatment greatly decreased the inhibitory effect of TPA on bombesin-stimulated PIP2 hydrolysis, suggesting that this action of the phorbol ester is mediated via protein kinase C. Since diacylglycerol is an endogenous activator of protein kinase C and a direct product of PIP2 hydrolysis, these results suggest that protein kinase C inhibition of polyphosphoinositide hydrolysis may function as a negative-feedback pathway. Cells in which protein kinase C has been down-modulated show elevated basal and bombesin-stimulated production of inositol phosphates, providing evidence that such a feedback loop limits polyphosphoinositide turnover in both unstimulated and mitogen-stimulated cells.  相似文献   

4.
P Feick  S Gilhaus  R Blum  F Hofmann  I Just  I Schulz 《FEBS letters》1999,451(3):269-274
Disruption of the actin cytoskeleton in AR4-2J pancreatic acinar cells led to an increase in cytosolic protein tyrosine phosphatase activity, abolished bombesin-induced tyrosine phosphorylation and reduced bombesin-induced amylase secretion by about 45%. Furthermore, both tyrosine phosphorylation and amylase secretion induced by phorbol ester-induced activation of protein kinase C were abolished. An increase in the cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration by the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 had no effect on tyrosine phosphorylation but induced amylase release. Only when added together with phorbol ester, the same level of amylase secretion as with bombesin was reached. This amylase secretion was inhibited by about 40%, by actin cytoskeleton disruption similar to that induced by bombesin. We conclude that actin cytoskeleton-controlled protein tyrosine phosphatase activity downstream of protein kinase C activity regulates tyrosine phosphorylation which in part is involved in bombesin-stimulated amylase secretion.  相似文献   

5.
The release of gastrin into the serum of five conscious gastric fistula dogs after a meat meal was monitored for 2 hours. Neither the rate of increase in serum gastrin nor the 2 hour cumulative integrated gastrin response was changed by administration of small doses of somatostatin tetradecapeptide (0.5 microgram/kg.hr IV for 2 hr), 16-16 dimethyl prostaglandin E2 (0.25 microgram/kg.hr IV for 2 hr or 1 microgram/kg intragastrically), or bethanechol (20 micrograms/kg.hr IV for 2 hr). Acidification of the food in the antrum to pH 1.2 to 1.4 eliminated serum gastrin release in response to food. In control studies, serum gastrin levels were not altered by IV administration of saline for 2 hr with no food or when a plate of food was held just out of the dogs' reach (teasing). Food-stimulated gastrin release was contrasted with that stimulated by bombesin under identical laboratory conditions [17]. In each case, antral acidification, somatostatin, prostaglandin E2 and bethanechol affected bombesin-stimulated gastrin release differently from that stimulated by food. We conclude that food and bombesin release gastrin by different pathways.  相似文献   

6.
We and others have recently reported an involvement of calcium (Ca2+)-mediated intracellular pathways in the release of antral gastrin in response to bombesin (BBS), while cyclic adenosine 3'5'-monophosphate (cAMP) potentiated the gastrin response to BBS. In this study we examined the effect of cyclic nucleotides on BBS-induced gastrin release from isolated perfused rat stomachs. Dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP, 1 mM), and Rolipram (a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, 0.5 microM), stimulated basal gastrin secretion and potentiated BBS-induced gastrin release. The stimulation of gastrin release by BBS was not altered by Wiptide (a cAMP dependent protein kinase inhibitor, 1.0 microM), but was surprisingly inhibited by dbcGMP (1 mM). The cAMP content in antral mucosa or in the perfusates was not changed after infusion of BBS. These findings coupled with previous results suggest that BBS-provoked gastrin release is principally coupled to a Ca2+-mediated intracellular pathway, and that an activation of the adenylate cyclase mediated pathway is not involved. Intracellular cGMP, however, may participate in the negative regulation of gastrin release induced by BBS.  相似文献   

7.
Bombesin-induced gastrin release from extragastric sources has been investigated in two groups of patients without gastric antrum: 11 patients with total gastrectomy and 11 patients with subtotal (Billroth II) gastrectomy. A 30-min bombesin infusion (5 ng . kg-1 . min-1) caused a prompt significant gastrin increase (P less than 0.05) in both groups of patients. The gastrin response to bombesin was significantly (P less than 0.005) lower in patients without antral tissue than in the control group (n = 7). The individual peak gastrin responses, in totally (TG) and subtotally (SG) gastrectomized patients, were significantly over basal levels (TG: peak 100.3 +/- 12 vs. basal 62.8 +/- 9.1, P less than 0.005; SG: peak 96.9 +/- 9.4 vs. basal 72.4 +/- 6.8, P less than 0.001; pg/ml, mean +/- S.E.M.). These data indicate that bombesin acts not only on antral G cells, but on all gastrin cells in the gastrointestinal tract.  相似文献   

8.
Bombesin-like peptides as well as receptor-independent activators were tested for their effect on gastrin release from acutely dispersed rat gastric G-cells. The amphibian peptide bombesin as well as its mammalian analogues neuromedin B and neuromedin C stimulated gastrin release. Maximal responses were achieved with 10(-9) M bombesin (191.0 +/- 16.8% of basal release), 10(-8) M neuromedin C(205.9 +/- 17.6%) and 10(-7) M neuromedin B (162.2 +/- 10.4%), respectively. The phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol 13-acetate (TPA) and the synthetic diacylglycerol analogue 1-oleoyl-2-acetyl-sn-glycerol (OAG) are receptor-independent activators of the protein kinase C. Both TPA (10(-6) M) and OAG (10(-5) M) stimulated gastrin release to 214.0 +/- 29.3% and 198.2 +/- 20.8% of basal, respectively. Calcium ionophore A23187 (10(-5) M) was the most effective stimulant tested (364.7 +/- 39.6%). Its effect was reversed by the calmodulin antagonist W 7 (10(-6)-10(-5) M). Finally, forskolin (10(-5) M), a direct activator of cAMP-formation, as well as the cAMP-analogue dbcAMP (10(-3) M) induced gastrin release. IN conclusion, neuromedin B is less potent and less effective than neuromedin C and bombesin in stimulating rat gastric G-cells. In addition, gastrin release is activated by calcium- and phospholipid-dependent as well as by cAMP-induced cellular signal transduction mechanisms.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of histamine on gastrin release was studied in 7 conscious mongrel dogs with chronic gastric and duodenal fistulas. Histamine-2 HCl was infused in doses of 0 (control), 20, 40, 80, and 160 micrograms/kg per h for 2 h on separate days. During the second hour, bombesin 500 ng/kg per h was infused intravenously. Intragastric pH was constantly kept at 2.5 by intragastric titration during each test. Leakage of gastric contents into the duodenum was prevented by a prepyloric balloon passed retrograde through a duodenal fistula. Gastrin release, as expressed by the integrated response during the last 50 min of the bombesin infusion was significantly (P less than 0.05) decreased by all doses of histamine, compared to control. The infusion doses of histamine studied, 20, 40, 80, and 160 micrograms/kg per h reduced bombesin-stimulated gastrin release 16%, 19%, 19%, and 30%, respectively. This effect was blocked by a histamine H-2 but not an H-1 receptor antagonist. We conclude that by an H-2 mechanism, exogenous histamine reduces bombesin-stimulated gastrin release in dog.  相似文献   

10.
Characterization of bombesin receptors on canine antral gastrin cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Dispersed canine antral mucosal cells were prepared by sequential steps of collagenase digestion and EDTA treatment. Cell preparations enriched in gastrin cells were made by centrifugal elutriation followed by step density gradient centrifugation. Specific, saturable, and reversible binding of 125I-[Tyr4]-bombesin was found in all preparations. This saturable binding was time, temperature, and cell number dependent. In both velocity (elutriator) and density cell separation experiments, saturable binding of bombesin correlated with the distribution of cells containing gastrin- but not somatostatin-like immunoreactivity. Maximal specific binding to gastrin (G) cell-enriched fractions was reached in 45 min at 37 degrees C and constituted 90% of total binding. Addition of 100 nM nonradioactive bombesin to cells incubated with 50 pM 125I-[Tyr4]-bombesin for 45 min resulted in time-dependent dissociation of specifically bound tracer to about 40% of the maximal equilibrium binding. Analysis of saturable equilibrium binding yielded a best fit to a one-site model of high affinity binding sites with an apparent Kd of 85 +/- 14 pM and a Bmax of 231,000 +/- 71,000 receptors/gastrin cell. Nonradioactive [Tyr4]-bombesin and related analogs inhibited the specific binding of the tracer in a dose-related manner. The rank order of potency, determined at the IC50, of [Tyr4]-bombesin and related analogs for inhibition of specific binding was bombesin greater than [Tyr4]-bombesin = hGRP-27 greater than GRP-10 greater than ranatensin much greater than neuromedin B. Cholecystokinin, somatostatin, substance K, and kassinin each tested at a concentration of 1 microM did not inhibit bombesin binding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Addition of bombesin in the presence of either forskolin or cholera toxin caused a marked (4-6 fold) enhancement of cAMP accumulation in Swiss 3T3 cells. This effect was time and concentration dependent, induced by various bombesin-like peptides and blocked by a bombesin antagonist. Enhancement of cAMP accumulation by bombesin was diminished by chronic pretreatment with phorbol dibutyrate implicating the involvement of protein kinase C in the activation. Pretreatment with pertussis toxin, which uncouples protein kinase C activation from cAMP accumulation (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 84:2282, 1987) also inhibited bombesin enhancement of cAMP. Bombesin was also shown to release E type prostaglandins into the medium, an effect which was abolished by the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin. Low concentrations (100 nM) of indomethacin partially inhibited the accumulation of cAMP by bombesin in the presence of forskolin indicating that the release of E type prostaglandins into the medium is also involved in the accumulation of cAMP by bombesin. The additive nature of PBt2-mediated down-regulation and treatment with indomethacin suggests that activation of protein kinase C and the release of E type prostaglandins provide two distinct pathways involved in the enhancement of cAMP accumulation by bombesin. Finally, bombesin in the presence of forskolin stimulated the phosphorylation of the intermediate filament component vimentin, identified in the accompanying paper as a substrate for a cAMP dependent protein kinase in intact Swiss 3T3 cells.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of 1-h infusions of bombesin and gastrin releasing peptide (GRP) at 50 pmol/kg per h and neurotensin at 100 pmol/kg per h on gastrin, pancreatic polypeptide (PP) and neurotensin release in man were determined following either saline or atropine infusion (20 micrograms/kg). Bombesin produced a rise in plasma neurotensin from 32 +/- 6 to 61 +/- 19 pmol/l and of PP from 26 +/- 8 to 36 +/- 7 pmol/l. There was a further rise of plasma PP to 50 +/- 13 pmol/l after cessation of the infusion. GRP had no significant effect on plasma neurotensin, but compared to bombesin, produced a significantly greater rise in plasma PP from 34 +/- 6 to 66 +/- 19 pmol/l during infusion. There was no post-infusional increase. At this dose, GRP was as effective as bombesin in releasing gastrin, although unlike bombesin its effect was enhanced by atropine. Neurotensin produced a rise in plasma PP from 17 +/- 4 to 38 +/- 8 pmol/l. Atropine blocked the release of PP during GRP and neurotensin infusion. Atropine had no effect on neurotensin or PP release during bombesin infusion, but did block the rise in plasma PP following bombesin infusion. We conclude that, in contrast to meal-stimulated neurotensin release, bombesin-stimulated neurotensin release is cholinergic independent. Despite structural homology, bombesin and GRP at the dose used are dissimilar in man in their actions and sensitivity to cholinergic blockade.  相似文献   

13.
We have used digitonin permeabilization to study the mechanism of bombesin-induced activation of protein kinase C in Swiss 3T3 cells. Protein kinase C-mediated phosphorylations in permeabilized cells were identified using phorbol esters and diacylglycerols. Addition of phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu) in the presence of [gamma-32P]ATP and digitonin caused a marked and rapid time- and dose-dependent increase in the phosphorylation of an Mr 80,000 cellular protein (maximum stimulation = 12.6 +/- 1.6-fold after 1 min, EC50 = 27 nM). 1-oleoyl-2-acetylglycerol substituted for PDBu in stimulating the phosphorylation of Mr 80,000 protein (EC50 = 13 microM). Bombesin also caused a striking increase in the phosphorylation of Mr 80,000 protein with a time course similar to that observed with PDBu. This phosphorylation was mimicked by mammalian bombesin-like peptides and blocked by the bombesin antagonists [D-Arg1,D-Phe5,D-Trp7,9,Leu11]substance P and [Leu13 psi (CH2NH)Leu14]bombesin. Down-regulation of protein kinase C in intact cells by prolonged exposure to PDBu prevented Mr 80,000 protein phosphorylation upon subsequent bombesin addition in digitonin-permeabilized cells. Comigration on one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and phosphopeptide mapping confirmed that the Mr 80,000 protein phosphorylated in permeabilized cells was indistinguishable from the Mr 80,000 protein which is the major protein kinase C substrate in intact cells. The GDP analogue guanosine-5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S) caused a 70% inhibition of the bombesin-induced phosphorylation of Mr 80,000 protein but had no effect on the phosphorylation induced by PDBu. Bombesin stimulated Mr 80,000 protein phosphorylation in permeabilized cells in a dose-dependent manner (EC50 = 4 nM), and GDP beta S shifted the bombesin dose response curve to higher bombesin concentrations (EC50 = 14 nM). These results demonstrate for the first time a growth factor receptor-mediated activation of protein kinase C in permeabilized cells and provide functional evidence for the involvement of a G protein in the transmembrane signaling pathway that mediates the stimulation of protein kinase C by bombesin in Swiss 3T3 cells.  相似文献   

14.
Neural, hormonal, and paracrine regulation of gastrin and acid secretion.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Physiological stimuli from inside and outside the stomach coverage on gastric effector neurons that are the primary regulators of acid secretion. The effector neurons comprise cholinergic neurons and two types of non-cholinergic neurons: bombesin/GRP and VIP neurons. The neurons act directly on target cells or indirectly by regulating release of the hormone, gastrin, the stimulatory paracrine amine, histamine, and the inhibitory paracrine peptide, somatostatin. In the antrum, cholinergic and bombesin/GRP neurons activated by intraluminal proteins stimulate gastrin secretion directly and, in the case of cholinergic neurons, indirectly by eliminating the inhibitory influence of somatostatin (disinhibition). In turn, gastrin acts on adjacent somatostatin cells to restore the secretion of somatostatin. The dual paracrine circuit activated by antral neurons determines the magnitude of gastrin secretion. Low-level distention of the antrum activates, preferentially, VIP neurons that stimulate somatostatin secretion and thus inhibit gastrin secretion. Higher levels of distention activate predominantly cholinergic neurons that suppress antral somatostatin secretion and thus stimulate gastrin secretion. In the fundus, cholinergic neurons activated by distention or proteins stimulate acid secretion directly and indirectly by eliminating the inhibitory influence of somatostatin. The same stimuli activate bombesin/GRP and VIP neurons that stimulate somatostatin secretion and thus attenuate acid secretion. In addition, gastrin and fundic somatostatin influence acid secretion directly and indirectly by regulating histamine release. Acid in the lumen stimulates somatostatin secretion, which attenuates acid secretion in the fundus and gastrin secretion in the antrum.  相似文献   

15.
Treatment of quiescent Swiss 3T3 cells with the mitogenic peptides bombesin, vasopressin, endothelin/vasoactive intestinal contractor (VIC), and bradykinin strikingly increased the initial rate of tyrosine phosphorylation measured in anti-phosphotyrosine immunoprecipitates of a major band of Mr 115,000 (p115) and two minor components of Mr 90,000 and 75,000. Neuropeptides increased the labeling of p115 within seconds and with great potency; half-maximum concentrations were 0.1, 0.2 and 0.3 nM for bombesin, vasopressin, and VIC, respectively. Immunoblotting and peptide mapping showed that the p115 band phosphorylated in anti-phosphotyrosine immunoprecipitates is identical to a major Mr 115,000 substrate for neuropeptide-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation in intact Swiss 3T3 cells. Furthermore, bombesin, vasopressin, and VIC markedly increased the rate of phosphorylation of Raytide, a broad specificity tyrosine kinase peptide substrate, by decreasing (8 +/- 1.3-fold) the apparent Km of the kinase for the substrate. Phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate and the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 had a weaker effect on tyrosine protein kinase activity in immune complexes compared with bombesin. Furthermore, down-regulation of protein kinase C blocked the small effect of phorbol esters but did not impair bombesin-stimulated tyrosine kinase activity. These results provide direct evidence for neuropeptide activation of a tyrosine kinase in cell-free preparations and identify a novel event in the action of this class of growth factors in Swiss 3T3 cells.  相似文献   

16.
Bombesin is a potent mitogen for Swiss 3T3 cells and acts synergistically with insulin and other growth factors. We show here that addition of bombesin to quiescent Swiss 3T3 cells causes a striking increase in the levels of c-fos and c-myc mRNAs. Enhanced expression of c-fos (122 +/- 14-fold) occurred within minutes of peptide addition followed by increased expression of c-myc (82 +/- 16-fold). The concentrations of peptide required for half-maximal increase in the levels of c-fos and c-myc mRNAs were 1.0 and 0.9 nM, respectively. The peptide [D-Arg1, D-Pro2, D-Trp7,9, Leu11] substance P which inhibits the binding of bombesin to its receptor and bombesin-stimulated DNA synthesis in Swiss 3T3 cells blocked the increase in c-fos and c-myc mRNA levels promoted by bombesin. Down-regulation of protein kinase C by long-term exposure to phorbol esters prevented c-fos and c-myc induction by bombesin. This and other results indicate that the induction of these proto-oncogenes by bombesin could be mediated by the coordinated effects of protein kinase C activation and Ca2+ mobilization. The marked synergistic effect between bombesin and insulin was used to assess whether the increase in the induction of c-fos and c-myc is an obligatory event in cell activation. In the presence of insulin, bombesin stimulated DNA synthesis at subnanomolar concentrations but had only a small effect on c-fos and c-myc mRNA levels. This apparent dissociation of mitogenesis from proto-oncogene induction was even more dramatic in 3T3 cells with down-regulated protein kinase C. In these cells bombesin stimulated DNA synthesis in the presence of insulin but failed to enhance c-fos and c-myc mRNA levels at comparable concentrations. Thus, the induction of c-fos and c-myc may be a necessary step in the mitogenic response initiated by ligands that act through activation of protein kinase C but the expression of these proto-oncogenes may not be an obligatory event in the stimulation of mitogenesis in 3T3 cells by mitogens that utilise other signalling pathways.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Recently, we cloned a novel serine/threonine kinase termed protein kinase D2 (PKD2). PKD2 can be activated by phorbol esters both in vivo and in vitro but also by gastrin via the cholecystokinin/CCK(B) receptor in human gastric cancer cells stably transfected with the CCK(B)/gastrin receptor (AGS-B cells). Here we identify the mechanisms of gastrin-induced PKD2 activation in AGS-B cells. PKD2 phosphorylation in response to gastrin was rapid, reaching a maximum after 10 min of incubation. Our data demonstrate that gastrin-stimulated PKD2 activation involves a heterotrimeric G alpha(q) protein as well as the activation of phospholipase C. Furthermore, we show that PKD2 can be activated by classical and novel members of the protein kinase C (PKC) family such as PKC alpha, PKC epsilon, and PKC eta. These PKCs are activated by gastrin in AGS-B cells. Thus, PKD2 is likely to be a novel downstream target of specific PKCs upon the stimulation of AGS-B cells with gastrin. Our data suggest a two-step mechanism of activation of PKD2 via endogenously produced diacylglycerol and the activation of PKCs.  相似文献   

19.
Wang L  Zhou L 《生理学报》2000,52(4):272-276
应用大鼠游离胃窦平滑肌细胞,观察胃动素和胃泌素对胃窦平滑肌细胞收缩作用的胞内信号转导通路。结果显示:⑴胃动素和胃泌素对胃窦平滑肌细胞均有收缩作用;⑵Gai-3抗体可抑制胃动素和胃泌素加强胃窦平滑肌细胞的收缩,胃动素、胃泌明显增加Gai-3抗体与「^35S」CTPγS的结合;⑶磷脂酶抑制剂U-73122、三磷酸肌醇受体拮抗剂肝素可抑制胃坳素和胃泌素引起的胃窦平滑肌细胞的收缩。结果表明:胃坳素和胃泌表  相似文献   

20.
Addition of the inhibitor of diacylglycerol kinase R 59022 to quiescent Swiss 3T3 cells potentiated protein kinase C activation by the neuropeptide bombesin, a potent mitogen for these cells. This was detected as a marked shift in the dose-response relationship for bombesin-stimulated phosphorylation of a Mr 80,000 protein, which is a major, specific substrate of protein kinase C. R 59022 also promoted the inhibition of [125I]epidermal growth factor binding induced by bombesin, an effect mediated by protein kinase C. A salient feature of our results is that R 59022, at concentrations that enhanced the activation of protein kinase C in intact cells (4-6 microM), potentiated long-term mitogenesis elicited by bombesin. Thus, R 59022 may be a valuable tool for elucidating the contribution of the protein kinase C pathway in mitogenesis.  相似文献   

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