首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 750 毫秒
1.
We have investigated whether TNF-induced changes in human endothelial cell (EC) surface Ag expression are mediated by protein kinase C (PKC). This suggestion arose from the observations that PMA, a potent PKC activator, can mimic TNF by inducing expression of endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule 1, intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1), and class I MHC molecules on human EC. However, in contrast to the actions of PMA, TNF neither causes membrane translocation of PKC nor induces the phosphorylation of the myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate, two measures of PKC activation. Moreover, the PKC inhibitor staurosporine can block PMA-induced endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule 1 expression at 4 h, but does not inhibit the actions of TNF. At 24 h, staurosporine itself induces intercellular adhesion molecule 1 and class I MHC, and acts additively with TNF. Twenty four hour treatment with PMA causes loss of PKC. We propose that at 24 h, staurosporine and PMA share a mechanism of action, namely diminution of PKC activity. However, 24 h treatment with TNF does not reduce the amount of PKC nor does it prevent activation of PKC by PMA. We conclude that TNF effects in EC are not mediated by PKC activation or inactivation.  相似文献   

2.
The adherence of cells to microvascular endothelium is important in a number of processes, including inflammatory responses and metastasis. It has been demonstrated that in human models, cytokines such as TNF, IL-1, IFN-gamma increase the adhesiveness of endothelium for cells of the immune and inflammatory system by stimulating the expression of cell adhesion molecules on endothelial cell surfaces. We and others have shown similar cytokine-induced endothelial adhesiveness for tumor cells in murine and human models. In contrast to the effect of those modulators, transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) has been shown to inhibit the binding of human neutrophils and T lymphocytes to human endothelium, although the mechanism of TGF-beta action remains unknown. Little is known about the effect of TGF-beta on tumor cell-endothelial interaction. In the present study, we demonstrate that TGF-beta inhibits basal and TNF-enhanced binding of murine P815 mastocytoma cells to murine microvascular endothelium (MME). The alterations in MME mediated by TGF-beta, also lead to the inhibition of adherence of murine splenocytes, thymocytes, and human lymphoblastoid cells but do not inhibit adherence of murine B16 melanoma cells. The effect of TGF-beta is transient and inhibition of the endothelial adhesive phenotype is strongest 12 to 24 h after addition of the factor to MME. The TGF-beta-mediated inhibition of P815 basal binding to endothelium is dependent on protein synthesis because cycloheximide reverses the TGF-beta effect. TGF-beta does not appear to activate classical signal transduction pathways. Inhibitors of G proteins do not abolish TGF-beta action, protein kinase C and protein kinase A activators elicit an effect opposite to that of the factor, TGF-beta does not increase intracellular cAMP levels, and finally calcium-mobilizing agents do not mimic, but rather inhibit the effect of TGF-beta. However, TGF-beta-mediated inhibition of both basal binding and TNF-enhanced P815 binding to MME is completely abolished in the presence of the protein phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid which suggests that TGF-beta may elicit its effect by stimulating protein phosphatase activity.  相似文献   

3.
We have demonstrated that pretreatment of mouse brain microvascular endothelial cells (MBE) with tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF), IL-1, or LPS augmented the binding of P815 mastocytoma cells in vitro. The effect of these agents was dose and time dependent. PMA was able to mimic the influence of these factors to a limited degree. The effect of TNF on endothelium was accompanied by the appearance of changes in the expression of proteins isolated from endothelial cell membranes. The adherence of tumor cells to endothelium was not inhibited by RGD-containing peptides but could be decreased by preincubation of endothelium with high concentrations of FCS. Our data suggest that cytokines regulate the synthesis of endothelial adhesion proteins which may be involved in tumor cell adherence leading to metastasis. These results raise the possibility that cytokines may exert paradoxical effects in vivo, i.e., a cytotoxic effect that reduces tumor mass accompanied by a metastasis-enhancing effect that actually promotes dissemination of the remaining tumor cells. Definition of the molecular events involved in tumor cell-endothelial cell interactions may lead to strategies for minimizing the latter effect in therapeutic settings.  相似文献   

4.
5.
During early cardiac development, progenitors of the valves and septa of the heart are formed by an epithelial-mesenchymal cell transformation of endothelial cells of the atrioventricular (AV) canal. We have previously shown that this event is due to an interaction between the endothelium and products of the myocardium found within the extracellular matrix. The present study examines signal transduction mechanisms governing this differentiation of AV canal endothelium. Activators of protein kinase C (PKC), phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) and mezerein, both produced an incomplete phenotypic transformation of endothelial cells in an in vitro bioassay for transformation. On the other hand, inhibitors of PKC (H-7 and staurosporine) and tyrosine kinase (genistein) blocked cellular transformation in response to the native myocardium or a myocardially-conditioned medium. Intracellular free calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) was measured in single endothelial cells by microscopic digital analysis of fura 2 fluorescence. Addition of a myocardial conditioned medium containing the transforming stimulus produced a specific increase in [Ca2+]i in "competent" AV canal, but not ventricular, endothelial cells. Epithelial-mesenchymal cell transformation was inhibited by pertussis toxin but not cholera toxin. These data lead to the hypothesis that signal transduction of this tissue interaction is mediated by a G protein and one or more kinase activities. In response to receptor activation, competent AV canal endothelial cells demonstrate an increase in [Ca2+]i. Together, the data provide direct evidence for a regional and temporal regulation of signal transduction processes which mediate a specific extracellular matrix-mediated tissue interaction in the embryo.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Protein kinase C (PKC) is activated in response to various inflammatory mediators and contributes significantly to the endothelial barrier breakdown. However, the mechanisms underlying PKC-mediated permeability regulation are not well understood. We prepared microvascular myocardial endothelial cells from both wild-type (WT) and caveolin-1-deficient mice. Activation of PKC by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) (100 nM) for 30 min induced intercellular gap formation and fragmentation of VE-cadherin immunoreactivity in WT but not in caveolin-1-deficient monolayers. To test the effect of PKC activation on VE-cadherin-mediated adhesion, we allowed VE-cadherin-coated microbeads to bind to the endothelial cell surface and probed their adhesion by laser tweezers. PMA significantly reduced bead binding to 78±6% of controls in WT endothelial cells without any effect in caveolin-1-deficient cells. In WT cells, PMA caused an 86±18% increase in FITC-dextran permeability whereas no increase in permeability was observed in caveolin-1-deficient monolayers. Inhibition of PKC by staurosporine (50 nM, 30 min) did not affect barrier functions in both WT and caveolin-1-deficient MyEnd cells. Theses data indicate that PKC activation reduces endothelial barrier functions at least in part by the reduction of VE-cadherin-mediated adhesion and demonstrate that PKC-mediated permeability regulation depends on caveolin-1.  相似文献   

8.
We have further examined the mechanism by which phorbol ester-mediated protein kinase C (PKC) activation protects against tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL)-induced cytotoxicity. We now report that activation of PKC targets death receptor signaling complex formation. Pre-treatment with 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (PMA) led to inhibition of TRAIL-induced apoptosis in HeLa cells, which was characterized by a reduction in phosphatidylserine (PS) externalization, decreased caspase-8 processing, and incomplete maturation and activation of caspase-3. These effects of PMA were completely abrogated by the PKC inhibitor, bisindolylmaleimide I (Bis I), clearly implicating PKC in the protective effect of PMA. TRAIL-induced mitochondrial release of the apoptosis mediators cytochrome c and Smac was blocked by PMA. This, together with the observed decrease in Bid cleavage, suggested that PKC activation modulates apical events in TRAIL signaling upstream of mitochondria. This was confirmed by analysis of TRAIL death-inducing signaling complex formation, which was disrupted in PMA-treated cells as evidenced by a marked reduction in Fas-associated death domain protein (FADD) recruitment, an effect that could not be explained by any change in FADD phosphorylation state. In an in vitro binding assay, the intracellular domains of both TRAIL-R1 and TRAIL-R2 bound FADD: activation of PKC significantly inhibited this interaction suggesting that PKC may be targeting key apical components of death receptor signaling. Significantly, this effect was not confined to TRAIL, because isolation of the native TNF receptor signaling complex revealed that PKC activation also inhibited TNF receptor-associated death domain protein recruitment to TNF-R1 and TNF-induced phosphorylation of IkappaB-alpha. Taken together, these results show that PKC activation specifically inhibits the recruitment of key obligatory death domain-containing adaptor proteins to their respective membrane-associated signaling complexes, thereby modulating TRAIL-induced apoptosis and TNF-induced NF-kappaB activation, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
In this study, we showed that human monocytes produced TNF-alpha in response to zymosan, a particulate agonist. Protein kinase C (PKC) seems to play a regulatory role in zymosan-induced TNF-alpha secretion. The pretreatment of monocytes with PMA induced a dose-dependent inhibition of zymosan-stimulated TNF production. This inhibition was likely due to an activation of PKC because it was prevented by inhibitors of PKC, sphingosine, and staurosporine. Moreover, PMA elicited a profound down-modulation of zymosan binding to monocytes. The inhibition of zymosan binding and TNF production displayed similar dose-dependence, suggesting that both events were closely related. In addition, PMA did not modify the expression of CD11b/CD18 receptor that is involved in zymosan recognition. In view of these findings, qualitative changes of CD11b/CD18 molecules might account for the inhibition of zymosan binding and TNF production. Thus, PMA specifically increased the association of CD11b/CD18 with the detergent-insoluble cytoskeleton. Cytochalasin B but not microtubule disrupters, nocodazole and colchicine, partially prevented the inhibition of zymosan binding. Hence, the inhibitory action of PMA on zymosan binding seems to be mediated by an increase in attachment of zymosan receptor to cytoskeleton and more likely to microfilaments. The regulatory activity of PKC might represent a first way of limiting cytokine over-production in response to pathogens which interact with monocytes via CD11/CD18 molecules.  相似文献   

10.
The binding of natural killer (NK) cells to either susceptible tumor cells or antibody-coated targets results in rapid activation of phospholipase C (PLC) in NK cells. PLC activation generates inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate and sn-1,2-diacylglycerol as second messengers, which, in turn, increase intracellular free calcium concentrations ([Ca2+]i) and protein kinase C (PKC) activity, respectively. These proximal signals initiate a cascade of as yet undefined biochemical events, leading eventually to the exocytosis of preformed cytotoxic granules. To investigate the signal transduction pathways involved in granule exocytosis, we utilized streptolysin-O-permeabilized human NK cells as our experimental model. Our initial studies indicated that the separate activation of either PKC (using the phorbol ester, PMA) or G protein-dependent pathways (using guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S)) stimulated granule exocytosis in a time-, concentration-, and Ca(2+)-dependent manner. PMA-stimulated exocytosis was inhibited by staurosporine or a PKC pseudosubstrate antagonist peptide, but was not affected by GDP. In contrast, GTP gamma S-stimulated exocytosis was effectively inhibited by GDP, but not by staurosporine or the PKC pseudosubstrate antagonist. These observations suggest that NK cell exocytosis can be stimulated by at least two separate pathways; one involving PKC and the other involving a G protein. However, co-stimulation with PMA and GTP gamma S synergistically enhanced exocytosis, suggesting that even though the two exocytotic pathways were biochemically distinct, cross-talk between the two pathways may potently influence the exocytotic process. These results define a regulatory role for PKC- and G protein-dependent pathways during granule exocytosis from NK cells.  相似文献   

11.
The protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor staurosporine was found to dramatically alter the actin microfilament cytoskeleton of a variety of cultured cells, including PTK2 epithelial cells, Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts, and human foreskin fibroblasts. For example, PTK2 cells exposed to 20 nM staurosporine exhibited a progressive thinning and loss of cytoplasmic actin microfilament bundles over a 60-min period. During this time microtubule and intermediate filament systems remained intact (as shown by immunofluorescence and at higher resolution by photoelectron microscopy), and the cells remained spread even though microfilament bundles were absent. Higher doses of staurosporine or longer exposure times at lower doses resulted in morphological alterations, but even severely arborized cells recovered normal morphology and actin patterns after a wash and an incubation for several hours in fresh medium. The actin filament disruption induced by staurosporine was distinguishable from the actin reorganization induced by exposure to the tumor promoter (and activator of PKC) phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). Swiss 3T3 cells made deficient in PKC by prolonged exposure to PMA (PKC down-regulation) exhibited actin alterations in response to staurosporine which were comparable to those in cells which had not been exposed to the phorbol ester. In a parallel control experiment, the actin cytoskeleton of PKC-deficient 3T3 cells was unaffected in response to PMA, consistent with down-regulation of this kinase. While the exact mechanism of staurosporine-induced actin reorganization remains to be determined, the observed effects of staurosporine on PKC-deficient cells make a role for PKC unlikely. These results indicate the need for care when staurosporine is employed as an inhibitor of protein kinase C in studies involving intact cells.  相似文献   

12.
To understand how vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) production is activated in malignant glioma cells, we employed protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) and protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitors to evaluate the extent to which these protein kinases were involved in signal transduction leading to VEGF production. PTK inhibitors blocked glioma proliferation and epidermal growth factor (EGF)-induced VEGF secretion, while H-7, a PKC inhibitor, inhibited both EGF-induced and baseline VEGF secretion. Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), a non-specific activator of PKC, induced VEGF secretion by glioma cells, which was enhanced by calcium ionophore A23187, but completely blocked after prolonged treatment of cells with 1 microM PMA, by presumably depleting PKC. All inhibitors (genistein, AG18, AG213, H-7, prolonged PMA treatment) which inhibited EGF-induced VEGF secretion in glioma cells also inhibited cell proliferation at similar concentrations. However, PKC inhibition only blocked 50% of the VEGF secretion induced by growth factors (EGF, platelet-derived growth factor-BB, or basic fibroblast growth factor). This reserve capacity could be ascribed to a PKC-independent effect, or to PKC isoenzymes not down-regulated by PMA. These findings extend our previous assertion that VEGF secretion is tightly coupled with proliferation by suggesting that activation of convergent growth factor signaling pathways will lead to increased glioma VEGF secretion. Understanding of signal transduction of growth factor-induced VEGF secretion should provide a rational basis for the development of novel strategies for therapy.  相似文献   

13.
Epidermal growth factor (EGF) induces a rapid increase in the phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) in the human osteosarcoma osteoblastic cell line G292 and in primary cultures of rat osteoblastic cells. This phosphorylation is transient and time-dependent. Maximal stimulation is attained within 1 min in G292 and within 5 min in rat osteoblastic cells. Enzymatic activity in G292 cells is also induced rapidly after EGF stimulation. Western blot analysis revealed that enhancement of the phosphorylation of ERKs in the EGF-stimulated cells is not due to an increase in ERK protein, since EGF-treatment does not lead to an increase in the absolute amount of ERKs present even after 2 days of stimulation. The pattern of expression of the ERKs observed in the two cell types differs in the apparent molecular weights observed. The most slowly migrating immunoreactive protein (~45 kDa) in normal rat osteoblastic cells is ERK1, identified by an ERK1-selective antiserum. The same antiserum reacts only weakly with one of the ERK proteins (44 kDa) blotted from the human osteosarcoma cell line G292. Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) is also capable of inducing ERK phosphorylation, albeit to a lesser degree. The combination of PMA and EGF does not produce a greater response than EGF alone. The role of protein kinase C (PKC) in the EGF-stimulated ERK signaling pathway was further examined by inhibition of PKC with the staurosporine analog, CGP41251, and by down-regulation of PKC via chronic treatment with PMA. Chronic PMA treatment results in a partial inhibition of the EGF-mediated phosphorylation. CGP41251 completely abolishes the increased ERK activity produced by PMA, but the effect of EGF in this regard is potentiated. We conclude that PKC and EGF act through parallel pathways to stimulate ERK phosphorylation and activity. The inhibitor studies, in addition, indicate that activation of PKC may moderate the actions of the EGF pathway via a tonic inhibitory feedback. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Regulation of motility in bovine brain endothelial cells   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Scatter factor (SF) is a fibroblast-derived cytokine which stimulates motility of epithelial and vascular endothelial cells. We used a quantitative assay based on migration of cells from microcarrier beads to flat surfaces to study the regulation of motility in bovine brain endothelial cells (BBEC). Peptide growth factors (EGF, ECGF, basic FGF) did not stimulate migration. Tumor promoting phorbol esters (PMA, PDD) markedly stimulated migration, while inactive phorbol esters (4a-PDD, phorbol-13,20-diacetate) did not affect migration. Both SF- and PMA-stimulated migration were inhibited by 1) TGF-beta; 2) protein kinase inhibitors (e.g., staurosporine, K-252a); 3) activators of the adenylate cyclase signaling pathway (e.g., dibutyryl cyclic AMP, theophylline); 4) cycloheximide; and 5) anti-cytoskeleton agents (e.g., cytochalasin B, colcemid). However, PMA and SF pathways were distinguishable: 1) PMA induced additional migration at saturating SF concentrations; 2) the onset of migration-stimulation was immediate for PMA and delayed for SF; and 3) down-modulation of protein kinase C (PKC) ablated PMA but not SF responsiveness. Assessment of PKC by (3H)-phorbol ester (PDBu) binding and by immunoblot showed 1) scatter factor does not cause significant redistribution or down-modulation of PDBu binding or alpha-PKC; and 2) PDBu mediates redistribution and down-modulation of both binding and alpha-PKC. These findings suggest two pathways for BBEC motility: a PKC-dependent pathway and an SF-stimulated/PKC-independent pathway.  相似文献   

15.
GM-CSF has a major role in the immune and inflammatory milieu of the airway. Airway epithelial cells (AEC) are among the first targets of environmental stimuli and local cytokines, in response to which they can produce GM-CSF. The regulation of GM-CSF is only minimally understood in AEC. We hypothesized that GM-CSF expression in AEC would result from activation of protein kinase C (PKC) and subsequent activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (MAPKerk1/2) pathway, so we investigated signal transduction pathways in human primary culture bronchial epithelial cells (HBECs). TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, and PMA induced the release of GM-CSF in HBECs. The robust response to PMA was not detected in SV40 adenovirus-transformed normal human bronchial epithelial cells (BEAS-2B). PMA and TNF-alpha stimulation of GM-CSF required activation of PKC (inhibition by staurosporine and bisindolylmaleimide I). GM-CSF expression was up-regulated by a nonphorbol PKC activator, but not by an inactive PMA analogue. PMA-induced GM-CSF production in HBECs did not require a Ca2+ ionophore and was not inhibited by cyclosporin A. Activation of MAPKerk1/2 via PKC was associated with and was required for GM-CSF production induced by PMA and TNF-alpha. The data demonstrate regulation of GM-CSF in HBECs by PKC pathways converging on the MAPKerk1/2 pathway and further define cell-specific regulation critical for local airway responses.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Binding of radiolabeled tumor necrosis factor (TNF) to cell surface receptors was markedly reduced in human foreskin fibroblasts and cells from SV-80 and HeLa cell lines subsequent to treatment with interleukin 1 (IL-1) or 4 beta-phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA). The decrease in TNF binding was initiated within minutes of application of IL-1 or PMA and could not be blocked by cycloheximide, suggesting that it is independent of protein synthesis. Scatchard plot analysis of TNF binding to the SV-80 cells indicated that its decrease in response to IL-1 and PMA reflects a reduced amount of TNF receptors, with no change in their affinity. IL-1 and PMA together had an additive effect on TNF binding. Treatment with TNF did not result in decreased binding of IL-1 to its receptors nor did TNF and IL-1 compete directly for their respective receptors. Human U937 cells on which receptors for IL-1 were below detectable levels exhibited no decrease in TNF binding when treated with IL-1, but did so in response to PMA. In addition to a decrease in TNF receptors, cells treated with IL-1 or PMA exhibited a lesser vulnerability to the cytolytic effect of TNF. The two kinds of changes were not completely correlated. A particularly notable dissimilarity was evident when comparing the rate of their reversal: the TNF receptor level was fully recovered within a few hours of removal of IL-1 or of the water-soluble analogue of PMA, 4 beta-phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate, from pretreated SV-80 cells; yet at that time resistance to the cytotoxicity of TNF was still prominent. These findings indicate that IL-1 as well as tumor-promoting phorbol diesters can down regulate cellular response to TNF by inducing a decrease in the number of receptors for TNF, and apparently through some other effect(s) as well.  相似文献   

18.
The role of protein kinase C (PKC) in the control of erythropoietin (Epo) production was studied using the human hepatoma cell line HepG2. Inhibition of PKC by staurosporine and the selective PKC inhibitor CGP 41251 significantly reduced Epo formation. No inhibition occurred with the inactive staurosporine derivative CGP 42700. Treatment with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) for 24 h dose-dependently inhibited Epo formation, thus suggesting that down-regulation of PKC might be responsible for this inhibition. Immunoblotting experiments showed that incubation of HepG2 cells with PMA for 24 h resulted in a selective and almost complete down-regulation of PKC-alpha. Thus, PKC-alpha may play a permissive role in Epo synthesis in HepG2 cells.  相似文献   

19.
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is a 17-kDa protein produced by endotoxin-stimulated macrophages. We have demonstrated that recombinant human TNF activates human macrophages to kill intracellular bacteria of the Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) in a dose-related manner. TNF also primed macrophages to produce superoxide anion (O2-) following treatment with phorbol esther PMA (0.1 micrograms/ml). To investigate the intracellular pathway involved in the TNF-mediated activation of mycobacteriostatic/mycobactericidal activity in macrophages, we used two different protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitors: H7 (10(-5)-10(7) M) and staurosporine (10(-7)-10(-9) M). Mellitin (1 and 100 mM) was used as a calmodulin inhibitor. Human peripheral blood-derived macrophages cultured for 7 days were treated with H7, mellitin, or staurosporine for 1 hr prior to incubation with TNF (10(3) U/ml). Twenty-four hours after treatment with TNF the O2- release was measured spectrophotometrically following exposure to PMA. Macrophages were infected with MAC and the viable intracellular bacilli were quantitated following 4 days of treatment with TNF. All PKC inhibitors suppressed O2- production after incubation with PMA. However, treatment with either PKC or calmodulin inhibitors did not influence the intracellular killing of M. avium by TNF-stimulated macrophages. Exposure of the macrophages to cGMP inhibitor but not to cAMP inhibitor significantly impaired the response to the stimulation with TNF. In contrast, incubation of macrophages with protein kinase A (PKA) had no effect on TNF-mediated mycobacteriostatic/mycobactericidal activity. These results suggest that the TNF-mediated mycobactericidal activity in cultured macrophages probably occurs by a PKC-independent mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
We have previously shown that myosin light chain (MLC) phosphatase (MLCP) is critically involved in the regulation of agonist-mediated endothelial permeability and cytoskeletal organization (Verin AD, Patterson CE, Day MA, and Garcia JG. Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol 269: L99-L108, 1995). The molecular mechanisms of endothelial MLCP regulation, however, are not completely understood. In this study we found that, similar to smooth muscle, lung microvascular endothelial cells expressed specific endogenous inhibitor of MLCP, CPI-17. To elucidate the role of CPI-17 in the regulation of endothelial cytoskeleton, full-length CPI-17 plasmid was transiently transfected into pulmonary artery endothelial cells, where the background of endogenous protein is low. CPI-17 had no effect on cytoskeleton under nonstimulating conditions. However, stimulation of transfected cells with direct PKC activator PMA caused a dramatic increase in F-actin stress fibers, focal adhesions, and MLC phosphorylation compared with untransfected cells. Inflammatory agonist histamine and, to a much lesser extent, thrombin were capable of activating CPI-17. Histamine caused stronger CPI-17 phosphorylation than thrombin. Inhibitory analysis revealed that PKC more significantly contributes to agonist-induced CPI-17 phosphorylation than Rho-kinase. Dominant-negative PKC-alpha abolished the effect of CPI-17 on actin cytoskeleton, suggesting that the PKC-alpha isoform is most likely responsible for CPI-17 activation in the endothelium. Depletion of endogenous CPI-17 in lung microvascular endothelial cell significantly attenuated histamine-induced increase in endothelial permeability. Together these data suggest the potential importance of PKC/CPI-17-mediated pathway in histamine-triggered cytoskeletal rearrangements leading to lung microvascular barrier compromise.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号