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Growth factor-stimulated protein synthesis is inhibited by sodium orthovanadate.
Authors:F Vi?als  F R McKenzie  J Pouysségur
Affiliation:Institute of Signaling, Developmental Biology and Cancer Research, Nice, France. fvinals@bell.ub.es
Abstract:The study of intracellular signaling pathways has been aided by the use of sodium orthovanadate, a cell-permeable inhibitor of tyrosine phosphatases. However, long-term addition of sodium orthovanadate is often cytotoxic. In this study we demonstrate that the growth factor-mediated increase in the rate of protein synthesis was inhibited by sodium orthovanadate. This effect of sodium orthovanadate was dose-dependent, with an IC50 of 40 microM and maximal inhibition obtained at 100 microM. As a consequence, the fetal bovine serum-mediated induction of the immediate-early genes, c-Fos and MKP-1, at the protein level was inhibited by orthovanadate. Orthovanadate's ability to attenuate protein synthesis was partially reversible, and was no longer evident when the agent was added 6 h after addition of growth factor to cells. Analysis of several elements of signaling pathways which are known to regulate protein synthesis in a positive manner (p42/p44 MAPK, AKT and p70 S6K stimulation, and hyperphosphorylation of PHAS-I) were not inhibited but rather were stimulated by orthovanadate. Thus, sodium orthovanadate is a potent inhibitor of growth factor-stimulated protein synthesis independent of p42/p44 MAPK or PI3K-p70 S6K activation.
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