Literature DB >> 16132703

Okadaic acid induces tyrosine phosphorylation of IkappaBalpha that mediated by PKR pathway in human osteoblastic MG63 cells.

Hiroyuki Morimoto1, Akiko Ozaki, Hirohiko Okamura, Kaya Yoshida, Seiichiro Kitamura, Tatsuji Haneji.   

Abstract

Treatment of human osteosarcoma cell line MG 63 cells with okadaic acid stimulated phosphorylation of IkappaBalpha, as judged from the results of Western blot analysis and a lambda protein phosphatase dephosphorylation assay. The stimulated phosphorylation of IkappaBalpha was both time- and dose-dependent. The phosphorylation sites of IkappaBalpha were taken to be tyrosine residues because the anti-phospho-tyrosine antibody bound to the samples immunoprecipitated with the anti-IkappaBalpha antibody. In the cells treated with 100 nM okadaic acid consequential translocation of NF-kappaB p65 from the cytosol to the nucleus occurred. Double-stranded RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR) is a player in the cellular antiviral response and is involved in transcriptional stimulation through activation of NF-kappaB. We investigated the functional relationship between PKR and IkappaBalpha phosphorylation by constructing MG 63 PKR K/R cells that produced a catalytically inactive mutant PKR. NF-kappaB p65 was detected in the nucleus of these cells, even in the unstimulated cells. Although IkappaBalpha was degraded phosphorylation of eIF-2 alpha, a substrate of PKR, did not occur in the mutant cells treated with okadaic acid. Our results suggest that okadaic acid-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of IkappaBalpha was mediated by PKR kinase activity, thus indicating the involvement of this kinase in the control mechanism governing the activation of NF-kappaB. (Mol Cell Biochem 276: 211-217, 2005).

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16132703     DOI: 10.1007/s11010-005-4440-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cell Biochem        ISSN: 0300-8177            Impact factor:   3.396


  46 in total

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5.  Okadaic acid activates the PKR pathway and induces apoptosis through PKR stimulation in MG63 osteoblast-like cells.

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  5 in total

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