Literature DB >> 17321765

Lysophosphatidic acid stimulation of platelets rapidly induces Ca2+-dependent dephosphorylation of cofilin that is independent of dense granule secretion and aggregation.

Dharmendra Pandey1, Pankaj Goyal, Wolfgang Siess.   

Abstract

Cofilin is an actin dynamizing protein and inactivated after Ser3 phosphorylation by LIM-kinases (LIMKs). We studied whether in platelets stimulated by lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), Rho-kinase or p21-activated kinase (PAK) mediates LIMK-1 activation leading to subsequent phosphorylation and inactivation of cofilin and the increase of F-actin. During LPA (0.1 microM)-induced shape change, a rapid Rho-kinase activation and a slower activation of PAK were observed. Rho-kinase activation led to rapid LIMK-1 (Thr508) phosphorylation. Despite of LIMK-1 activation, cofilin net phosphorylation was not increased. Cofilin rapidly associated with F-actin and preceded the F-actin increase. Pretreatment with the Rho-kinase inhibitor Y-27632 inhibited LIMK-1 phosphorylation, unmasked cofilin dephosphorylation and inhibited the reversible F-actin increase during shape change. In the presence of fibrinogen, LPA (10 microM) induced ATP-secretion from dense granules and aggregation, and cofilin was rapidly dephosphorylated and then rephosphorylated in a Rho-kinase/LIMK-1-dependent manner. In the absence of fibrinogen, cofilin de- and rephosphorylation after LPA (10 microM) was unchanged, but secretion and aggregation were absent. Cofilin dephosphorylation was completely blocked by BAPTA-AM indicating that it was mediated by an increase of cytosolic Ca(2+). We conclude that in LPA-stimulated platelets, Rho-kinase-dependent LIMK-1 activation mediates the F-actin increase during shape change without enhancing cofilin net phosphorylation. However, a rapid dephosphorylation of cofilin occurs during secretion and aggregation, which is Ca(2+)-dependent, upstream of secretion and aggregation and might regulate these platelet responses.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17321765     DOI: 10.1016/j.bcmd.2007.01.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood Cells Mol Dis        ISSN: 1079-9796            Impact factor:   3.039


  11 in total

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Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2017-01-01       Impact factor: 5.357

10.  Calcineurin-dependent cofilin activation and increased retrograde actin flow drive 5-HT-dependent neurite outgrowth in Aplysia bag cell neurons.

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