| Literature DB >> 19887445 |
Xue Wei Meng1, Michael P Heldebrant, Karen S Flatten, David A Loegering, Haiming Dai, Paula A Schneider, Timothy S Gomez, Kevin L Peterson, Sergey A Trushin, Allan D Hess, B Douglas Smith, Judith E Karp, Daniel D Billadeau, Scott H Kaufmann.
Abstract
Although treatment with the protein kinase C (PKC) activator phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) is known to protect a subset of cells from induction of apoptosis by death ligands such as Fas ligand and tumor necrosis factor-alpha-related apoptosis-inducing ligand, the mechanism of this protection is unknown. This study demonstrated that protection in short term apoptosis assays and long term proliferation assays was maximal when Jurkat or HL-60 human leukemia cells were treated with 2-5 nm PMA. Immunoblotting demonstrated that multiple PKC isoforms, including PKCalpha, PKCbeta, PKCepsilon, and PKC, translocated from the cytosol to a membrane-bound fraction at these PMA concentrations. When the ability of short hairpin RNA (shRNA) constructs that specifically down-regulated each of these isoforms was examined, PKCbeta shRNA uniquely reversed PMA-induced protection against cell death. The PKCbeta-selective small molecule inhibitor enzastaurin had a similar effect. Although mass spectrometry suggested that Fas is phosphorylated on a number of serines and threonines, mutation of these sites individually or collectively had no effect on Fas-mediated death signaling or PMA protection. Further experiments demonstrated that PMA diminished ligand-induced cell surface accumulation of Fas and DR5, and PKCbeta shRNA or enzastaurin reversed this effect. Moreover, enzastaurin sensitized a variety of human tumor cell lines and clinical acute myelogenous leukemia isolates, which express abundant PKCbeta, to tumor necrosis factor-alpha related apoptosis-inducing ligand-induced death in the absence of PMA. Collectively, these results identify a specific PKC isoform that modulates death receptor-mediated cytotoxicity as well as a small molecule inhibitor that mitigates the inhibitory effects of PKC activation on ligand-induced death receptor trafficking and cell death.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19887445 PMCID: PMC2801290 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M109.057638
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157