| Literature DB >> 9547350 |
T Palomero1, F Barros, D del Camino, C G Viloria, P de la Peña.
Abstract
Activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) is induced by adding thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) to COS-7 cells cotransfected with TRH receptors and an epitope-tagged MAPK. Long term treatment of the cells with pertussis toxin has no effect on TRH-induced MAPK activation. Incubation of the cells with the protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor GF109203X causes an almost complete inhibition of MAPK activation by the PKC activator phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate. In contrast, only approximately 50% of the TRH-induced MAPK activity is inhibited by GF109203X, indicating that activation of MAPK by TRH is only partially dependent on PKC. The inhibitory effect of GF109203X is additive with that of p21(N17ras), a dominant negative mutant of p21(ras) that exerts little effect on PKC-dependent MAPK activation by phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate. The TRH-induced activation of MAPK also is inhibited partially by overexpression of transducin alpha subunits (alpha t), an agent known to sequester free G protein beta gamma dimers. However, the inhibitory potency of alpha t on TRH-induced activation is about half of that obtained in cells transfected with m2 muscarinic receptors, which activate MAPK exclusively through beta gamma dimers. The effect of alpha t is also additive with that of GF109203X but not with that of p21(N17ras). MAPK activation is not induced by the constitutively active form of G alpha q due to an inhibitory effect of its expression at a step downstream of that at which PKC-dependent and -independent routes to MAPK converge. Our results demonstrate that TRH receptors activate MAPK by a pathway only partially dependent on PKC activity. Furthermore, they indicate that beta gamma dimers of a pertussis and cholera toxin-insensitive G protein are involved in the PKC-independent fraction of the dual signaling route to MAPK initiated in the TRH receptor.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9547350 DOI: 10.1124/mol.53.4.613
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Pharmacol ISSN: 0026-895X Impact factor: 4.436