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  • 1995-1999  (4)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1471-4159
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract: We examined the interdependence of calpain and protein kinase C (PKC) activities on neurite outgrowth in SH-SY-5Y human neuroblastoma cells. SH-SY-5Y cells elaborated neurites when deprived of serum or after a specific thrombin inhibitor, hirudin, was added to serum-containing medium. The extent of neurite outgrowth under these conditions was enhanced by treatment of cells with the cell-permeant cysteine protease inhibitors N-acetyl-leucyl-leucyl-norleucinal (“C1”) and calpeptin or by the phospholipid-mediated intracellular delivery of either a recombinant peptide corresponding to a conserved inhibitory sequence of human calpastatin or a neutralizing anti-calpain antisera. Calpain inhibition in intact cells was confirmed by immunoblot analysis showing inhibition of calpain autolysis and reduced proteolysis of the known calpain substrates fodrin and microtubule-associated protein 1. The above inhibitory peptides and antiserum did not induce neurites in medium containing serum but lacking hirudin, suggesting that increased surface protein adhesiveness is a prerequisite for enhancement of neurite outgrowth by calpain inhibition. Treatment of cells with the PKC inhibitor H7, staurosporine, or sphingosine induced neurite outgrowth independently of serum concentration. Because calpain is thought to regulate PKC activity, we examined this potential interrelationship during neurite outgrowth. Simultaneous treatment with calpain and PKC inhibitors did not produce additive or synergistic effects on neurite outgrowth. PKC activation by 2-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) prevented and reversed both neurite initiation by serum deprivation and its enhancement by calpain inhibitors. Treatment of cells with the calpain inhibitor C1 retarded PKC down-regulation following TPA treatment. Cell-free analyses demonstrated the relative specificity of various protease and kinase inhibitors for calpain and PKC and confirmed the ability of millimolar calcium-requiring calpain to cleave the SH-SY-5Y PKC regulatory subunit from the catalytic subunit, yielding a free catalytic subunit (protein kinase M). These findings suggest that the influence of PKC on neurite outgrowth is downstream from that of surface adhesiveness and calpain activity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Science Ltd
    Journal of neurochemistry 64 (1995), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1471-4159
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract: Calcium-activated neutral proteases (calpains) are regulated by specific endogenous protein inhibitors, the calpastatins, which are widely distributed in mammalian tissues. Calpastatins from different species or in various tissues from the same species exhibit considerable size heterogeneity on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gels, reflecting both transcriptional and posttranslational regulation. This heterogeneity has complicated previous biochemical characterizations. In this study, we purified bovine brain calpastatin to homogeneity. The inhibitor was purified 2,463-fold from a cytosolic fraction of fresh bovine cerebral cortex by chromatographies on diethylaminoethyl cellulose, Ultrogel AcA44, phenyl-Sepharose, concanavalin A-Sepharose, and Q-Sepharose. The major calpastatin displayed a native molecular mass of 250–300 kDa by gel filtration and was composed of 125-kDa polypeptide chains by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Small amounts of a 68-kDa calpastatin fragment were detected particularly in molecules exhibiting smaller native molecular mass (250 kDa). When electroeluted from SDS gels, the 125- and 68-kDa polypeptides each inhibited calpain. The purified protein was strongly immunoreactive toward antibodies raised against a synthetic peptide, CEKLGEKEETIPPDYR, shown to be a conserved repetitive motif in the calpastatin gene or a recombinant polypeptide corresponding to domains L and 1 of human calpastatin. Calpastatins purified from bovine and human erythrocytes exhibited molecular masses of 78 and 68 kDa, respectively, by SDS-PAGE. Both erythrocyte calpastatins reacted strongly with antibodies against the conserved sequence but not with antibodies raised against domains L and 1 of human calpastatin, indicating that the erythrocyte inhibitors lack these two domains. The heat-stable inhibitor was effective toward calpain I and calpain II and showed no inhibitory activity toward other proteases, including trypsin, chymotrypsin, cathepsin D, bromelain, and papain. Brain calpastatin therefore shares molecular properties with calpastatins from other tissues but is distinct from the erythrocyte form.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1471-4159
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract: Calcium influx into SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells after ionophore treatment or transient permeabilization in calcium-containing medium increased ALZ-50 immunoreactivity markedly. This increase was prevented by inhibitors active against calpain or against protein kinase C (PKC), suggesting that both of these enzymes were required to mediate the effect of calcium influx on ALZ-50 immunoreactivity. Treatment with PKC activator TPA increased ALZ-50 immunoreactivity in the absence of calcium influx or after intracellular delivery of the specific calpain inhibitor calpastatin, indicating that the influence of PKC was downstream from that of calpain. Calcium influx also resulted in μ-calpain autolysis (one index of calpain activation) and the transient appearance of PKM (i.e., free PKC catalytic subunits, generated by calpain-mediated cleavage of the regulatory and catalytic PKC domains). Inhibition of calpain within intact cells resulted in a dramatic increase in steady-state levels of total τ (migrating at 46–52 kDa) but resulted in a relatively minor increase in 68-kDa ALZ-50-immunoreactive τ isoforms. Although calcium influx into intact cells resulted in accumulation of ALZ-50 immunoreactivity, total τ levels were, by contrast, rapidly depleted. Incubation of isolated fractions with calpain in the presence of calcium indicated that ALZ-50-immunoreactive τ isoforms were more resistant to calpain-mediated proteolysis than were non-ALZ-50 reactive τ isoforms. These data therefore indicate that calpain may regulate τ levels directly via proteolysis and indirectly through PKC activation. A consequence of the latter action is altered τ phosphorylation, perhaps involving one or more kinase cascades, and the preferential accumulation of ALZ-50-immunoreactive τ isoforms due to their relative resistance to degradation. These findings provide a basis for the possibility that disregulation of calcium homeostasis may contribute to the pathological levels of conversion of τ to A68 by hyperactivation of the calpain/PKC system.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1471-4159
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract : We have shown previously that phosphate groups on theamino-terminal head domain region of the middle molecular mass subunit ofneurofilament proteins (NF-M) are added by second messenger-dependent proteinkinases. Here, we have identified Ser23 as a specific proteinkinase A phosphorylation site on the native NF-M subunit and on two syntheticpeptides, S1 (14RRVPTETRSSF24) andS2 (21RSSFSRVSGSPSSGFRSQSWS41), localizedwithin the amino-terminal head domain region. Ser23 was identifiedas a phosphorylation site on the 32P-labeled α-chymotrypticpeptide that carried 〉80% of the 32P-phosphates incorporatedinto the NF-M subunit by protein kinase A. The synthetic peptidesS1 and S2 were phosphorylated 18 and two times moreefficiently by protein kinase A than protein kinase C, respectively. Neitherof the peptides was phosphorylated by casein kinase II. The sequence analysesof the chemically modified phosphorylated serine residues showed thatSer23 was the major site of phosphorylation for protein kinase A onboth S1 and S2 peptides. Low levels of incorporation of32P-phosphates into Ser22, Ser28, andSer32 by protein kinase A were also observed. Protein kinase Cincorporated 32P-phosphates into Ser22,Ser23, Ser25, Ser28, Ser32, and athreonine residue, but none of these sites could be assigned as a major siteof phosphorylation. Analyses of the phosphorylated synthetic peptides byliquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry also showed that protein kinaseA phosphorylated only one site on peptide S1 and that ions with upto four phosphates were detected on peptide S2. Analysis of thedata from the tandem ion trap mass spectrometry by using the computer programPEPSEARCH did not unequivocally identify the specific sites of phosphorylationon these serine-rich peptides. Our data suggest that Ser23 is amajor protein kinase A-specific phosphorylation site on the amino-terminalhead region of the NF-M subunit. Phosphorylation of Ser23 on the NF-M subunit by protein kinase A may play a regulatory role in neurofilament assembly and/or the organization of neurofilaments in the axon.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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