Signal Transduction Pathways Regulated by Mitogen-activated/Extracellular Response Kinase Kinase Kinase Induce Cell Death — Nancy L. Johnson (1996) | RDL Network
Signal Transduction Pathways Regulated by Mitogen-activated/Extracellular Response Kinase Kinase Kinase Induce Cell Death
Article 1996 en
Authors
NJ
Nancy L. Johnson
AG
Anne M. Gardner
KD
Katrina Diener
Abstract
1 min read
Mitogen-activated/extracellular response kinase kinase (MEK) kinase (MEKK) is a serine-threonine kinase that regulates sequential protein phosphorylation pathways, leading to the activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK), including members of the Jun kinase (JNK)/stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK) family. In Swiss 3T3 and REF52 fibroblasts, activated MEKK induces cell death involving cytoplasmic shrinkage, nuclear condensation, and DNA fragmentation characteristic of apoptosis. Expression of activated MEKK enhanced the apoptotic response to ultraviolet irradiation, indicating that MEKK-regulated pathways sensitize cells to apoptotic stimuli. Inducible expression of activated MEKK stimulated the transactivation of c-Myc and Elk-1. Activated Raf, the serine-threonine protein kinase that activates the ERK members of the MAPK family, stimulated Elk-1 transactivation but not c-Myc; expression of activated Raf does not induce any of the cellular changes associated with MEKK-mediated cell death. Thus, MEKK selectively regulates signal transduction pathways that contribute to the apoptotic response.
Endre Kiss‐Toth, Stephanie M. Bagstaff, Hye Youn Sung, Veronika Jozsa, Clare Dempsey, Jim Caunt, Kevin M. Oxley, David Wyllie, Tímea Polgár, Mary T. Harte, Luke O'neill, Eva E. Qwarnström, Steven Dower
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.