Abstract

We have recently shown that bradykinin (BK), acting via B2 receptors, stimulates DNA synthesis and proliferation of rat mesangial cells and that these responses were preceded by induction of c-fos and AP-1 binding activity (Kidney Int. 50: 1850, 1996). The present study was designed to examine the role of protein tyrosine phosphorylation in coupling the B2 receptors with AP-1 and DNA replication. BK (100 nM) induced tyrosine phosphorylation of distinct substrates of 170, 120-130, 70, 55-60, and 44-42 kDa as detected by antiphosphotyrosine immunoblotting. Immunoblotting with a polyclonal ERK antibody of BK-stimulated cells revealed predominant phosphorylation of the 42-kDa MAP kinase (ERK-2). Inhibition of tyrosine kinase activity with genistein (15-100 μM) abolished the stimulatory effect of BK on tyrosine phosphorylation and ERK-2 activation. Furthermore, genistein attenuated BK-mediated c-fos and c-jun induction and AP-1-DNA binding activity and suppressed BK-stimulated DNA synthesis in a dose-dependent manner. Herbimycin A (50-200 nM), a chemically and mechanistically distinct tyrosine kinase inhibitor, also abolished BK-stimulated DNA synthesis. Thus, tyrosine phosphorylation is an essential requirement in the mitogenic signaling of BK in glomerular mesangial cells. The data implicate the MAP kinase, ERK-2, and the transcription factor, AP-1, as the downstream signals linking BK-B2 receptor stimulation with DNA replication.

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