Abstract

BackgroundWhile evidence suggested that the activity states of Protein kinase B (AKT/PKB) and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) play an important role in the progression of the Growth Hormone (GH) signal cascade, the implication of the activation of AKT/PKB and eNOS in terms of their function in the signaling pathway was not clear.ResultsUsing a specific AKT/PKB inhibitor and a functional proteomic approach, we were able to detect the activities of multiple signal transduction pathway elements, the downstream targets of the AKT/PKB pathway and the modification of those responses by treatment with GH. Inhibiting the AKT/PKB activity reduced or eliminated the activation (phosphorylation) of eNOS. We demonstrated that the progression of the GH signal cascade is influenced by the activity status of AKT and eNOS, wherein the suppression of AKT activity appears to augment the activity of extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 (Erk1/2) and to antagonize the deactivation (phosphorylation) of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDC2/Cdk1) induced by GH. Phosphorylation of GSK3a/b (glycogen synthase kinase 3), the downstream target of AKT/PKB, was inhibited by the AKT/PKB inhibitor. GH did not increase phosphorylation of ribosomal S6 kinase 1 (RSK1) in normal cells but increases phosphorylation of RSK1 in cells pre-treated with the AKT and eNOS inhibitors.ConclusionThe MAP kinase and CDC2 kinase-dependent intracellular mechanisms are involved in or are the targets of the GH's action processes, and these activities are probably directly or indirectly modulated by AKT/PKB pathways. We propose that the AKT/PKB-eNOS module likely functions as a negative feedback mediator of GH actions.

Highlights

  • While evidence suggested that the activity states of Protein kinase B (AKT/PKB) and endothelial nitric oxide synthase play an important role in the progression of the Growth Hormone (GH) signal cascade, the implication of the activation of AKT/PKB and eNOS in terms of their function in the signaling pathway was not clear

  • The AKT/PKB inhibitor effectively inhibited phosphorylation of AKT, and eNOS The MDBK cell culture system was used as a model to examine whether the function of AKT/PKB may be associated with the ability of GH to modulate the activation state of the NO-generating enzyme eNOS

  • Membrane-bound Akt is phosphorylated at two sites for its full activation [27]; Thr-308 in the activation loop of the kinase domain is phosphorylated by 3-phosphoinositide-dependent kinase-1 (PDK1) and Ser-473 in the C-terminal hydrophobic motif by a putative kinase PDK2

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Summary

Introduction

While evidence suggested that the activity states of Protein kinase B (AKT/PKB) and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) play an important role in the progression of the Growth Hormone (GH) signal cascade, the implication of the activation of AKT/PKB and eNOS in terms of their function in the signaling pathway was not clear. Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS or NOS3) is a target downstream of activated AKT/PKB. In response to various forms of cellular stimulation, eNOS is phosphorylated by AKT/PKB [1]. The AKT proto-oncogene is an important regulator of various cellular processes, including glucose metabolism and cell survival [25]. AKT/PKB can be phosphorylated and activated by the activation of receptor tyrosine kinases and the G-proteincoupled receptor, as well as the stimulation of cells by mechanical forces [6]. The clarification of AKT's downstream targets and functions is of central importance to our understanding and treatment of such diseases

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