Abstract

The aim of the present study was to compare in vitro protein expression, protein kinase activity and protein phosphorylation in the medial vestibular nucleus (MVN) and prepositus hypoglossi (PH) from labyrinthine-intact guinea pigs and from guinea pigs at various stages of vestibular compensation following unilateral labyrinthectomy (UL). The ipsilateral (I-MVN) and contralateral (C-MVN) MVN, and the ipsilateral (I-PH) and contralateral (C-PH) PH, were dissected from 3 naive labyrinthine-intact guinea pigs and 55 guinea pigs at 10 hs or 53 hs following a surgical UL or sham operation. Tissue extracts were incubated with [gamma-33P]ATP+/-Ca2+, phorbol 12, 13 dibutyrate and phosphatidylserine or +/- Ca2+ and calmodulin, to enhance protein kinase C (PKC) or calcium calmodulin kinase (CaMK) activity, respectively. Data were analysed as the ratio of activated to basal 33P incorporation detected by phosphorimaging. There were similar total protein and phosphoprotein profiles in the MVN and PH, as well as both PKC and CaMKII activity, suggesting that the MVN and PH are similar in the way that proteins undergo rapid modification by phosphorylation. During the development of vestibular compensation, a 46 kDa band in C-PH displayed higher PKC-mediated phosphorylation from 10 hs post-UL compared to sham controls. Significantly greater PKC-mediated phosphorylation of proteins of approximately 18, 46 and 75 kDa was observed in C-PH at 10 hs compared to 53 hs post-UL and in most cases the phosphorylation was greater in C-PH than in the C-MVN. These results suggest that between 10 and 53 hs post-UL, PKC-mediated phosphorylation changes mainly in the C-PH rather than the ipsilateral or contralateral MVN.

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