Abstract

Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) is an angiogenic and oncogenic factor that activates signal transduction pathways involved in the expression of transcriptional regulators of tumorigenesis. RUNX2, a member of the Ig-loop family of transcription factors is expressed in vascular endothelial cells (EC) and regulates EC migration, invasion, and proliferation. Here we show that IGF-1 and its receptor regulate post-translational changes in RUNX2 to activate DNA binding in proliferating EC. The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitor, LY294002, reduced both basal and IGF-1-stimulated RUNX2 DNA binding activity in the absence of changes in RUNX2 protein as did the overexpression of the phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate phosphatase, confirming that PI3K signaling mediates RUNX2 activation. IGF-1 increased ERK1/2 activation, which was abrogated by the inhibition of PI3K, thus linking these two pathways in EC. Treatment with U0126, which inhibits ERK1/2 activation, reduced IGF-1-stimulated RUNX2 DNA binding without affecting RUNX2 protein levels. Overexpression of constitutively active MKK1 increased RUNX2 DNA binding and phosphorylation. No additive effects of PI3K or ERK inhibitors on DNA binding were evident. Surprisingly, these IGF-1-mediated effects on RUNX2 were not regulated by Akt phosphorylation, a common downstream target of PI3K, as determined by pharmacological or genetic inhibition. However, an inhibitor of the p21-activated protein kinase-1, glutathione S-transferase-Pak1-(83-149), inhibited both basal and IGF-1-stimulated RUNX2 DNA binding, suggesting that Pak1 mediates IGF-1 signaling to increase RUNX2 activity. These results indicate that the angiogenic growth factor, IGF-1, can regulate RUNX2 DNA binding through sequential activation of the PI3K/Pak1 and ERK1/2 signaling cascade.

Highlights

  • Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) is an angiogenic and oncogenic factor that activates signal transduction pathways involved in the expression of transcriptional regulators of tumorigenesis

  • An inhibitor of the p21-activated protein kinase-1, glutathione S-transferase-p21-activated kinase-1 (Pak1)-(83–149), inhibited both basal and IGF-1-stimulated RUNX2 DNA binding, suggesting that Pak1 mediates IGF-1 signaling to increase RUNX2 activity. These results indicate that the angiogenic growth factor, IGF-1, can regulate RUNX2 DNA binding through sequential activation of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/Pak1 and ERK1/2 signaling cascade

  • RUNX2 protein is expressed in several endothelial cells (EC) including HBME, human dermal microvascular EC, and human lung microvascular EC [11,12,13, 48] and in tumor cell lines including MDA231 breast [15] and PC-3 prostate [19] carcinoma

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) is an angiogenic and oncogenic factor that activates signal transduction pathways involved in the expression of transcriptional regulators of tumorigenesis. An inhibitor of the p21-activated protein kinase-1, glutathione S-transferase-Pak1-(83–149), inhibited both basal and IGF-1-stimulated RUNX2 DNA binding, suggesting that Pak mediates IGF-1 signaling to increase RUNX2 activity. These results indicate that the angiogenic growth factor, IGF-1, can regulate RUNX2 DNA binding through sequential activation of the PI3K/Pak and ERK1/2 signaling cascade. RUNX2-mediated osteocalcin promoter activation was increased by FGF-2 but inhibited by U0126, suggesting that an ERK pathway was responsible for transcriptional activity This FGF-2 activated response was synergistically enhanced by the protein kinase A pathway after forskolin treatment [31]. PI3K activates Pak1 [42], and Pak phosphorylates MKK1 at position Ser-298 [43] or Raf-1 kinase on Ser-338 [44], contributing to the activation of the ERK pathway [35, 45]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call