Abstract

In rat pinealocytes, cytoplasmic alkalization causes protein kinase C (PKC) translocation, but the isozyme involved is not known. In this study, we investigated the effect of cytoplasmic alkalization on membrane-associated PKCalpha, delta, epsilon, and zeta, four isozymes present in the rat pineal gland. Treatment with NH(4)Cl, which had no effect on PKCzeta, caused a sustained increase in membrane-associated PKCalpha, delta, and epsilon that lasted for at least 60 min. The effect of NH(4)Cl on PKCalpha, delta, and epsilon was reduced by sodium propionate, an agent that counteracts the effect of NH(4)Cl on intracellular pH. Both sodium propionate and 5-(N,N-hexamethylene)amiloride (HMA), two treatments that abolished the effect of norepinephrine on cytoplasmic alkalization, also reduced norepinephrine-mediated increases in membrane-associated PKCalpha, delta, and epsilon. In contrast, these two treatments did not have an effect on the increase in membrane-associated PKC isozymes caused by 4beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), an active phorbol ester, even though HMA was effective in abolishing PMA-mediated increases in intracellular pH. These results, apart from demonstrating that cytoplasmic alkalization by itself can cause translocation of PKCalpha, delta, and epsilon in rat pinealocytes, also indicate that the norepinephrine-stimulated cytoplasmic alkalization plays an important role in transducing signals from the adrenergic receptor to selective PKC isozymes. However, PKC translocation stimulated directly by PMA does not appear to be sensitive to changes in intracellular pH.

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