Abstract

We have used a recombinant mouse pre-B cell line (TonB210.1, expressing Bcr/Abl under the control of an inducible promoter) and several human leukemia cell lines to study the effect of high tyrosine kinase activity on G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) agonist-stimulated cellular Ca 2+ release and store-operated Ca 2+ entry (SOCE). After induction of Bcr/Abl expression, GPCR-linked SOCE increased. The effect was reverted in the presence of the specific Abl inhibitor imatinib (1 μM) and the Src inhibitor PP2 (10 μM). In leukemic cell lines constitutively expressing high tyrosine kinase activity, Ca 2+ transients were reduced by imatinib and/or PP2. Ca 2+ transients were enhanced by specific inhibitors of PKC subtypes and this effect was amplified by tyrosine kinase inhibition in Bcr/Abl expressing TonB210.1 and K562 cells. Under all conditions Ca 2+ transients were essentially blocked by the PKC activator PMA. In Bcr/Abl expressing (but not in native) TonB210.1 cells, tyrosine kinase inhibitors enhanced PKCα catalytic activity and PKCα co-immunoprecipitated with Bcr/Abl. Unlike native TonB210.1 cells, Bcr/Abl expressing cells showed a high rate of cell death if Ca 2+ influx was reduced by complexing extracellular Ca 2+ with BAPTA. Our data suggest that tonic inhibition of PKC represents a mechanism by which high tyrosine kinase activity can enhance cellular Ca 2+ transients and thus exert profound effects on the proliferation, apoptosis and chemotaxis of leukemic cells.

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