Neuropathic pain is a common and often incapacitating clinical problem for which little useful therapy is presently available. Painful peripheral neuropathies can have many etiologies, among which are trauma, viral infections, exposure to radiation or chemotherapy, and metabolic or autoimmune diseases. Sufferers generally experience both pain at rest and exaggerated, painful sensitivity to light touch. Spontaneous firing of injured nerves is believed to play a critical role in the induction and maintenance of neuropathic pain syndromes. Using a well characterized nerve ligation model in the rat, we demonstrate that hyperpolarization-activated, cyclic nucleotide-modulated (HCN) "pacemaker" channels play a previously unrecognized role in both touch-related pain and spontaneous neuronal discharge originating in the damaged dorsal root ganglion. HCN channels, particularly HCN1, are abundantly expressed in rat primary afferent somata. Nerve injury markedly increases pacemaker currents in large-diameter dorsal root ganglion neurons and results in pacemaker-driven spontaneous action potentials in the ligated nerve. Pharmacological blockade of HCN activity using the specific inhibitor ZD7288 reverses abnormal hypersensitivity to light touch and decreases the firing frequency of ectopic discharges originating in Abeta and Adelta fibers by 90 and 40%, respectively, without conduction blockade. These findings suggest novel insights into the molecular basis of pain and the possibility of new, specific, effective pharmacological therapies.
Two heat-stable protein inhibitors of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), tentatively designated I1PP2A and I2PP2A, have been purified to apparent homogeneity from extracts of bovine kidney. The purified preparations of I1PP2A exhibited an apparent M(r) approximately 30,000 and 250,000 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and gel permeation chromatography on Sephacryl S-300, respectively. In contrast, the purified preparations of I2PP2A exhibited an apparent M(r) approximately 20,000 and 80,000 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and gel permeation chromatography on Sephacryl S-200, respectively. The purified preparations of I1PP2A and I2PP2A inhibited PP2A with 32P-labeled myelin basic protein, 32P-labeled histone H1, 32P-labeled pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, 32P-labeled phosphorylase, and protamine kinase as substrates. By contrast, I1PP2A and I2PP2A exhibited little effect, if any, on the activity of PP2A with 32P-labeled casein, and did not prevent the autodephosphorylation of PP2A in incubations with the autophosphorylation-activated protein kinase [Guo, H., & Damuni, Z. (1993) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 90, 2500-2504]. The purified preparations of I1PP2A and I2PP2A had little effect, if any, on the activities of protein phosphatase 1, protein phosphatase 2B, protein phosphatase 2C, and pyruvate dehydrogenase phosphatase. With 32P-labeled MBP as a substrate, kinetic analysis according to Henderson showed that I1PP2A and I2PP2A were noncompetitive and displayed a Ki of about 30 and 25 nM, respectively. Following cleavage with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease, I1PP2A and I2PP2A displayed distinct peptide patterns, indicating that these inhibitor proteins are the products of distinct genes. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of the purified preparations indicate that I1PP2A and I2PP2A are novel proteins.
To study transporters involved in regulating intracellular Ca 2؉ , we isolated a full-length cDNA encoding a Ca 2؉ -ATPase from a model plant, Arabidopsis, and named it ACA2 (Arabidopsis Ca 2؉ -ATPase, isoform 2). ACA2p is most similar to a "plasma membrane-type"
Purified preparations of a distinct autophosphorylation-activated protein kinase from bovine kidney phosphorylated and inactivated purified preparations of protein phosphatase 2A2 (PP2A2) by about 80% with the autophosphorylation-activated protein kinase, protamine kinase, and 32P-labeled myelin basic protein as substrates. Analysis of incubations performed in the presence of 0.2 mM [-32P]ATP by autoradiography following SDS/PAGE and by FPLC gel permeation chromatography on Superose 12 demonstrated that the catalytic subunit of PP2A2 was phosphorylated in the incubation mixtures containing the kinase and phosphatase. Up to 0.3 mol of phosphate groups was incorporated per mol of the catalytic subunit of PP2A2 following incubation with the kinase. This phosphorylation was enhanced about 5-fold in the presence of 0.4 FM microcystin-LR. In addition, up to 1 mol of phosphate groups was incorporated per mol of the PP2A2 subunit of apparent Mr 60,000 when microcystin-LR was included. Analysis by thin-layer chromatography indicated that PP2A2 catalyzed an autodephosphorylation reaction which was inhibited by microcystin-LR. Phospho amino acid analysis showed that the catalytic subunit of PP2A2 was phosphorylated on threonine residues by the autophosphorylation-activated protein kinase. Together with previous observations, the results suggest that inactivation of PP2A by phosphorylation catalyzed by the autophosphorylation-activated protein kinase could contribute to the marked increase in the phosphorylation of cellular proteins in response to insulin and other mitogens.Protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) is a protein-serine/threonine-phosphatase which acts on the enzymes and proteins that regulate the rates of glycogen metabolism, glycolysis/ gluconeogenesis, cholesterol synthesis, aromatic amino acid metabolism, protein synthesis, gene transcription, and numerous other processes (1, 2). Two forms, PP2A1 and PP2A2, have been found in the cytosol of nearly all tissues examined (1, 2). A form of PP2A2 has also been purified to apparent homogeneity from extracts of bovine kidney mitochondria (3). PP2A1 and PP2A2 contain a catalytic subunit of apparent Mr 36,000 and a subunit of apparent Mr 60,000. PP2A1 also contains a subunit of apparent Mr 55,000. The catalytic subunit is highly conserved (4-8), and in some species two forms have been identified by cloning methods (4-8). The deduced amino acid sequences indicate that these two forms of the catalytic subunit exhibit 97% identity, with four of the seven amino acid substitutions located in the N terminus being conservative (4-8). However, the exact physiological function of PP2A is uncertain because the enzyme exhibits overlapping specificity with PP1 and PP2C. Furthermore, other than subunit-subunit interactions which modulate the specificity of PP2A (1, 2), there is little information on the regulation of this enzyme (1, 2). Nevertheless, PP2A is considered an important enzyme that is likely to occupy a critical position in the control of diverse metabolic pathways and...
Phosphorylation in vivo of several proteins in the mammalian heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein complex (hnRNP), including A1, has been observed and proposed as a regulatory step in pre-mRNA splicing [Maryland, S. H., Dwen, P., & Pederson, T. (1993) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 90, 7764-7768]. We examined the ability of recombinant hnRNP protein A1 to act as a substrate for a number of purified Ser/Thr protein kinases in vitro. A survey of seven protein kinases showed that A1 was heavily phosphorylated by protein kinase C (PKC) and also was phosphorylated by casein kinase II, protamine kinase, and protein kinase A. In contrast, autophosphorylation-activated protein kinase and two forms of myelin basic protein kinase failed to phosphorylate A1. Proteolysis with trypsin and V8 protease revealed that PKC phosphorylates A1 at three main sites, two in the N-terminal domain (spanning residues 2-196) and one in the C-terminal domain (spanning residues 197-320). Amino acid sequencing revealed that these sites were Ser95, Ser192, and Ser199; phosphorylation at Ser192 was more abundant than at Ser95 and Ser199. Phosphorylation by PKC inhibited the strand annealing activity of A1. Protein phosphatase 2A, but not protein phosphatase 1, dephosphorylated A1 and reversed the inhibitory effect of PKC phosphorylation on the strand annealing activity. A conformational change in the C-terminal domain of A1 was observed upon PKC phosphorylation, and this was associated with a decrease in A1's affinity for single-stranded polynucleotides. The results are consistent with a role of phosphorylation of A1 in regulating its strand annealing activity in vivo.
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