The results of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (1) have shown that strict glycemic control can prevent the onset and progression of diabetic complications. Several hypotheses such as hyperosmolarity, glycation end products, oxidant formation, abnormality of sorbitol and myoinositol metabolism, and diacylglycerol (DAG)-protein kinase C (PKC) activation (2-6) have been proposed to explain the various pathologic changes induced by hyperglycemia. It is likely that glucose and its metabolites mediate their adverse effects by altering the various signal transduction pathways, which are used by vascular cells to perform their functions and to maintain cellular integrity. We and others (6-16) have recently identified that the activation of PKC, especially the β isoforms, could be responsible for some of the vascular dysfunctions observed in the diabetic state. Some of these changes in the vascular cells are increases in contractility, cellular proliferation, permeability, and extracellular matrix and cytokine production (5, 6). However, it has not been determined whether hyperglycemia and its metabolites can affect other signal transduction systems and/or the cellular targets of DAG-PKC activation.Recently, several mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase signal transduction pathways have been characterized . Extensive studies have clarified that they are activated by multistep phosphorylation cascades after ligand-cell surface receptor binding and and that they transmit signals to cytosolic and nuclear targets (17). The classic MAP kinases, extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK)-1 and -2, are activated through Ras-dependent signal transduction pathway by hormones and growth factors, leading to cellular proliferation and differentiation by stimulating transcription factors that induce the expression of c-fos and other growth-responsive genes (18,19). With respect to ERKs, Haneda et al. (20) recently showed that high glucose levels phosphorylated ERKs through PKC activation in rat glomeruli and mesangial cells.In contrast, two additional parallel signal transduction pathways, c-jun NH 2 -terminal protein kinase (JNK) and p38 MAP kinases, have also been identified (21-38). These pathways are strongly activated by environmental stress factors including ultraviolet light (22, 23), oxidants (25, 26), lipopolysaccharide (27-29), osmotic stress (30-33), heat shock (34), and proinflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-α (ΤΝF-α) and interleukin-1 (35-38), leading to alterations in cell growth, prostanoid productions, and other cellular dysfunctions (39, 40).Because many similar stress factors as already mentioned here have been identified to be present in diabetes, it is reasonable to suspect that p38 MAP kinase activation could also be involved in mediating hyperglycemia's adverse effects. In this study, we have characterized the mechanisms by which elevation of glucose levels activated p38 MAP kinase in cultured vascular cells and aorta derived from diabetic rats. Hyperglycemia can cause va...