Nat Cell Biol 2000,
PMID: 10980699
Howe, A K; Juliano, R L
Activation of the canonical mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade by soluble mitogens is blocked in non-adherent cells. It is also blocked in cells in which the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) is activated. Here we show that inhibition of PKA allows anchorage-independent stimulation of the MAPK cascade by growth factors. This effect is transient, and its duration correlates with sustained tyrosine phosphorylation of paxillin and focal-adhesion kinase (FAK) in non-adherent cells. The effect is sensitive to cytochalasin D, implicating the actin cytoskeleton as an important factor in mediating this anchorage-independent signalling. Interestingly, constitutively active p21-activated kinase (PAK) also allows anchorage-independent MAPK signalling. Furthermore, PKA negatively regulates PAK in vivo, and whereas the induction of anchorage-independent signaling resulting from PKA suppression is blocked by dominant negative PAK, it is markedly prolonged by constitutively active PAK. These observations indicate that PKA and PAK are important regulators of anchorage-dependent signal transduction.
Diseases/Pathways annotated by Medline MESH: MAP Kinase Signaling System
Document information provided by NCBI PubMed
Text Mining Data
MAPK → p21 activated kinase (PAK): "
Interestingly, constitutively active
p21 activated kinase (PAK) also
allows anchorage independent
MAPK signalling
"
PAK → PKA: "
Furthermore, PKA negatively regulates PAK in vivo, and whereas the induction of anchorage independent signaling resulting from PKA suppression is blocked by dominant negative PAK, it is markedly prolonged by constitutively active PAK
"
Manually curated Databases
No curated data.