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Title: Protein kinase C-alpha is an upstream activator of the IkappaB kinase complex in the TPA signal transduction pathway to NF-kappaB in U2OS cells. Author: Vertegaal AC, Kuiperij HB, Yamaoka S, Courtois G, van der Eb AJ, Zantema A. Journal: Cell Signal; 2000 Dec; 12(11-12):759-68. PubMed ID: 11152962. Abstract: Inactive nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB) complexes are retained in the cytoplasm by binding to inhibitory proteins, such as IkappaBalpha. Various stimuli lead to phosphorylation and subsequent processing of IkappaBalpha in the 26S proteasome and import of the active NF-kappaB transcription factor into the nucleus. In agreement with our previous finding that p90(rsk1) is essential for TPA-induced activation of NF-kappaB in Adenovirus 5E1-transformed Baby Rat Kidney cells, we now report that the MEK/ERK/p90(rsk1) inhibitor U0126 efficiently blocks TPA-induced IkappaBalpha processing in these cells. However, in U2OS cells, the cytokine-inducible IkappaB kinase complex (IKK) is the essential component of the TPA signal transduction pathway. Activation of the IKK complex in response to TPA is mediated by PKC-alpha, since both the PKC inhibitor GF109203 and a catalytically inactive PKC-alpha mutant inhibit activation of endogenous IKK by TPA, but not by tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha). We conclude that IKK is an integrator of TNF-alpha and TPA signal transduction pathways in U2OS cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]