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Title: Glucocorticoid stimulation of amnion cell prostaglandin synthesis: suppression by protein kinase C inhibitors and independence of phorbol ester-sensitive protein kinase C. Author: Zakar T, MacLeod EA, Olson DM. Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta; 1992 Aug 12; 1136(2):161-8. PubMed ID: 1504101. Abstract: Glucocorticoids stimulate the prostaglandin E2 production of confluent amnion cell cultures, but have no stimulatory effect on the PGE2 output of freshly isolated human amnion cells. Since protein phosphorylation may modify the responsiveness of target cells to steroids, and activators of protein kinase C (PKC), as well as corticosteroids, promote amnion cell PGE2 output by stimulating the synthesis of prostaglandin endoperoxide H synthase (PGHS), we investigated the possibility that PKC is involved in the glucocorticoid-induction of PGE2 synthesis in cultured amnion cells. The dexamethasone-induced PGE2 output of arachidonate-stimulated cells was blocked by the protein kinase inhibitors staurosporine, K-252a, H7, HA1004, and sphinganine, in a manner consistent with their effect on PKC. However, dexamethasone increased the PGE2 production of cultures treated with maximally effective concentrations of the PKC-activator compound TPA. Moreover, dexamethasone stimulated PGE2 synthesis in cultures which were desensitized to TPA-stimulation by prolonged phorbol ester treatment. Concentration-dependence studies showed that staurosporine completely (greater than 95%) blocked glucocorticoid-provoked PGE2 synthesis at concentrations which did not inhibit TPA-stimulated prostaglandin output, and that K-252a inhibited the effect of TPA by more than 95% at concentrations which decreased the effect of dexamethasone only moderately (approximately 40%). Dibutyryl cyclic AMP had no influence on the basal- or dexamethasone-stimulated PGE2 production, and on the staurosporine inhibition of the steroid effect. These results show that glucocorticoids and phorbol esters control amnion PGE2 production by separate regulatory mechanisms. It is suggested that the response of human amnion cells to glucocorticoids is modulated by protein kinase(s) other than phorbol ester-sensitive PKC and cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]