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Title: Selective translocation of non-conventional protein kinase C isoenzymes by gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in the gonadotrope-derived alpha T3-1 cell line. Author: Kratzmeier M, Poch A, Mukhopadhyay AK, McArdle CA. Journal: Mol Cell Endocrinol; 1996 Apr 19; 118(1-2):103-11. PubMed ID: 8735596. Abstract: Gonadotropin-releasing hormone acts via G-protein coupled receptors to stimulate polyphosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C (PIC) with consequent elevation of cytosolic Ca2+ and activation of protein kinase C (PKC). Whereas Ca2+ is known to mediate stimulation of exocytotic gonadotropin release by GnRH, the identity of the PKC isoenzymes activated by GnRH and their physiological role in gonadotropes are poorly understood. In many systems translocation of PKC (from cytosolic to particulate fractions of cellular homogenates) has been taken as evidence of hormonal activation of PKC and down regulation of PKC (by prolonged treatment with PKC-activating phorbol esters) has been used extensively to investigate the role of PKC in hormone action. Here we have assessed the influence of GnRH and phorbol esters on translocation and down regulation of PKC isoenzymes identified by Western blotting with isoenzyme-specific antibodies in alpha T3-1 cells (a gonadotrope-derived cell line). These cells were found to posses PKCs alpha, epsilon and zeta but not beta, delta (present in rat pituitaries) or gamma (present in rat brains). In short-term stimulations (10 min), the PKC-activating phorbol esters, PMA and PDBu, caused concentration-dependent increases in the proportion of PKC alpha and PKC epsilon recovered from the particulate fraction of alpha T3-1 cells, but did not induce measurable translocation of PKC zeta. The inactive phorbol ester 4 alpha PDBu did not cause translocation of any of these isoenzymes. GnRH treatment induced a concentration-dependent increase in the proportion of particulate PKC epsilon and PKC zeta but had no measurable effect on PKC alpha translocation. In longer incubations (6-48 h) GnRH failed to cause measurable down-regulation of these isoenzymes whereas PMA treatment led to a clear down regulation of PKCs alpha and epsilon (albeit with different kinetics). The data demonstrate the differential activation and down regulation of PKC isoenzymes by GnRH versus PMA, which are clearly pertinent to the design of experiments intended to address the role of such isoenzymes in GnRH action. Moreover, they provide the first demonstration of hormonal regulation of an atypical PKC isoenzyme (PKC zeta) in pituitary cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]