Epithelial injury induces egr-1 and fos expression by a pathway involving protein kinase C and ERK.
Publication/Presentation Date
2-1-1999
Abstract
The signaling pathways activated in response to gastrointestinal injury remain poorly understood. Previous work has implicated the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) mitogen-activated protein kinase as a mediator of wound-signal transduction and a possible regulator of epithelial restitution. Monolayer injury resulted in rapid activation of p42 and p44 ERK. Injury-induced ERK activation was blocked by protein kinase C inhibition or by disruption of the cell cytoskeleton. Significant increases in Fos and early growth response (Egr)-1 mRNA levels were stimulated by injury, peaking by 20 min. ERK activation and the induction of Egr-1 mRNA were inhibited in a dose-dependent fashion with PD-98059. Fos mRNA expression was partially blocked by PD-98059. Western blot analysis demonstrated strong expression and nuclear localization of Fos and Egr after wounding. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays demonstrated that nuclear extracts contained a protein that specifically bound double-stranded oligonucleotides containing the Egr consensus binding element. Gel supershift assays demonstrated that the protein-DNA complexes were recognized by anti-Egr antibody. Inhibition of injury-induced ERK activation by PD-98059 or direct interference with Egr by expression of a dominant negative mutant led to significantly reduced in vitro monolayer restitution.
Volume
276
Issue
2
First Page
322
Last Page
330
ISSN
0002-9513
Published In/Presented At
Dieckgraefe, B. K., & Weems, D. M. (1999). Epithelial injury induces egr-1 and fos expression by a pathway involving protein kinase C and ERK. The American journal of physiology, 276(2), G322–G330. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpgi.1999.276.2.G322
Disciplines
Diagnosis | Medicine and Health Sciences | Other Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment | Radiology
PubMedID
9950805
Department(s)
Department of Radiology and Diagnostic Medical Imaging
Document Type
Article