Publication | Open Access
Heparin Inhibits Mitogen-activated Protein Kinase-dependent and -independent c- Induction in Mesangial Cells
58
Citations
50
References
1996
Year
Heparin suppresses mitogenic responses in renal mesangial cells, and when quiescent mesangial cells are stimulated with serum, heparin blocks the induction of c-fos seen at 15 min. Because heparin is taken up by cells over a much longer time course, we addressed mechanisms whereby extracellular heparin might suppress c-fos induction at such early times. Quiescent cells were treated with serum, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate, or low concentrations of Ca2+ ionophores that produced increases in intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) in the physiological range. Each treatment caused an increase in c-fos mRNA, but they did so by different mechanisms. Serum activated mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and increased [Ca2+]i without affecting protein kinase C. Activation of protein kinase C with phorbol ester activated MAPK without much effect on [Ca2+]i. Ionophores increased [Ca2+]i without affecting basal levels of protein kinase C or MAPK. Heparin (1 microg/ml) suppressed the induction of c-fos initiated by all three treatments. It did not affect the activity of protein kinase C, but inhibited activation of MAPK by either serum or phorbol ester, suggesting a common site of action at or below the probable convergence of the induced signals at Ras/Raf-1 activation. Heparin also inhibited the serum-stimulated entry of extracellular Ca2+ to the same extent as verapamil, consistent with the ability of verapamil to block L-type Ca2+ channels and the known presence of these channels in mesangial cells. However, this effect does not appear to be related to heparin's ability to inhibit induction of c-fos. First, verapamil had no effect on induction of c-fos by serum. Second, heparin had no effect on changes in [Ca2+]i achieved by ionophores. We conclude that heparin suppresses induction of c-fos in mesangial cells by blocking at least two different points in signal transduction cascades, one upstream of MAPK and the other independent of MAPK, but dependent on intracellular Ca2+.
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