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Role of the Exchange Protein Directly Activated by Cyclic Adenosine 5′-Monophosphate (Epac) Pathway in Regulating Proglucagon Gene Expression in Intestinal Endocrine L Cells
50
Citations
39
References
2006
Year
Cyclic AdenosineCyclic Amp 2ImmunologyCellular PhysiologyGastrointestinal Peptide HormoneProtein Kinase AProtein ExpressionSignaling PathwayReceptor Tyrosine KinaseProteomicsCell SignalingMolecular PhysiologyEndocrine MechanismMolecular PathwayGene ExpressionProglucagon Gene ExpressionEndocrinologyCell BiologyProtein PhosphorylationSignal TransductionNatural SciencesPhysiologySystems BiologyMedicine
Although proglucagon gene expression and the synthesis of proglucagon encoded peptide hormones could be activated by protein kinase A (PKA) activators such as forskolin/3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) and cholera toxin, whether the activation is entirely attributed to PKA has not been previously examined. We found that forskolin/IBMX also activate ERK1/2 phosphorylation in intestinal and pancreatic proglucagon-producing cell lines. The MEK inhibitors PD98059 and U0126 were found to repress the expression of proglucagon promoter as well as endogenous proglucagon mRNA in two intestinal proglucagon-producing cell lines and to block the stimulatory effect of forskolin/IBMX on proglucagon mRNA expression. The repressive effect of the PKA-specific inhibitors H-89 and KT-5720, however, was either not observable or much less potent. Forskolin could activate ERK1/2 phosphorylation and proglucagon gene transcription on its own, whereas forskolin plus IBMX are required to effectively activate the PKA pathway in the proglucagon-producing cells. Exchange protein directly activated by cyclic AMP 2 (Epac2, or cAMP-binding guanine nucleotide exchange factor-2) was found to be expressed in gut and pancreatic proglucagon-producing cell lines, whereas the Epac-pathway-specific cAMP analog, 8-pMeOPT-2'O-Me-cAMP, effectively stimulated ERK1/2 phosphorylation as well as proglucagon mRNA expression. We therefore suggest that cAMP at least partially regulates proglucagon gene expression via the Epac-Ras/Rap-Raf-MEK-ERK signaling pathway.
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