Publication | Open Access
A Refractory Phase in Cyclic AMP-Responsive Transcription Requires Down Regulation of Protein Kinase A
71
Citations
20
References
1995
Year
Molecular RegulationMolecular BiologyCell CycleCellular PhysiologyTranscriptional RegulationProtein Kinase ASignaling PathwayCell RegulationNuclear Factor CrebCellular Regulatory MechanismCell SignalingRefractory PeriodCyclic AmpGene ExpressionCell BiologyProtein PhosphorylationSignal TransductionNatural SciencesRefractory PhaseCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicine
Cyclic AMP (cAMP) stimulates the expression of numerous genes through the protein kinase A (PK-A)-mediated phosphorylation of the nuclear factor CREB at Ser-133 (G. A. Gonzalez and M. R. Montminy, Cell 59:675-680, 1989). Like other signal transduction pathways, cAMP induces gene expression with burst-attenuation kinetics; cAMP-dependent transcription and CREB phosphorylation peak within 30 min and decline steadily over the next 4 to 6 h via the protein phosphatase 1-mediated dephosphorylation of CREB (M. Hagiwara, A. Alberts, P. Brindle, J. Meinkoth, J. Feramisco, T. Deng, M. Karin, S. Shenolikar, and M. Montminy, Cell 70:105-113, 1992). Here we characterize a third phase in cAMP-responsive transcription--a refractory period during which hormone-treated cells become transcriptionally unresponsive to subsequent stimulation by cAMP. This refractory period begins 6 to 8 h after stimulation and lasts 3 to 5 days after the removal of hormone. In contrast to the earlier attenuation phase, transcription of cAMP-responsive genes during the refractory period is not restored by inhibitors of protein phosphatase 1 activity. Rather, the establishment and maintenance of this phase rely on a marked reduction in PK-A catalytic subunit expression at the translational level. As overexpression of C-subunit protein can reactive transcription of cAMP-responsive genes during the refractory period, our results suggest that hormone-responsive cells may stimulate, attenuate, and then silence signal-dependent genes through distinct regulatory mechanisms.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1