From the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tennessee Medical Center,
Knoxville, Tennessee 37920, the § Department of Obstetrics
and Gynecology, Chang-Gung Medical School, Chang-Gung Memorial
Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan, the ¶ Department of Biochemistry, the
Cancer Institute, Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research, Tokyo 170, Japan, and the
Medicine Branch, Division of Clinical Sciences,
NCI, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892
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ABSTRACT |
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The essential cellular functions associated with microtubules have led to a wide use of microtubule-interfering agents in cancer chemotherapy with promising results. Although the most well studied action of microtubule-interfering agents is an arrest of cells at the G2/M phase of the cell cycle, other effects may also exist. We have observed that paclitaxel (Taxol), docetaxel (Taxotere), vinblastine, vincristine, nocodazole, and colchicine activate the c-Jun N-terminal kinase/stress-activated protein kinase (JNK/SAPK) signaling pathway in a variety of human cells. Activation of JNK/SAPK by microtubule-interfering agents is dose-dependent and time-dependent and requires interactions with microtubules. Functional activation of the JNKK/SEK1-JNK/SAPK-c-Jun cascade (where JNKK/SEK1 is JNK kinase/SAPK kinase) was demonstrated by activation of a 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate response element (TRE) reporter construct in a c-Jun dependent fashion. Microtubule-interfering agents also activated both Ras and apoptosis signal-regulating kinase (ASK1) and coexpression of dominant negative Ras and dominant negative apoptosis signal-regulating kinase exerted individual and additive inhibition of JNK/SAPK activation by microtubule-interfering agents. These findings suggest that multiple signal transduction pathways are involved with cellular detection of microtubular disarray and subsequent activation of JNK/SAPK.
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INTRODUCTION |
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c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs),1 also known as stress-activated protein kinases (SAPKs), are involved in a signal transduction pathway parallel to that of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) (1-6). This highly conserved cascade is responsive to stress-related stimuli such as UV irradiation, ionizing radiation, ischemia and reperfusion, and inflammatory cytokines, eliciting phosphorylation and activation of JNK/SAPKs (7-12). Activated JNK/SAPKs phosphorylate a variety of transcription factors including c-Jun, leading to transcriptional activation through interactions with c-Jun responsive DNA elements such as TPA response element (TRE). In addition to responding to extracellular stimuli (13), the JNK/SAPK pathway is also activated by intracellular stresses including inhibition of protein synthesis, treatment with antimetabolites, or DNA damage (8, 10, 14). No association has been shown, however, between microtubule disruption and JNK/SAPK activation.
Microtubule-interfering agents (MIAs) utilized in the present study include paclitaxel, docetaxel, vinblastine, vincristine, nocodazole, and colchicine. Through differential binding to microtubule polymers (paclitaxel, docetaxel) or tubulin monomer and dimers (vinblastine, vincristine, nocodazole, colchicine), MIAs interfere with the dynamic process of microtubule assembly (15). Effects of MIAs include an arrest of cells at the G2/M phase of the cell cycle and initiation of apoptosis (16-21). It has been proposed, however, that G2/M arrest may not be sufficient to induce apoptosis and that additional phosphoregulatory pathways may be required (17, 22, 23). On the other hand, evidence is also accumulating to indicate that JNK/SAPK activation may regulate the cell cycle (12, 24) and apoptosis (11, 25-27). In this report, we identify that treatment with MIAs activated JNK/SAPK in a variety of human cells, suggesting activation of JNK/SAPK to be a common cellular response to MIA-induced microtubular disarray.
Apoptosis signal-regulating kinase (ASK1) is a recently characterized
MAPK kinase kinase (28). Overexpression of ASK1 induces apoptosis in
mink lung epithelial cells, and ASK1 is activated in cells treated with
tumor necrosis factor-, suggesting a role of ASK1 in stress- and
cytokine-induced apoptosis (28). Here we report that
microtubule-interfering agents activate JNK/SAPK through signal
transduction by both Ras and ASK1, indicating that multiple signal
transduction pathways may be required for this type of cellular stress
response. These results, for the first time, demonstrate involvement of
Ras, ASK1, and JNK/SAPK in signal transduction pathways initiated by
microtubular disarray.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
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Cell Culture-- Human fibroblasts (CRL1502), breast cancer cells MCF-7 and T47D, choriocarcinoma JEG-3, and osteosarcoma SAOS-2 were obtained from ATCC (Rockville, MD). Ovarian carcinoma cells BR (29), 67R (30), 1A9, and the tubulin mutant, paclitaxel-resistant derivatives of 1A9 cells, PTX10 and PTX22 (31, 32), were described previously, as was isolation of primary trophoblast from term placentae (33). All cell lines were cultured in DMEM/F-12 (Sigma) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS), penicillin, and streptomycin except that primary trophoblasts were cultured in DMEM-HG (Sigma) supplemented with 20% FBS. Both PTX10 and PTX22 cells were maintained in 15 ng/ml paclitaxel and 5 µg/ml verapamil continuously but were cultured in drug-free medium for 5 days prior to each experiment.
Chemicals and Cell Treatment-- Unless noted, all chemicals were purchased from Sigma. Docetaxel (Taxotere) was kindly provided by S. A. Coughlin (Rhone-Poulenc Pharmaceutic Inc., Collegeville, PA), and lovastatin was a gift from W. L. Henckler (Merck and Co., Rahway, NJ). All stock solutions of MIAs were prepared with Me2SO at a concentration of 10 mM except that colchicine (10 mM) was dissolved in absolute ethanol and bacterial lipopolysaccharide (2 mg/ml) was dissolved in water. Lovastatin (10 mM) was prepared with 10% ethanol (34). Cell treatments were performed in serum-containing culture medium when cells were approximately 80% confluent. As reviewed by Rowinsky (35), peak plasma concentrations of paclitaxel (Taxol) in patients are 0.21-13.0 µM. Thus, we treated cells with 1 µM paclitaxel in most experiments. For comparison, other MIAs were used at similar concentrations. UV irradiation was performed by exposing cells to a germicidal ultraviolet lamp (254 nm, 38 watts, 76-cm distance between plates and the UV lamp) in a tissue culture hood for 2 min. The UV dose was approximately 40 J/m2 (36). Cells were then incubated at 37 °C in 5% CO2 for 1 h before preparing cell lysates.
Immunocomplex Kinase Activity Assays--
Anti-JNK1 or anti-MAPK
(ERK2) antibodies, purified GST-c-Jun (amino acids 1-79), and protein
A-agarose beads were purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology (Santa
Cruz, CA). The procedure for the immunocomplex kinase assay of JNK was
modified from Derijard et al. (2). Whole cell lysates were
prepared with lysis buffer (20 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 200 mM NaCl, 0.1% Nonidet P-40, 1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 1 mM
Na3VO4, and 10 mM NaF), and 100 µg was immunoprecipitated with antibody in excess and protein
A-agarose beads at 4 °C overnight. The precipitates were washed with
lysis buffer and kinase buffer (25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 25 mM MgCl2, and 25 mM
-glycerophosphate) and the kinase reactions for JNK/SAPK were
performed by incubating immunoprecipitated proteins with kinase mixture
(1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1 mM
Na3VO4, 10 µM ATP, 5 µCi of
[
-32P]ATP, and 0.2 µg of GST-c-Jun in kinase buffer)
at room temperature for 30 min. Laemmli's loading buffer was added to
stop the reaction, and samples were resolved on SDS-PAGE. The procedure
for the immunocomplex MAPK assay was identical to the JNK/SAPK assay
except an anti-ERK2 antibody was used for immunoprecipitation and
myelin basic protein (Upstate Biotechnology, Inc., Lake Placid, NY) was
the substrate. GST-c-Jun or myelin basic protein (MBP) bands on
autoradiograms were analyzed with a Lynx4000 video densitometer
(Applied Imaging, Santa Clara, CA).
Western Blotting Analysis-- Aliquots of cell lysates resolved on SDS-PAGE were transferred to nitrocellulose membranes and probed with antibodies as specified, followed by second antibody conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (Santa Cruz Biotechnology). After washing, proteins were detected by enhanced chemiluminescence (Pierce).
Plasmid Constructs and Transfection--
A reporter construct
for the TPA response element, p(TRE)x5-TK-CAT (37), was from Z. Culig
(University of Innsbruck, Austria). An expression vector for
-galactosidase (pCMV-lacZ), hemagglutinin (HA)-epitope tagged
expression vectors pSR
-HA-JNK1 and pSR
-HA-ERK2 (38), and
dominant-negative (dn) expression vectors pSR
-dn Ras (17N) and
pSR
-dn Rac (17N) (39) were from M. Karin (University of California
at San Diego). An expression vector for dn c-Jun (pCMV-TAM67) was from
M. Birrer (NCI, NIH) (40). Dominant-negative expression vectors for
JNK/SAPK (pSR
-APF) and for JNKK/SEK1 (pSR
-K116R) were from
G. L. Johnson (National Jewish Center for Immunology and
Respiratory Medicine, Denver, CO) (41). Expression vectors for wild
type ASK1 (pcDNA3-ASK1-HA) and dn ASK1 (pcDNA3-dn ASK1-HA) were
described recently (28). Liposome-mediated transfections were performed
by using LipofectAMINE (Life Technologies, Inc.) on MCF-7 cells, and
using Tfx-50 (Promega, Madison, WI) on BR cells.
Chloramphenicol Acetyltransferase (CAT) Assay and Statistical
Analyses--
Cells in six-well plates were cotransfected with
p(TRE)x5-TK-CAT (1.5 µg/well for MCF-7 and 2.5 µg/well for BR), 0.5 µg/well pCMV-lacZ, and 0.5 µg/well either control DNA or dn
expression vectors. At 24 h after transfection, cells were treated
with 1 µM MIA for 16 h. The liquid scintillation CAT
assay was modified from a standard protocol (42). Expression of
-galactosidase was measured with a kit purchased from Promega
(Madison, WI). Data for CAT activities were normalized with levels of
-galactosidase. Statistical analysis of CAT assay values was
performed by analysis of variance and Student's t-test.
Activated Ras Interaction Assay (ARIA)-- Activated Ras (Ras-GTP) was precipitated from whole cell lysates with the Ras-binding domain (RBD) of Raf-1 as a GST-RBD fusion protein immobilized on glutathione beads, followed by detection of precipitated Ras by Western blot with anti-Ras antibodies (43, 44). The bacterial expression vector for GST-RBD, pGEX-RBD, was provided by D. Shalloway (Cornell University) (43). BR cells growing to 90% confluence in 10-cm dishes were serum-starved (0.1% fetal calf serum) for 48 h, then treated with 1 µM paclitaxel or vinblastine for 30 or 120 min. Cells treated with 50 ng/ml epidermal growth factor for 10 min were used as positive controls. Treated cells were rinsed with ice-cold phosphate-buffered saline twice and lysed with 0.4 ml/dish of Mg-containing lysis buffer (MLB: 25 mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1% Nonidet P-40, 0.25% sodium deoxycholate, 10% glycerol, 25 mM NaF, 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM sodium vanadate, 10 µg/ml leupeptin, 10 µg/ml aprotinin). Activated Ras was precipitated by GST-RBD in excess. After three washes with MLB, activated Ras was eluted from beads by boiling in Laemmli's loading buffer, subjected to 14% SDS-PAGE, transferred to nitrocellulose membrane, and detected using anti-Ras antibody (Santa Cruz, SC-035).
Immunocomplex Kinase Assays of HA-JNK1, HA-ERK2, and ASK1-HA-- Since efficiencies of transient transfection in both BR and MCF-7 cells were limited (20% and 15%, respectively), we were not able to accurately evaluate the effects of transfected expression vectors on regulation of JNK/SAPK by direct measurement of endogenous JNK/SAPK activities in the whole population of cells. Therefore, we cotransfected expression vectors for HA-JNK1 with vectors expressing its potential upstream regulators, then assayed activities of epitope-tagged HA-JNK1. Since we had determined in pilot experiments that transfected HA-JNK1 was optimally activated by 4-h treatment with MIAs in BR cells (data not shown), we treated with MIAs for 4 h before measuring HA-JNK1 activity.
BR cells in 60-mm Petri dishes were cotransfected with 4 µg of pSR ![]() |
RESULTS |
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MIAs Activate JNK/SAPK in a Variety of Human Cells-- Activities of JNK/SAPK and MAPK in MIA-treated cells were measured by immunocomplex kinase assays using GST-c-Jun and MBP as substrates, respectively. Treatment with 1 µM paclitaxel, docetaxel, vinblastine, nocodazole, or colchicine for 2 h activated JNK/SAPK in BR ovarian cancer cells and in MCF-7 breast cancer cells. Activation of JNK/SAPK was not accompanied by alterations in JNK/SAPK protein levels as measured by Western blotting of whole cell extracts (Fig. 1A). In contrast, treatment with MIAs did not significantly activate MAPK/ERK activities. Since BR cells had higher basal MAPK activities which could obscure modest MAPK activation by MIAs, HA-ERK2 activity was measured following 1 µM paclitaxel or vinblastine, but no significant activation was detected (data not shown).
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MIA-induced Activation of JNK/SAPK Is Dose-dependent and Time-dependent-- In both BR and MCF-7 cells, MIAs activation of JNK/SAPK was dose-dependent over a range of 0.01-10 µM (Table I). MIAs activated JNK/SAPK within 30 min of treatment and the JNK/SAPK response peaked between 2 and 8 h, declining to basal levels by 12 h (Fig. 2). BR cells (Fig. 2A) appeared to respond more rapidly than MCF-7 cells (Fig. 2B), suggesting cell type-specific differences.
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Interactions with Microtubules Are Required for Activation of
JNK/SAPK by MIAs--
To elucidate whether interactions between MIAs
and tubulin/microtubules are required for activation of JNK/SAPK, we
measured JNK/SAPK activities in BR and MCF-7 cells treated with an
inactive precursor of paclitaxel, 10-deacetylbaccatin III, or an
inactive form of colchicine, -lumicolchicine. Both agents at
concentrations up to 10 µM failed to activate JNK/SAPK
(Fig. 3A). Since paclitaxel exerts lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-like effects (45) and activates JNK/SAPK in macrophages and monocytes (46), we assayed JNK/SAPK activities in BR and MCF-7 cells treated with purified bacterial LPS.
No significant activation of JNK/SAPK was observed in BR cells, while
in MCF-7 cells, JNK/SAPK activities fell 10-70% below basal
activities in two independent experiments (Fig. 3A). These data do not suggest a role for LPS-like activity of paclitaxel in
JNK/SAPK activation in cancer cells.
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The MIA-activated, JNKK/SEK1-JNK/SAPK Signaling Cascade Activates
Transcription through c-Jun--
To identify possible downstream
effectors of MIA-activated JNK/SAPK, we measured AP-1 transcription
factor activity by transfecting BR and MCF-7 cells with a
p(TRE)x5-TK-CAT reporter construct for 24 h, followed by treatment
with MIAs for 16 h and CAT assays. Fig.
4A shows statistically
significant activation of the TRE reporter by MIAs (p < 0.01 when compared with basal TRE activities). Consistent with the
immunocomplex JNK/SAPK assays in Fig. 3A, 10-deacetylbaccatin III, -lumicolchicine, and LPS did not activate the TRE reporter (data not shown). In cells cotransfected with p(TRE)x5-TK-CAT and the dn c-Jun expression vector (pCMV-TAM67), both
basal and MIA-activated TRE activity were lower than
Me2SO-treated controls (p < 0.01, Fig.
4B), confirming c-Jun was required for activation of the TRE
reporter construct.
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Multiple Signal Transduction Pathways, Including Ras and ASK1, Regulate JNK/SAPK Activation Induced by MIAs-- Lovastatin inhibits lipidation of Ras (48), which is essential for anchorage to the inner cell membrane and for Ras activation of the Raf-MAPKK-MAPK signaling cascade. Pretreatment of BR cells with 100 µM lovastatin for 24 h partially (about 50%) inhibited JNK/SAPK activation by MIAs (Fig. 5A). Using ARIA (43, 44), we identified activation of Ras in serum-starved BR cells treated with paclitaxel or vinblastine (Fig. 5B) and confirmed the inhibitory effect of lovastatin on Ras (data not shown). These results suggest a role for Ras in JNK/SAPK activation by MIAs and that additional signaling pathways independent of Ras may function as well.
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DISCUSSION |
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Microtubules serve as an intracellular scaffold, and their unique polymerization dynamics are critical for many cellular functions (15, 49, 50). It is conceivable that cytoskeletal dysfunction, manifested as either a disrupted microtubule network or a stabilized, "rigid" microtubule cytoskeleton, is an intracellular stress. In the present study, we report that disruption of the equilibrium between tubulin monomer/dimers and microtubule polymers with microtubule stabilizing (paclitaxel, docetaxel) or destabilizing (vinblastine, vincristine, nocodazole, colchicine) agents activated the stress-activated protein kinase (JNK/SAPK) signaling cascade. In both BR and MCF-7 cells, JNK/SAPK remained activated for up to 8 h after treatment with MIAs (Fig. 2). Since induction of JNK/SAPK in T-cell activation and apoptosis can occur in a transient or persistent pattern, respectively (51), the sustained activation of JNK/SAPK following MIA treatment may reflect the apoptosis-inducing nature of these drugs.
For the MIAs used in this study, no membrane-associated receptor or
target has been identified (15, 45). Our data indicate that binding to
tubulin and/or microtubules was required for MIA activation of
JNK/SAPK. First, inactive structural derivatives of some MIAs
(10-deacetylbaccatin III and -lumicolchicine), which do not bind
tubulin/microtubules did not activate JNK/SAPK (Fig. 3). Second,
paclitaxel did not activate JNK/SAPK in the paclitaxel-resistant cell
lines, PTX10 (F270V) and PTX22 (A364T), where single amino acid
mutations in
-tubulin abolish binding of paclitaxel to microtubule and result in paclitaxel resistance (32, 47). The notion that microtubular interactions are required for MIA-activated JNK/SAPK is
strengthened by the observation that, although both paclitaxel and
vinblastine activated JNK/SAPK in the parental 1A9 cells, only
vinblastine, but not paclitaxel, activated JNK/SAPK in the paclitaxel-resistant PTX10 and PTX22 cell lines (Fig.
3B).
We have verified that the JNKK/SEK1-JNK/SAPK-c-Jun signaling cascade was activated by MIAs with the following evidence. First, MIA treatment activated transcription from a TRE-CAT reporter construct and this activation was inhibited by coexpressed dn c-Jun (Fig. 4, A and B), indicating c-Jun was a downstream effector responsive to treatment with MIAs. Second, coexpression of dn JNK/SAPK or dn JNKK/SEK1 inhibited MIA-induced TRE reporter activity (Fig. 4C). These results suggest that MIA-activated JNK/SAPK may regulate transcription by activation of c-Jun and formation of functional c-Jun/c-Fos heterodimers (AP-1).
Multiple signal transduction pathways are required for activation of the JNK/SAPK cascade when a cell is perturbed by physical stress (52) and activation of the JNK/SAPK pathway by environmental stress can occur via Ras-dependent or Ras-independent pathways (53). Farnesylation and geranylgeranylation, the major posttranslational modifications of Ras and Rac, respectively, are essential for membrane anchoring and physiological functions (54). Our observations that lovastatin at concentrations that block farnesylation and geranylgeranylation (48) was unable to completely block JNK/SAPK activation by MIAs suggest involvement of other pathways, independent of the Ras-Rac cascade.
Indeed, we demonstrated a requirement for both Ras and ASK1 signaling for full activation of JNK/SAPK by MIAs. First, treatment with paclitaxel or vinblastine activated Ras (Fig. 5B). Second, dn Ras and dn ASK1 exerted individual and additive inhibition of HA-JNK1 activation by MIAs (Fig. 6). Third, MIAs activated ASK1-HA with corresponding activation of HA-JNK1 (Fig. 7A). Finally, overexpression of ASK1-HA augmented MIA-induced activation of HA-JNK1 (Fig. 7B), and this augmentation could be completely blocked by high levels of dn JNKK/SEK1, but not by dn Ras or dn Rac (Fig. 7C). Collectively, these data suggest that both Ras and ASK1 are involved in optimal activation of JNK/SAPK after microtubular disruption and that both may regulate JNK/SAPK activity through the same downstream transducer, JNKK/SEK1.
Unlike treatment with epidermal growth factor, which activates Ras with an amplified activation of MAPK, treatment with MIAs induced a more sustained activation of Ras (Fig. 5B) with negligible activation of MAPK (Fig. 1A). Explanations for this discrepancy might be twofold. First, the effects of MIAs on the cell cycle might dissociate the sequential activation in the Ras-Raf1-MEK-MAPK cascade. This is supported by a report that, during progression of the cell cycle, there is a temporal dissociation between Ras and MAPK activation, suggesting Ras may target alternate effector pathways (43). Second, in addition to activation of Ras and ASK1, microtubular disarray might also activate phosphatase(s) that attenuate MAPK activation. Several phosphatases that might target MAPK have been identified (55-59).
Based on these results, we propose that activation of the JNK/SAPK pathway may be a stress response to the disruption of microtubule dynamics (Fig. 8). In this model, microtubule-interfering agents enter the cell and disrupt the dynamics of microtubule assembly. Through a yet-to-be defined mechanism, microtubular disarray activates both Ras and ASK1. Activated Ras may activate the JNK/SAPK through activation of Rac (60, 61), activation of MEKK1 (62), or through direct activation of JNK/SAPK by formation of the Ras-JNK complex (63). On the other hand, the signal from activated ASK1 may involve autophosphorylation followed by sequential activation of JNKK/SEK1 and JNK/SAPK. JNK/SAPK in turn activates downstream effectors, including c-Jun and other transcription factors, mediating cellular responses to this stress. Furthermore, disruption of microtubule integrity has been shown to result in phosphorylation of an anti-apoptosis regulator, Bcl-2 (31, 64), and Bcl-2 can be phosphorylated by JNK/SAPK in the presence of Rac1 (65). Since the protective effects of Bcl-2 may be regulated by its phosphorylation status (66), these studies collectively suggest a potential role of activated JNK/SAPK in apoptotic regulation of cancer cells after chemotherapy with MIAs.
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It is intriguing that MIAs with stabilizing or destabilizing effects on microtubules elicit similar activation of JNK/SAPK. These observations suggest a surveillance mechanism exists that signals the functional integrity of microtubules to nuclear transcription factors. Interestingly, tubulin itself exhibits GTPase activity and acts as a nucleotide-binding protein (67), implying that tubulin may function in a fashion similar to Cdc42/Rac in the JNK/SAPK signal transduction pathway (10, 13). The mechanism(s) by which microtubular disarray activates both Ras and ASK1 remains to be elucidated.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Drs. A. T. Ichiki, J. Merryman, D. S. Torry and W. D. Wicks of the University of Tennessee for critically reading the manuscript. We are indebted to Drs. M. Birrer, S. A. Coughlin, Z. Culig, W. L. Henckler, G. L. Johnson, M. Karin, and D. Shalloway for reagents and expression vectors. We appreciate Dr. Z. G. Liu's advice on the details of HA-JNK1 assays and thank Dr. K. Miyazona of the Cancer Institute (Tokyo) for valuable discussion. Preparation of trophoblast from term placentae by V. H. Shore and Dr. P. P. McKenzie is gratefully acknowledged. T.-H. W. is also grateful to Dr. M. R. Caudle, Dean of the Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tennessee Medical Center, Knoxville, for encouragement and support.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants AA-08328 and CA-68538 (to J. W.) and Chang-Gung Memorial Hospital Research Grant CMRP-0426 (to H.-S. W.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
** To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Tennessee Medical Center, 1924 Alcoa Hwy., Knoxville, TN 37920. Tel.: 423-544-8960; Fax: 423-544-6863; E-mail: mcf7{at}msn.com.
1 The abbreviations used are: JNK, c-Jun N-terminal kinase; MIA, microtubule-interfering agent; SAPK, stress-activated protein kinase; ASK1, apoptosis signal-regulating kinase; TPA, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate; TRE, TPA response element; CAT, chloramphenicol acetyltransferase; dn, dominant-negative; JNKK/SEK1, JNK kinase/SAPK or ERK kinase; MAPK, mitogen-activated protein kinase; ERK, extracellular signal-regulated kinase; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; HA, hemagglutinin epitope of influenza virus; GST, glutathione S-transferase; RBD, Ras-binding domain of Raf-1; FBS, fetal bovine serum; DMEM, Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium; MBP, myelin basic protein; ARIA, activated Ras interaction assay; PAGE, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
2 H. Ichijo, unpublished data.
3 The inhibitory efficacy of the expression vector for dn Ras used in this study was verified by cotransfection experiments with HA-tagged ERK2, where the dn Ras completely blocked activation of HA-ERK2 by treatment with epidermal growth factor (T.-H. Wang, unpublished data).
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REFERENCES |
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