Frank Gerald D, Saito Shuichi, Motley Evangeline D, Sasaki Terukatsu, Ohba Motoi, Kuroki Toshio, Inagami Tadashi, Eguchi Satoru
Department of Biochemistry, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232, USA.
Mol Endocrinol. 2002 Feb;16(2):367-77. doi: 10.1210/mend.16.2.0768.
In vascular smooth muscle cells, angiotensin II (AngII) stimulates association of its G protein-coupled AngII type 1 (AT(1)) receptor with Janus kinase 2 (JAK2), resulting in the activation of signal transducer and activator of transcription proteins. Although the association and activation of subsequent signal transducer and activator of transcription proteins appear to prerequire JAK2 activation, the signaling mechanism by which the AT(1) receptor activates JAK2 remains uncertain. Here, we have examined the signaling mechanism required for JAK2 activation by AngII in vascular smooth muscle cells. We found that AngII, through the AT(1) receptor, rapidly stimulated JAK2 phosphorylation at Tyr(1007/1008), the critical sites for the kinase activation. By using selective agonists and inhibitors, we demonstrated that PLC and its derived signaling molecules, phosphatidylinositol triphosphate/Ca(2+) and diacylglycerol/PKC, were essential for AngII-induced JAK2 phosphorylation. The PKC isoform required for JAK2 activation appears to be PKCdelta since a selective PKCdelta but not PKCalpha/beta inhibitor and dominant-negative PKCdelta overexpression inhibited JAK2 activation. We further examined a link between JAK2 and a Ca(2+)/PKC-sensitive tyrosine kinase, PYK2. We found that PYK2 activation by AngII requires PKCdelta, and that PYK2 associates with JAK2 constitutively. Moreover, transfection of two distinct PYK2 dominant-negative mutants markedly inhibited AngII-induced JAK2 activation. From these data we conclude that AT(1)-derived signaling molecules, specifically Ca(2+) and PKCdelta, participate in AngII-induced JAK2 activation through PYK2. These data provide a new mechanistic insight by which the hormone AngII exerts its cytokine-like actions in mediating vascular remodeling.
在血管平滑肌细胞中,血管紧张素II(AngII)刺激其G蛋白偶联的血管紧张素II 1型(AT(1))受体与Janus激酶2(JAK2)结合,导致信号转导子和转录激活子蛋白的激活。尽管后续信号转导子和转录激活子蛋白的结合及激活似乎预先需要JAK2激活,但AT(1)受体激活JAK2的信号传导机制仍不确定。在此,我们研究了血管平滑肌细胞中AngII激活JAK2所需的信号传导机制。我们发现,AngII通过AT(1)受体,迅速刺激JAK2在Tyr(1007/1008)位点磷酸化,该位点是激酶激活的关键位点。通过使用选择性激动剂和抑制剂,我们证明磷脂酶C(PLC)及其衍生的信号分子磷脂酰肌醇三磷酸/Ca(2+)和二酰基甘油/蛋白激酶C(PKC)对于AngII诱导的JAK2磷酸化至关重要。JAK2激活所需的PKC亚型似乎是PKCδ,因为选择性PKCδ抑制剂而非PKCα/β抑制剂以及显性负性PKCδ过表达可抑制JAK2激活。我们进一步研究了JAK2与Ca(2+)/PKC敏感的酪氨酸激酶PYK2之间的联系。我们发现,AngII激活PYK2需要PKCδ,并且PYK2与JAK2组成性结合。此外,转染两种不同的PYK2显性负性突变体可显著抑制AngII诱导的JAK2激活。从这些数据我们得出结论,AT(1)衍生的信号分子,特别是Ca(2+)和PKCδ,通过PYK2参与AngII诱导的JAK2激活。这些数据为激素AngII在介导血管重塑中发挥其细胞因子样作用提供了新的机制见解。