Făgărăşan M O, Bishop J F, Rinaudo M S, Axelrod J
Laboratory of Cellular Biology, National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, MD 20892.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1990 Apr;87(7):2555-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.87.7.2555.
Previous work has shown that prolonged pretreatment of a mouse anterior pituitary cell line, AtT-20 cells, with the cytokine interleukin 1 (IL-1) stimulates beta-endorphin release and potentiates the secretion induced by many secretagogues. Desensitization of protein kinase C (PKC) by pretreatment with phorbol ester [phorbol 12-tetradecanoate 13-acetate (TPA)] for 8 hr abolished the secretion induced by TPA as well as the enhancement of TPA-induced beta-endorphin release produced by IL-1. Desensitization of PKC only partly abolished the potentiating effects of IL-1 on corticotropin-releasing factor-induced beta-endorphin secretion. In contrast, IL-1-induced beta-endorphin release was independent of PKC. We observed that treatment of AtT-20 cells with IL-1 markedly phosphorylated 19-, 20-, and 60-kDa proteins within minutes, presumably by early activation of protein kinases. Prolonged treatment with TPA, which was shown to desensitize an 87-kDa protein (a substrate for PKC), had no effect on IL-1-induced phosphorylation of 20-, 60-, and 87-kDa proteins, indicating that the phosphorylation of these proteins does not involve PKC. IL-1 does not generate cAMP in AtT-20 cells, suggesting that a cAMP-dependent protein kinase is also not involved. Prolonged treatment with IL-1 abolishes the capacity of cytokine to induce the phosphorylation of 20- and 60-kDa proteins. The presence of IL-1 was required initially only for a short time to induce late secretion in AtT-20 cells. These observations indicate that once IL-1 generates an early signal, its presence is no longer necessary for the subsequent secretion of beta-endorphin.