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Published online before print November 30, 2007
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Article |
Regulates Airway Mucin Secretion via Phosphorylation of MARCKS Protein
,
From the Department of Molecular Biomedical Sciences,* College of Veterinary Medicine, and the Department of Environmental and Molecular Toxicology,
College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina
@ To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: kenneth_adler{at}ncsu.edu.
| Abstract |
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Mucin hypersecretion is a major pathological feature of many respiratory diseases, yet cellular mechanisms regulating secretion of mucin have not been fully elucidated. Previously, we reported that mucin hypersecretion induced by human neutrophil elastase involves activation of protein kinase C (PKC), specifically the
-isoform (PKC
). Here, we further investigated the role of PKC
in mucin hypersecretion using both primary human bronchial epithelial cells and the human bronchial epithelial 1 cell line as in vitro model systems. Phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA)-induced mucin hypersecretion was significantly attenuated by rottlerin, a PKC
-selective inhibitor. Rottlerin also reduced PMA- or human neutrophil elastase-induced phosphorylation of myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS) protein in these cells. Both secretion and MARCKS phosphorylation were significantly enhanced by the PKC
activator bryostatin 1. A dominant-negative PKC
construct (pEGFP-N1/PKC
K376R) transfected into human bronchial epithelial 1 cells significantly attenuated both PMA-induced mucin secretion and phosphorylation of MARCKS, whereas transfection of a wild-type construct increased PKC
and enhanced mucin secretion and MARCKS phosphorylation. Similar transfections of a dominant-negative or wild-type PKC
construct did not affect either mucin secretion or MARCKS phosphorylation. The results suggest that PKC
plays an important role in mucin secretion by airway epithelium via regulation of MARCKS phosphorylation.
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