Initiation and maintenance of CNTF-Jak/STAT signaling in neurons is blocked by protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitors.

Brain Res Mol Brain Res

Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, 102 Farber Hall, The State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14214-3000, USA.

Published: August 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cytokines like interferon-gamma and CNTF utilize Jak/STAT signaling pathways in nerve cells, but this activation can be quickly stopped by tyrosine phosphatase inhibitors.
  • In neuroblastoma cells, using these inhibitors before cytokine exposure prevents activation of key proteins (Jak1, STAT1, STAT3), while using them afterwards disrupts normal signal decrease and keeps active proteins out of the nucleus.
  • Overall, the study indicates that tyrosine phosphatases are crucial for starting Jak/STAT signaling, as their inhibition affects signaling across various cell types.

Article Abstract

Cytokines, including interferon-gamma and ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), act in common through tyrosine kinase-based Jak/STAT signaling pathways. We found that activation of the Jak/STAT pathway by both interferon-gamma and CNTF in nerve cells was rapidly terminated by tyrosine phosphatase inhibitors. Exposure of human neuroblastoma cells, BE(2)-C, first to tyrosine phosphatase inhibitors (either phenylarsine oxide or PTP inhibitor-2) prevented Jak1, STAT1 and STAT3 activation elicited subsequently by either CNTF or interferon-gamma. In contrast, exposure of these cells to phosphatase inhibitors after initial stimulation by CNTF or interferon-gamma prevented the normal time-dependent decrease of total cellular phosphotyrosine-STAT levels as expected, while excluding already formed phosphotyrosine-STAT from the nucleus. Thus, treatment of nerve cells with a tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor blocked nuclear signal transduction. A similar inhibition of CNTF-Jak/STAT signaling was observed following tyrosine phosphatase inhibition in SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells, HMN-1 mouse motor neuron-neuroblastoma hybrid cells, HepG2 human hepatoma cells and embryonic chick ciliary ganglion and retinal neurons. Expression of dominant-negative forms of the tyrosine phosphatases, SHP-1 and/or SHP-2, in BE(2)-C cells had no effect on CNTF activation of STAT or on the ability of phosphatase inhibitors to block signaling. Further, results from H-35 cells expressing gp130 receptor subunits lacking functional SHP-2 binding sites revealed normal cytokine activation of Jak and STAT that was inhibited by phosphatase inhibitors. These findings suggest a critical control for regulating the initiation of Jak/STAT signaling requiring tyrosine phosphatase activity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0169-328x(03)00286-9DOI Listing

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