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Lysophosphatidic acid-stimulated phosphorylation of PKD2 is mediated by PI3K p110β and PKCδ in myoblasts. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), a G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) agonist, activates protein kinase D (PKD) in skeletal muscle myoblasts.
  • Researchers found that LPA stimulates PKD phosphorylation through specific signaling pathways, namely involving PI3K p110β and PKCδ.
  • The results identified PKD2 as the isoform responsive to LPA treatment, enhancing understanding of GPCR signaling in skeletal muscle.

Article Abstract

Context: G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) signaling in skeletal muscle is incompletely understood; in particular, the signaling pathways that regulate GPCR-mediated signaling in skeletal muscle are only beginning to be established. Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is a GPCR agonist that has previously been shown to activate protein kinase D (PKD) in non-muscle cells; however, whether PKD is activated in response to LPA in skeletal muscle myoblasts, and the identities of signaling intermediates that regulate this activation, have not been defined.

Objective: To determine whether PKD is activated in response to LPA administration in myoblasts, and to define the signaling pathways that mediate LPA-stimulated PKD phosphorylation.

Methods: C2C12 myoblasts were treated with LPA and signaling pathways examined by means of Western immunoblotting and real-time PCR (RT-PCR). Pharmacological inhibition and RNA-interference were used to target specific molecules to determine their involvement in LPA-induced PKD phosphorylation.

Results: Treatment of myoblasts with exogenous LPA revealed that PI3K p110β mediated PKD phosphorylation at Ser 748 and at Ser 916 through kinase-dependent and kinase-independent mechanisms. Loss of PKCδ, but not the loss of PKCα, prevented LPA-induced PKD phosphorylation. The PKD isoform responsive to LPA treatment was identified as PKD2.

Conclusion: These results indicate that LPA-stimulated PKD2 phosphorylation requires PKCδ and non-catalytic actions of PI3K p110β, and provide new information with respect to GPCR-mediated signal transduction in myoblasts.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/10799893.2012.752005DOI Listing

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