4.4 Article

The role of PKC epsilon-dependent signaling for cardiac differentiation

Journal

HISTOCHEMISTRY AND CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 139, Issue 1, Pages 35-46

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00418-012-1022-4

Keywords

Heart; nkx2.5; gata4; Kinases

Funding

  1. Programma di ricerca Regione Emilia-Romagna-Universita (ER-Universita)
  2. Finanziamento Italiano per la Ricerca di Base (FIRB) [RBAP10KCNS_002]

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Protein kinase Cepsilon (PKC epsilon) exerts a well-known cardio-protective activity in ischemia-reperfusion injury and plays a pivotal role in stem cell proliferation and differentiation. Although many studies have been performed on physiological and morphological effects of PKC epsilon mis-expression in cardiomyocytes, molecular information on the role of PKC epsilon on early cardiac gene expression are still lacking. We addressed the molecular role of PKC epsilon in cardiac cells using mouse cardiomyocytes and rat bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells. We show that PKC epsilon is modulated in cardiac differentiation producing an opposite regulation of the cardiac genes NK2 transcription factor related, locus 5 (nkx2.5) and GATA binding protein 4 (gata4) both in vivo and in vitro. Phospho-extracellular regulated mitogen-activated protein kinase 1/2 (p-ERK1/2) levels increase in PKC epsilon over-expressing cells, while pkc epsilon siRNAs produce a decrease in p-ERK1/2. Indeed, pharmacological inhibition of ERK1/2 rescues the expression levels of both nkx2.5 and gata4, suggesting that a reinforced (mitogen-activated protein kinase) MAPK signaling is at the basis of the observed inhibition of cardiac gene expression in the PKC epsilon over-expressing hearts. We demonstrate that PKC epsilon is critical for cardiac cell early gene expression evidencing that this protein is a regulator that has to be fine tuned in precursor cardiac cells.

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