4.6 Article

p70 Ribosomal S6 Kinase Is Required for Airway Smooth Muscle Cell Size Enlargement but Not Increased Contractile Protein Expression

Journal

Publisher

AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1165/rcmb.2009-0037OC

Keywords

asthma; hyperresponsiveness; hypertrophy; remodeling

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL79339]
  2. Tanox
  3. Merck
  4. AstraZeneca
  5. Genentech
  6. Cytokinetics
  7. Sepracor
  8. University of Chicago
  9. NH
  10. GlaxoSmithKline
  11. NIH
  12. American Diabetes Association

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We examined the contribution of p70 ribosomal 56 kinase (p70S6K) to airway smooth muscle hypertrophy, a structural change found in asthma. In human airway smooth muscle cells, transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta, endothelin-1, and cardiotrophin-1 each induced phosphorylation of p70S6K and ribosomal protein S6 while increasing cell size, total protein synthesis, and relative protein abundance of a-smooth muscle actin and SM22. Transfection of myocytes with siRNA against either p70S6K or 56, or infection with retrovirus encoding a kinase-dead p70S6K, reduced cell size and protein synthesis but had no effect on contractile protein expression per mg total protein. Infection with a retrovirus encoding a constitutively active, rapamycin-resistant (RR) p70S6K increased cell size but not contractile protein expression. siRNA against 56 decreased cell size in myocytes expressing RR p70S6K. Finally, TGF-beta treatment, but not RR p70S6K expression, increased KCl-induced fractional shortening. Together, these data suggest that p70S6K activation is both required and sufficient for airway smooth muscle cell size enlargement but not contractile protein expression. Further, ribosomal protein 56 is required for p70S6K-mediated cell enlargement. Finally, we have shown for the first time in a functional cell system that p70S6K-mediated myocyte enlargement alone, without preferential contractile protein expression, is insufficient for increased cell shortening.

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