4.6 Article

Role of protein kinase C α in primary human osteoblast proliferation

Journal

JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH
Volume 17, Issue 11, Pages 1968-1976

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1359/jbmr.2002.17.11.1968

Keywords

osteoblast; protein kinase C; isoforms; oligodeoxynucleotides; proliferation

Funding

  1. NIDCR NIH HHS [DE00158] Funding Source: Medline

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms have been shown to have specific expression profiles and individual isoforms are believed to play distinct roles in the cells in which they are found. The goal here was to determine which specific isoform(s) is involved in proliferation of primary human osteoblasts. In primary human osteoblasts, 10 muM of acute sphingosine-1-phosphate (SIP) treatment induced an increase in proliferation that correlated with an increase in PKCalpha and PKCL expression. To further delineate which isoforms are involved in osteoblastic cell proliferation, the effect of low versus high serum culture conditions on PKC isoform expression was determined. Likewise, the effect of antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) to specific PKC isoforms on proliferation and MAPK activation was studied. The effect of SIP on intracellular translocation of activated PKC isoforms was also evaluated. The results indicated that in primary human osteoblasts, PKCalpha was not expressed under conditions of low proliferative rate while PKCdelta and PKCL expression was not affected. The specific inhibition of PKCalpha by antisense ODNs resulted in inhibition of MAPK activity leading to a significant decrease in proliferation. SIP up-regulated antisense ODN inhibited PKCalpha expression and MAPK activity and led to an increase in proliferation. Subsequent experiments using platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) as an additional mitogen generated similar data. PDGF stimulation resulted in a significant increase in proliferation that correlated with an up-regulation of inhibited PKCalpha expression in antisense ODN-treated cells. Immunofluorescence methods showed that mitogenic stimulation of PKCalpha resulted in nuclear translocation. Our findings present original data that PKCalpha is the isoform specifically involved in the proliferation of primary human osteoblasts.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available