The Akt Proto-oncogene Links Ras to Pak and Cell Survival Signals

The Ras oncogene regulates cellular proliferation, differentiation, transformation, and survival through multiple downstream signals. Ras signals through its effector phosphoinositide 3 (PI3) kinase to the Pak protein kinase (p65 pak), but the steps from Ras to Pak remain to be elucidated. PI3 kinas...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2000-03, Vol.275 (13), p.9106-9109
Hauptverfasser: Tang, Yi, Zhou, Honglin, Chen, Albert, Pittman, Randall N., Field, Jeffrey
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container_end_page 9109
container_issue 13
container_start_page 9106
container_title The Journal of biological chemistry
container_volume 275
creator Tang, Yi
Zhou, Honglin
Chen, Albert
Pittman, Randall N.
Field, Jeffrey
description The Ras oncogene regulates cellular proliferation, differentiation, transformation, and survival through multiple downstream signals. Ras signals through its effector phosphoinositide 3 (PI3) kinase to the Pak protein kinase (p65 pak), but the steps from Ras to Pak remain to be elucidated. PI3 kinase can stimulate the small G protein, Rac, a direct activator of Pak, as well as the Akt proto-oncogene, a serine-threonine protein kinase. We found that activated Akt stimulated Pak, whereas a dominant negative Akt inhibited Ras activation of Pak in transfection assays. Akt stimulation of Pak was not inhibited by dominant negative mutants of either Rac or Cdc42 suggesting that Akt activated Pak through a GTPase-independent mechanism. We also developed a novel cell-free system to study Ras activation of Pak. In this system Ras activated Pak only in the presence of a crude cell extract but failed to activate Pak when Akt was immunodepleted from the extract. Akt protects cells from apoptosis through phosphorylation of downstream targets such as the Bcl-2 family member, Bad. We found that activated Pak decreased apoptosis and increased phosphorylation of Bad, whereas dominant negative Pak increased apoptosis and decreased phosphorylation of Bad. These studies define a new oncogene-mediated cell survival signal.
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subjects Akt gene
Animals
Apoptosis
cdc42 protein
Cell Line
Oncogene Protein p21(ras) - metabolism
p21-Activated Kinases
Pak protein
Phosphorylation
Protein-Serine-Threonine Kinases - metabolism
Proto-Oncogene Proteins - metabolism
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt
Rac protein
Rats
Signal Transduction
title The Akt Proto-oncogene Links Ras to Pak and Cell Survival Signals
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