Increased Expression and Activation of c-Jun Contributes to Human Amylin-induced Apoptosis in Pancreatic Islet β-Cells

The role of c-Jun in apoptosis evoked by human amylin was investigated using human and rat insulinoma β-cell lines. Two transient increases in the levels of c-jun mRNA were detected at 30 minutes and eight hours after treatment with human amylin. The level of c-Jun protein was also up-regulated in a...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Journal of molecular biology 2002-11, Vol.324 (2), p.271-285
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Shaoping, Liu, Junxi, MacGibbon, Geraldine, Dragunow, Michael, Cooper, Garth J.S
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:The role of c-Jun in apoptosis evoked by human amylin was investigated using human and rat insulinoma β-cell lines. Two transient increases in the levels of c-jun mRNA were detected at 30 minutes and eight hours after treatment with human amylin. The level of c-Jun protein was also up-regulated in a time-dependent manner, reaching maximal levels after eight hours of exposure. However, no c-Jun induction was detected in cells treated with vehicle only or with rat amylin, indicating that the amyloidogenic feature of the human peptide may be important for c-Jun induction. We found that c-Jun was activated by phosphorylation specifically at Ser63 at four hours, but not at Ser73, after treatment with human amylin, preceding increased c-Jun protein. Furthermore, expression of an antisense c- jun (AS- c- jun), which suppressed protein levels of both c-Jun and phosphorylated-c-Jun, caused a marked reduction in apoptotic cell death, whereas the corresponding sense c- jun (S- c- jun) had no effect on changes of either c-Jun production or apoptosis. This indicated that increased expression and activation of c-Jun is required for human amylin-induced apoptosis. Immunocytochemical studies showed a significant increase in nuclear staining for c-Jun, phosphorylated-c-Jun (Ser63) and phosphorylated-JNK, suggesting that c-Jun may be activated through activation of JNK. In addition, electrophoretic mobility-shift assays showed that the increase in expression and phosphorylation of c-Jun was associated with increased AP-1 DNA binding activity. Supershift assays demonstrated that c-Jun, c-Fos and ATF-2 are part of the AP-1 complex, indicating that activated c-Jun is dimerized with c-Fos or ATF-2 for control of its target gene expression. Finally, we showed that human amylin triggers AP-1-mediated transcriptional activation. Our results suggest strongly that human amylin induces apoptosis through stimulation of expression and activation of c-Jun, and that co-expression and dimerization of c-Jun and c-fos or ATF-2 may be important for activation of the downstream apoptotic process.
ISSN:0022-2836
1089-8638
DOI:10.1016/S0022-2836(02)01044-6