Recent evidence has implicated protein kinase C (PKC) in the etiology of hyperproliferative diseases such as psoriasis and non-melanoma skin cancer. In this study, PKC activity, immunoreactive protein, and phorbol ester-binding kinetics were examined in primary cultures of normal human epidermal keratinocytes (NHEK) in order to elucidate the relationship between PKC and NHEK proliferation and differentiation. NHEK were maintained in a proliferative phase in serum-free low-calcium (0.15 mM) medium, and then were exposed to high calcium (1.6 mM) in order to stimulate growth arrest and differentiation. Staurosporine was inhibitory to Ca++-induced differentiation. Scatchard analysis of phorbol binding indicated that exposure to high calcium for 24 h increased the number of binding sites (Bmax) by fivefold. In correlation with the ligand-binding results, PKC activity was extremely low in proliferating (low-calcium) NHEK compared to differentiating cells (high calcium). When assayed after 24, 48, and 72 h, high calcium induced tenfold or greater increases in Ca++/phospholipid-dependent phosphotransferase activity. Immunoblot analysis of NHEK PKC using antibodies directed against the hinge region of PKCα β also indicated that exposure to high calcium resulted in higher levels of immunoreactive protein. Therefore, PKC in NHEK appears to be upregulated under conditions of Ca++-induced growth arrest and differentiation. In addition, NHEK and other human skin cell particulate fractions contain a protein of approximately 116 kDa that is highly immunoreactive to an antibody to PKCα β, which coelutes from DEAE-sephacel under the same buffer conditions as the 80-kDa PKC. © 1992.
CITATION STYLE
Matsui, M. S., Chew, S. L., & Deleo, V. A. (1992). Protein kinase C in normal human epidermal keratinocytes during proliferation and calcium-induced differentiation. Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 99(5), 559–564. https://doi.org/10.1111/1523-1747.ep12667411
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