Abstract
A chicken B cell line DT40 and its syk-negative or lyn-negative mutants were used to investigate the roles of protein-tyrosine kinases in oxidant stress signaling. The data presented here for wild-type cells demonstrate that hydrogen peroxide stimulates p53/56lyn-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of p72syk, and induces a rapid and prolonged elevation of intracellular calcium, which consists of calcium release from intracellular stores and influx from the extracellular space. Hydrogen-peroxide-triggered calcium mobilization was impaired in both syk-negative and lyn-negative cells, which was mainly due to the loss of calcium release from intracellular stores. Further studies indicated that inositol trisphosphate production was also abolished in both syk-negative and lyn-negative cells, which is consistent with the loss of calcium release. Taken together, these observations suggest that the defect of p72syk or p53/56lyn was responsible for the abnormality of calcium mobilization in both lyn-negative and syk-negative cells, and that both p72syk and p53/56lyn might regulate calcium mobilization through the phosphatidylinositol pathway in B cell oxidant stress signaling.
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Qin, S., Inazu, T., Takata, M., Kurosaki, T., Homma, Y., & Yamamura, H. (1996). Cooperation of tyrosine kinases p72syk and p53/56lyn regulates calcium mobilization in chicken B cell oxidant stress signaling. European Journal of Biochemistry, 236(2), 443–449. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1996.00443.x
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