High glucose concentrations and protein kinase C isoforms in vascular smooth muscle cells

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Abstract

High extracellular glucose activates protein kinase C (PKC), a family of kinases vital to intracellular signaling. However, which PKC isoforms are involved and where in the cell they operate is unclear. We tested the hypothesis that only those PKC isoforms binding to diacylglycerol (DAG) are activated by high glucose. We also reasoned that the isoforms would translocate to different parts of the cell, where they presumably serve different functions. The PKC isoforms α,β,δ,ε, and ζ were studied. Twenty mM glucose caused an increase in total PKC activity at six hours, which was maintained at 24 hours. High glucose decreased the angiotensin II-induced calcium signal. This effect was reversed by preincubating the cells with the PKC inhibitor staurosporine. Glucose induced a translocation of all PKC isoforms except PKC ζP by Western blot. Confocal microscopy showed that PKC α,β, and ε were translocated into the nucleus. PKC φ showed strong association with cytoskeletal structures. The effects were sustained at 24 hours for PKC isoform 13 and to a lesser extent for PKC δ and ε, but not for PKC α. Thus, PKC isoforms differ in their propensity to be activated by high glucose. Those isoforms binding to DAG are activated. Both cytoskeletal and nuclear signaling may be involved.

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Haller, H., Baur, E., Quass, P., Behrend, M., Lindschau, C., Distler, A., & Luft, F. C. (1995). High glucose concentrations and protein kinase C isoforms in vascular smooth muscle cells. Kidney International, 47(4), 1057–1067. https://doi.org/10.1038/ki.1995.152

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