Calponin and mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling in differentiated vascular smooth muscle

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Abstract

Contraction of smooth muscle cells is generally assumed to require Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphorylation of the 20-kDa myosin light chains. However, we report here that in the absence of extracellular calcium, phenylephrine induces a contraction of freshly isolated ferret aorta cells in the absence of increases in intracellular ionized calcium or light chain phosphorylation levels but in the presence of activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase. A protein at 36 kDa co-immunoprecipitated with the mitogen- activated protein kinase and was identified as the actin-binding protein, calponin, by immunoblot. An overlay assay further confirmed an interaction between the kinase and calponin, even though the kinase did not phosphorylate calponin in vitro. Calponin also co-immunoprecipitated from smooth muscle cells with protein kinase C-ξ. High resolution digital confocal studies indicated that calponin redistributes to the cell membrane during phenylephrine stimulation at a time when mitogen-activated protein kinase and protein kinase C-ξ are targeted to the plasmalemma. These results suggest a role for calponin as a signaling molecule, possibly an adapter protein, linking the targeting of mitogen-activated protein kinase and protein kinase C-ξ to the surface membrane.

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Menice, C. B., Hulvershorn, J., Adam, L. P., Wang, C. L. A., & Morgan, K. G. (1997). Calponin and mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling in differentiated vascular smooth muscle. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(40), 25157–25161. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.40.25157

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