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Thrombin receptor activation causes rapid neural cell rounding and neurite retraction independent of classic second messengers

The protease thrombin is a potent activator of various cell types. Thrombin cleaves and thereby activates its own seven-transmembrane- domain receptor which couples to G proteins. Thrombin also can inhibit neuronal differentiation, supposedly by degrading components of the extracellular matrix. Here...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1992
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2290045/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1321160
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collection PubMed
description The protease thrombin is a potent activator of various cell types. Thrombin cleaves and thereby activates its own seven-transmembrane- domain receptor which couples to G proteins. Thrombin also can inhibit neuronal differentiation, supposedly by degrading components of the extracellular matrix. Here we report that active thrombin induces immediate cell rounding and neurite retraction in differentiating N1E- 115 and NG108-15 neural cells in serum-free culture. Serum (0.5-5% vol/vol) evokes similar responses, but the cell-rounding and neurite- retracting activity of serum is not attributable to thrombin. Neural cell rounding is transient, subsiding after 10-15 min, and subject to homologous desensitization, whereas retracted neurites rapidly degenerate. Thrombin action is inhibited by cytochalasin, but not colchicine. A novel 14-amino acid peptide agonist of the thrombin receptor fully mimics thrombin's morphoregulatory activity, indicating that thrombin-induced shape changes are receptor-mediated and not secondary to extracellular matrix degradation. Although thrombin receptors couple to phosphoinositide hydrolysis and Ca2+ mobilization, thrombin-induced shape changes appear to depend neither on the Ca2+/protein kinase C- nor the cyclic nucleotide-mediated signal transduction pathways; however, the morphological response to thrombin is blocked by pervanadate, an inhibitor of tyrosine phosphatases, and by broad-specificity kinase inhibitors. Our results suggest that the thrombin receptor communicates to an as-yet-uncharacterized effector to reorganize the actin cytoskeleton and to reverse the differentiated phenotype of neural cells.
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spelling pubmed-22900452008-05-01 Thrombin receptor activation causes rapid neural cell rounding and neurite retraction independent of classic second messengers J Cell Biol Articles The protease thrombin is a potent activator of various cell types. Thrombin cleaves and thereby activates its own seven-transmembrane- domain receptor which couples to G proteins. Thrombin also can inhibit neuronal differentiation, supposedly by degrading components of the extracellular matrix. Here we report that active thrombin induces immediate cell rounding and neurite retraction in differentiating N1E- 115 and NG108-15 neural cells in serum-free culture. Serum (0.5-5% vol/vol) evokes similar responses, but the cell-rounding and neurite- retracting activity of serum is not attributable to thrombin. Neural cell rounding is transient, subsiding after 10-15 min, and subject to homologous desensitization, whereas retracted neurites rapidly degenerate. Thrombin action is inhibited by cytochalasin, but not colchicine. A novel 14-amino acid peptide agonist of the thrombin receptor fully mimics thrombin's morphoregulatory activity, indicating that thrombin-induced shape changes are receptor-mediated and not secondary to extracellular matrix degradation. Although thrombin receptors couple to phosphoinositide hydrolysis and Ca2+ mobilization, thrombin-induced shape changes appear to depend neither on the Ca2+/protein kinase C- nor the cyclic nucleotide-mediated signal transduction pathways; however, the morphological response to thrombin is blocked by pervanadate, an inhibitor of tyrosine phosphatases, and by broad-specificity kinase inhibitors. Our results suggest that the thrombin receptor communicates to an as-yet-uncharacterized effector to reorganize the actin cytoskeleton and to reverse the differentiated phenotype of neural cells. The Rockefeller University Press 1992-07-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2290045/ /pubmed/1321160 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Thrombin receptor activation causes rapid neural cell rounding and neurite retraction independent of classic second messengers
title Thrombin receptor activation causes rapid neural cell rounding and neurite retraction independent of classic second messengers
title_full Thrombin receptor activation causes rapid neural cell rounding and neurite retraction independent of classic second messengers
title_fullStr Thrombin receptor activation causes rapid neural cell rounding and neurite retraction independent of classic second messengers
title_full_unstemmed Thrombin receptor activation causes rapid neural cell rounding and neurite retraction independent of classic second messengers
title_short Thrombin receptor activation causes rapid neural cell rounding and neurite retraction independent of classic second messengers
title_sort thrombin receptor activation causes rapid neural cell rounding and neurite retraction independent of classic second messengers
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2290045/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1321160