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    J Biol Chem. 1991 Aug 5;266(22):14237-43.

    Mechanisms of bombesin-induced arachidonate mobilization in Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts.

    Source

    Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tokyo, Japan.

    Abstract

    A peptide mitogen bombesin, which activates the phospholipase C-protein kinase C signaling pathway, induces a mepacrine-sensitive, dose-dependent increase in the release of [3H]arachidonic acid and its metabolites ([3H]AA) from prelabeled Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts. The effect is temporally composed of two phases, i.e. an initial transient burst that is essentially independent of extracellular Ca2+, and a following sustained phase that is absolutely dependent on the extracellular Ca2+. The initial transient [3H]AA liberation occurs concomitantly with bombesin-induced 45Ca efflux from prelabeled cells: both responses being substantially attenuated by loading cells with a Ca2+ chelator quin2. However, bombesin-induced intracellular Ca2+ mobilization by itself is not sufficient as a signal for the initial transient [3H]AA liberation, since A23187 potently stimulates 45Ca efflux to an extent comparable to bombesin but fails to induce [3H]AA release in the absence of extracellular Ca2+. The second sustained phase of the bombesin-induced [3H]AA release is abolished by reducing extracellular Ca2+ to 0.03 mM, although bombesin effects on phospholipase C and protein kinase C activation are barely affected by the same procedure. A protein kinase C activator phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate induces an extracellular Ca(2+)-dependent, slowly developing sustained increase in [3H]AA release, and markedly potentiates both phases of bombesin-induced [3H]AA release. Down-regulation of cellular protein kinase C completely abolishes all of the effects of phorbol dibutyrate, and partially inhibits the second but not the first phase of bombesin-induced [3H]AA release. These results indicate that bombesin-induced receptor-mediated activation of phospholipase A2 involves multiple mechanisms, including intracellular Ca2+ mobilization for the first phase, protein kinase C activation plus Ca2+ influx for the second phase, and as yet unknown mechanism(s) independent of intracellular Ca2+ mobilization or protein kinase C for both of the phases.

    PMID:
    1860838
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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