Angiotensin II Signaling in Human Preadipose Cells: Participation of ERK1,2-Dependent Modulation of Akt
Artículo
![Thumbnail](/themes/Mirage2/images/cubierta.jpg)
Open/ Download
Publication date
2013-10Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Dünner, Natalia
Cómo citar
Angiotensin II Signaling in Human Preadipose Cells: Participation of ERK1,2-Dependent Modulation of Akt
Author
Abstract
The renin-angiotensin system expressed in adipose tissue has been implicated in the modulation of adipocyte formation,
glucose metabolism, triglyceride accumulation, lipolysis, and the onset of the adverse metabolic consequences of obesity.
As we investigated angiotensin II signal transduction mechanisms in human preadipose cells, an interplay of extracellularsignal-
regulated kinases 1 and 2 (ERK1,2) and Akt/PKB became evident. Angiotensin II caused attenuation of phosphorylated
Akt (p-Akt), at serine 473; the p-Akt/Akt ratio decreased to 0.560.2-fold the control value without angiotensin II (p,0.001).
Here we report that the reduction of phosphorylated Akt associates with ERK1,2 activities. In the absence of angiotensin II,
inhibition of ERK1,2 activation with U0126 or PD98059 resulted in a 2.160.5 (p,0.001) and 1.460.2-fold (p,0.05) increase in
the p-Akt/Akt ratio, respectively. In addition, partial knockdown of ERK1 protein expression by the short hairpin RNA
technique also raised phosphorylated Akt in these cells (the p-Akt/Akt ratio was 1.560.1-fold the corresponding control;
p,0.05). Furthermore, inhibition of ERK1,2 activation with U0126 prevented the reduction of p-Akt/Akt by angiotensin II. An
analogous effect was found on the phosphorylation status of Akt downstream effectors, the forkhead box (Fox) proteins O1
and O4. Altogether, these results indicate that angiotensin II signaling in human preadipose cells involves an ERK1,2-
dependent attenuation of Akt activity, whose impact on the biological functions under its regulation is not fully understood.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/129097
DOI: doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0075440
Quote Item
PLOS ONE, October 2013 | Volume 8 | Issue 10 | e75440
Collections