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Cell Growth and Development

Activation of c-Jun N-Terminal Kinase 1 by UV Irradiation Is Inhibited by Wortmannin without Affecting c-jun Expression

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Pages 1768-1774 | Received 04 Sep 1998, Accepted 04 Nov 1998, Published online: 27 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs)/stress-activated protein kinases is an early response of cells upon exposure to DNA-damaging agents. JNK-mediated phosphorylation of c-Jun is currently understood to stimulate the transactivating potency of AP-1 (e.g., c-Jun/c-Fos; c-Jun/ATF-2), thereby increasing the expression of AP-1 target genes. Here we show that stimulation of JNK1 activity is not a general early response of cells exposed to genotoxic agents. Treatment of NIH 3T3 cells with UV light (UV-C) as well as with methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) caused activation of JNK1 and an increase in c-Jun protein and AP-1 binding activity, whereas antineoplastic drugs such as mafosfamide, mitomycin C,N-hydroxyethyl-N-chloroethylnitrosourea, and treosulfan did not elicit this response. The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor wortmannin specifically blocked the UV-stimulated activation of JNK1 but did not affect UV-driven activation of extracellular regulated kinase 2 (ERK2). To investigate the significance of JNK1 for transactivation of c-jun, we analyzed the effect of UV irradiation on c-jun expression under conditions of wortmannin-mediated inhibition of UV-induced stimulation of JNK1. Neither the UV-induced increase in c-jun mRNA, c-Jun protein, and AP-1 binding nor the activation of the collagenase and c-junpromoters was affected by wortmannin. In contrast, the mitogen-activated protein kinase/ERK kinase inhibitor PD98056, which blocked ERK2 but not JNK1 activation by UV irradiation, impaired UV-driven c-Jun protein induction and AP-1 binding. Based on the data, we suggest that JNK1 stimulation is not essential for transactivation of c-jun after UV exposure, whereas activation of ERK2 is required for UV-induced signaling leading to elevated c-junexpression.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank H. J. Rahmsdorf (Karlsruhe, Germany) for providing c-jun, c-fos, and GAPDH hybridization probes as well as the promoter CAT constructs used. Furthermore, we thank C. Kost for technical assistance and D. Wilhelm as well as P. Angel (DKFZ, Heidelberg, Germany) for critical reading of the manuscript.

This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Fr 1241/1-1 and SFB 519, B4).

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