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Cell Growth and Development

The MLK Family Mediates c-Jun N-Terminal Kinase Activation in Neuronal Apoptosis

, , , &
Pages 4713-4724 | Received 09 Apr 2001, Accepted 16 Apr 2001, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Neuronal apoptotic death induced by nerve growth factor (NGF) deprivation is reported to be in part mediated through a pathway that includes Rac1 and Cdc42, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases 4 and 7 (MKK4 and -7), c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs), and c-Jun. However, additional components of the pathway remain to be defined. We show here that members of the mixed-lineage kinase (MLK) family (including MLK1, MLK2, MLK3, and dual leucine zipper kinase [DLK]) are expressed in neuronal cells and are likely to act between Rac1/Cdc42 and MKK4 and -7 in death signaling. Overexpression of MLKs effectively induces apoptotic death of cultured neuronal PC12 cells and sympathetic neurons, while expression of dominant-negative forms of MLKs suppresses death evoked by NGF deprivation or expression of activated forms of Rac1 and Cdc42. CEP-1347 (KT7515), which blocks neuronal death caused by NGF deprivation and a variety of additional apoptotic stimuli and which selectively inhibits the activities of MLKs, effectively protects neuronal PC12 cells from death induced by overexpression of MLK family members. In addition, NGF deprivation or UV irradiation leads to an increase in both level and phosphorylation of endogenous DLK. These observations support a role for MLKs in the neuronal death mechanism. With respect to ordering the death pathway, dominant-negative forms of MKK4 and -7 and c-Jun are protective against death induced by MLK overexpression, placing MLKs upstream of these kinases. Additional findings place the MLKs upstream of mitochondrial cytochromec release and caspase activation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Michael J. Birrer, Thomas Franke, J. Silvio Gutkind, Alan Hall, Larry Holzman, Hidenori Ichijo, and Richard Spritz for plasmid constructs; James M. Angelastro, David X. Liu, and Jaya Padmanabhan (Columbia University) for helpful advice; Sheryl L. Meyer, Steve Trusko, and Chrysanthe Spais (Cephalon Inc.) for providing molecular reagents; and Claudine Bitel (Columbia University) for technical aid.

This work was supported in part by grants from the NIH-NINDS and Blanchette Rockefeller Foundation (L.A.G.).

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