Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Division of Immunology and Cancer Research Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, 465 Life Science Addition, Berkeley, California 94720-3200
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The ERK5 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) differs from other MAPKs in possessing a potent transcriptional activation domain.
ERK5
−/−
embryos die from angiogenic defects, but the precise physiological role of ERK5 remains poorly understood. To elucidate molecular functions of ERK5 in the development of vasculature and other tissues, we performed gene profile analyses of
erk5
−/−
mouse embryos and
erk5
−/−
fibroblast cells reconstituted with ERK5 or ERK5(1-740), which lacks the transactivation domain. These experiments revealed several potential ERK5 target genes, including a proapoptotic gene
bnip3
, known angiogenic genes
flt1
and
lklf
(
lung Krüppel-like factor
), and genes that regulate cardiovascular development. Among these, LKLF, known for its roles in angiogenesis, T-cell quiescence, and survival, was found to be absolutely dependent on ERK5 for expression in endothelial and T cells. We show that ERK5 drives
lklf
transcription by activating MEF2 transcription factors. Expression of
erk5
short hairpin or a dominant-negative form of the ERK5 upstream activator, MEK5, in T cells led to downregulation of LKLF, increased cell size and upregulation of activation markers. Thus, through its kinase and transcriptional activation domains, ERK5 regulates transcriptional responses of cell survival and quiescence critical for angiogenesis and T-cell function.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
83 articles.
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