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Mise en évidence par immunohistochimie de différentes isoformes de la protéine kinase C dans la thyroïde normale et hyperplasique
Authors: --- ---
Year: 1993 Publisher: Bruxelles: UCL,

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Nous avons tenté de mettre en évidence différentes isoformes de la PKC dans la thyroïde normale et hyperplasique. Les marquages cytoplamsiques folliculaires que nous avons observés en présence des anti-PKC alpha et beta sont en accord avec la littérature. L’absence totale de marquage par omission, des premiers anticorps est aussi conforme à la littérature. Cependant, trois éléments nous amènent à mettre en doute nos résultats.
1°- Une immunoréactivité des cellules folliculaires est observée après marquage avec des anticorps anti-PKC gamma alors que cette isoforme est décrite comme étant spécifique du système nerveux central uniquement.
2°- Des marquages positifs ont été obtenus avec du sérum de lapin normal par la technique d’immunoperoxydase indirecte, avec le sérum normal et l’(anticorps immunoabsorbé par la technique ABC.
3°- Nous n’avons pas pu obtenir de marquage avec les anticorps anti-PKC par la technique d’immunofluorescence alors que la méthode s’est avérée fiable et spécifique pour un anticorps anti-Tg.
Tous ces résultats nous font conclure que d’autres anticorps devront, sans doute, être utilisés pour répondre à la question posée


Book
Protein kinase C and its brain substrates : role in neuronal growth and plasticity
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0444814361 Year: 1991 Publisher: Amsterdam : Elsevier,

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Dissertation
Activation of the respiratory burst in the polymorphonuclear granulocyte - with special focus on protein kinase C
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Year: 1990 Publisher: Helsinki s.n.

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Book
Regulation of immune system cell functions by protein kinase C
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Year: 2014 Publisher: Frontiers Media SA

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Members of the protein kinase C (PKC) family of Ser/Thr kinases are encoded by nine distinct but closely related genes, which give rise to more than 12 different protein isoforms via a mechanism of alternative RNA splicing. Most PKC proteins are ubiquitously expressed and participate in a plethora of functions in most cell types. A majority of PKC isoforms is also expressed in cells of the immune system in which they are involved in signal transduction downstream of a range of surface receptors, including the antigen receptors on T and B lymphocytes. PKC proteins are central to signal initiation and propagation, and to the regulation of processes leading to immune cell proliferation, differentiation, homing and survival. As a result, PKC proteins directly impact on the quality and quantity of immune responses and indirectly on the host resistance to pathogens and tendency to develop immune deficiencies and autoimmune diseases. A significant progress was made in recent years in understanding the regulation of PKC enzymes, their mechanism of action and their role in determining immunocyte behavior This volume reviews the most significant contributions made in the field of immune cell regulation by PKC enzymes. Several manuscripts are devoted to the role of distinct PKC isoforms in the regulation of selected immunocyte responses. Additional manuscripts review more general mechanisms of regulation of PKC enzymes, either by post-translational modifications, such as phosphorylation or controlled proteolysis, or by interaction with different binding proteins that may alter the conformation, activity and subcellular location of PKC. Both types of mechanisms can introduce conformational changes in the molecule, which may affect its ability to interact with cofactors, ATP, or substrates. This topic will be followed by a discussion on the positive and negative impact of individual PKC isoforms on cell cycle regulation. A second section of this volume concentrates on selected topics relevant to role of the novel PKC isoform, PKC-theta, in T lymphocyte function. PKC-theta plays important and some non-redundant roles in T cell activation and is a key isoform that recruits to the immunological synapse - the surface membrane area in T cells that comes in direct contact with antigen presenting cells. The immunological synapse is formed in T cells within seconds following the engagement of the TCR by a peptide-bound MHC molecule on the surface of antigen-presenting cells. It serves as a platform for receptors, adaptor proteins, and effector molecules, which assemble into multimolecular activation complexes required for signal transduction. The unique ability of PKC-theta to activate the NF-kB, AP-1 and NF-AT transcription factors is well established, and recent studies contributed essential information on the mechanisms involved in the recruitment of PKC-theta to the center of the immunological synapse and the nature of its substrates and the role of their phosphorylated forms in signal transduction. Additional review manuscripts will describe the unique behavior of PKC-theta in regulatory T cells and its role in the regulation of other cell populations, including those of the innate immune response. This volume brings together leading experts from different disciplines that review the most recent discoveries and offer new perspectives on the contributions of PKC isoforms to biochemical processes and signaling events in different immune cell populations and their impact on the overall host immune response.


Book
L' activation de la protéine kinase C augmente le clivage du précurseur transmembranaire du peptide amyloïde de la maladie d'Alzheimer
Authors: --- ---
Year: 1992 Publisher: Bruxelles: UCL,

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La maladie d’Alzheimer est caractérisée par deux lésions neuropathologiques essentielles : les dégénérescences neurofibrillaires intraneuronales et les plaques séniles extracellulaires.
Le constituant majeur du noyau amyloïde des plaques séniles est un peptide de 42 acides aminés, le peptide ßA4. Il dérive d’un précurseur transmembranaire plus grand : l’APP (Amyloid Precursor Protein). Dans les cellules en culture, l’APP est clivé entre les acides aminés 15 et 17 du peptide ßA4. Ce clivage est réalisé par une enzyme appelée « APP sécrétase ». Or, le peptide ßA4 est retrouvé entier au sein des plaques séniles ; il y a donc lieu de penser que, dans la maladie d’Alzheimer, le mécanisme de clivage normal est perturbé.
L’APP est une phosphoprotéine pouvant servir de substrat à la protéine Kinase C (PKC), dont l’activité est diminuée chez les patients atteints de la maladie d’Alzheimer. Nous avons étudié l’influence de l’activation et de l’inhibition de la PKC sur le clivage de l’APP. A cette fin, des cellules Cho ont été transfectées par l’ADNc de l’isoforme transmembranaire APP 770. Le marquage métabolique des cellules transfectées, à l’aide de méthioninel [35S], et l’immunoprécipitation des protéines solubles du milieu de culture par un anticorps anti-APP ont permis de mettre en évidence une forme soluble de l’APP résultant du clivage de la protéine transmembranaire.
Lorsque les cellules transfectées sont incubées en présence de 1 μ M de phorbol 12, 13-dibutyrate (PDBU : ester de phorbol activant la PKC), la quantité d’APP 770 soluble immunoprécipitée dans le milieu de culture augmente. Par contre, si la staurosporine (inhibiteur de la PCK) est utilisée, la quantité de forme retrouvée dans le milieu est réduite.
En parallèle, des cellules CHO ont été transfectées par l’ADNc 563, une isoforme plus courte qui ne possède pas de domaine transmembranaire. Cette protéine est donc sécrétée sans clivage protéolytique. Les milieux de culture des cellules CHO exprimant ce précurseur ont également fait l’objet d’immunoprécipitations. L’incubation préalable de ces cellules avec du PBBU ou de la staurosporine ne modifie en rien la quantité d’APP 563 retrouvée dans le milieu de culture.
Ces résultats montrent que l’activation en inhibition de la PKC influencent très significativement le clivage de l’APP transmembranaire par l’APP sécrétase.


Book
Regulation of immune system cell functions by protein kinase C
Authors: ---
Year: 2014 Publisher: Frontiers Media SA

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Members of the protein kinase C (PKC) family of Ser/Thr kinases are encoded by nine distinct but closely related genes, which give rise to more than 12 different protein isoforms via a mechanism of alternative RNA splicing. Most PKC proteins are ubiquitously expressed and participate in a plethora of functions in most cell types. A majority of PKC isoforms is also expressed in cells of the immune system in which they are involved in signal transduction downstream of a range of surface receptors, including the antigen receptors on T and B lymphocytes. PKC proteins are central to signal initiation and propagation, and to the regulation of processes leading to immune cell proliferation, differentiation, homing and survival. As a result, PKC proteins directly impact on the quality and quantity of immune responses and indirectly on the host resistance to pathogens and tendency to develop immune deficiencies and autoimmune diseases. A significant progress was made in recent years in understanding the regulation of PKC enzymes, their mechanism of action and their role in determining immunocyte behavior This volume reviews the most significant contributions made in the field of immune cell regulation by PKC enzymes. Several manuscripts are devoted to the role of distinct PKC isoforms in the regulation of selected immunocyte responses. Additional manuscripts review more general mechanisms of regulation of PKC enzymes, either by post-translational modifications, such as phosphorylation or controlled proteolysis, or by interaction with different binding proteins that may alter the conformation, activity and subcellular location of PKC. Both types of mechanisms can introduce conformational changes in the molecule, which may affect its ability to interact with cofactors, ATP, or substrates. This topic will be followed by a discussion on the positive and negative impact of individual PKC isoforms on cell cycle regulation. A second section of this volume concentrates on selected topics relevant to role of the novel PKC isoform, PKC-theta, in T lymphocyte function. PKC-theta plays important and some non-redundant roles in T cell activation and is a key isoform that recruits to the immunological synapse - the surface membrane area in T cells that comes in direct contact with antigen presenting cells. The immunological synapse is formed in T cells within seconds following the engagement of the TCR by a peptide-bound MHC molecule on the surface of antigen-presenting cells. It serves as a platform for receptors, adaptor proteins, and effector molecules, which assemble into multimolecular activation complexes required for signal transduction. The unique ability of PKC-theta to activate the NF-kB, AP-1 and NF-AT transcription factors is well established, and recent studies contributed essential information on the mechanisms involved in the recruitment of PKC-theta to the center of the immunological synapse and the nature of its substrates and the role of their phosphorylated forms in signal transduction. Additional review manuscripts will describe the unique behavior of PKC-theta in regulatory T cells and its role in the regulation of other cell populations, including those of the innate immune response. This volume brings together leading experts from different disciplines that review the most recent discoveries and offer new perspectives on the contributions of PKC isoforms to biochemical processes and signaling events in different immune cell populations and their impact on the overall host immune response.


Dissertation
Protein kinase C as a mediator of osteoblast function.
Authors: ---
Year: 1994 Publisher: S.l. s.n.

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Book
Regulation of immune system cell functions by protein kinase C
Authors: ---
Year: 2014 Publisher: Frontiers Media SA

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Abstract

Members of the protein kinase C (PKC) family of Ser/Thr kinases are encoded by nine distinct but closely related genes, which give rise to more than 12 different protein isoforms via a mechanism of alternative RNA splicing. Most PKC proteins are ubiquitously expressed and participate in a plethora of functions in most cell types. A majority of PKC isoforms is also expressed in cells of the immune system in which they are involved in signal transduction downstream of a range of surface receptors, including the antigen receptors on T and B lymphocytes. PKC proteins are central to signal initiation and propagation, and to the regulation of processes leading to immune cell proliferation, differentiation, homing and survival. As a result, PKC proteins directly impact on the quality and quantity of immune responses and indirectly on the host resistance to pathogens and tendency to develop immune deficiencies and autoimmune diseases. A significant progress was made in recent years in understanding the regulation of PKC enzymes, their mechanism of action and their role in determining immunocyte behavior This volume reviews the most significant contributions made in the field of immune cell regulation by PKC enzymes. Several manuscripts are devoted to the role of distinct PKC isoforms in the regulation of selected immunocyte responses. Additional manuscripts review more general mechanisms of regulation of PKC enzymes, either by post-translational modifications, such as phosphorylation or controlled proteolysis, or by interaction with different binding proteins that may alter the conformation, activity and subcellular location of PKC. Both types of mechanisms can introduce conformational changes in the molecule, which may affect its ability to interact with cofactors, ATP, or substrates. This topic will be followed by a discussion on the positive and negative impact of individual PKC isoforms on cell cycle regulation. A second section of this volume concentrates on selected topics relevant to role of the novel PKC isoform, PKC-theta, in T lymphocyte function. PKC-theta plays important and some non-redundant roles in T cell activation and is a key isoform that recruits to the immunological synapse - the surface membrane area in T cells that comes in direct contact with antigen presenting cells. The immunological synapse is formed in T cells within seconds following the engagement of the TCR by a peptide-bound MHC molecule on the surface of antigen-presenting cells. It serves as a platform for receptors, adaptor proteins, and effector molecules, which assemble into multimolecular activation complexes required for signal transduction. The unique ability of PKC-theta to activate the NF-kB, AP-1 and NF-AT transcription factors is well established, and recent studies contributed essential information on the mechanisms involved in the recruitment of PKC-theta to the center of the immunological synapse and the nature of its substrates and the role of their phosphorylated forms in signal transduction. Additional review manuscripts will describe the unique behavior of PKC-theta in regulatory T cells and its role in the regulation of other cell populations, including those of the innate immune response. This volume brings together leading experts from different disciplines that review the most recent discoveries and offer new perspectives on the contributions of PKC isoforms to biochemical processes and signaling events in different immune cell populations and their impact on the overall host immune response.


Dissertation
Preclinical and clinical pharmacologic studies on topoisomerase and protein kinase C inhibitors
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9039318980 Year: 1998 Publisher: Utrecht Universiteit Utrecht

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Dissertation
Cellular and environmental effects on the efficacy of photodynamic treatment

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