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Mol. Cell. Biol., 01 1995, 326-337, Vol 15, No. 1
M Monfar, KP Lemon, TC Grammer, L Cheatham, J Chung, CJ Vlahos and J Blenis
Activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and activation of the
70/85-kDa S6 protein kinases (alpha II and alpha I isoforms, referred to
collectively as pp70S6k) have been independently linked to the regulation
of cell proliferation. We demonstrate that these kinases lie on the same
signalling pathway and that PI3K mediates the activation of pp70 by the
cytokine interleukin-2 (IL-2). We also show that the activation of pp70S6k
can be blocked at different points along the signalling pathway by using
specific inhibitors of T-cell proliferation. Inhibition of PI3K activity
with structurally unrelated but highly specific PI3K inhibitors (wortmannin
or LY294002) results in inhibition of IL-2-dependent but not phorbol ester
(conventional protein kinase C [cPKC])-dependent pp70S6k activation. The
T-cell immunosuppressant rapamycin potently antagonizes IL-2-(PI3K)- and
phorbol ester (cPKC)-mediated activation of pp70S6k. Thus, wortmannin and
rapamycin antagonize IL-2-mediated activation of pp70S6k at distinct points
along the PI3K-regulated signalling pathway, or rapamycin antagonizes
another pathway required for pp70S6k activity. Agents that raise the
concentration of intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP) and activate
cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) also inhibit IL-2- dependent activation
of pp70S6k. In this case, inhibition appears to occur at least two points
in this signalling path. Like rapamycin, PKA appears to act downstream of
cPKC-mediated pp70S6k activation, and like wortmannin, PKA antagonizes
IL-2-dependent activation of PI3K. The results with rapamycin and
wortmannin are of added interest since the yeast and mammalian rapamycin
targets resemble PI3K in the catalytic domain.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Activation of pp70/85 S6 kinases in interleukin-2-responsive lymphoid cells is mediated by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and inhibited by cyclic AMP
Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115.
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