Citation:
Exp Cell Res. 2006 Apr 15;312(7):1164-73. Epub 2006 Mar 9
Abstract:
Akt kinase is an important downstream effector of VEGF in primary endothelial cells (EC), promoting angiogenesis by increased cellular survival, motility and tubulogenesis. Akt1 is the founding member of a family of serine threonine kinases thought to have overlapping function. We sought to determine if other Akt family members were also regulated by VEGF in EC. We show that treatment of EC with the angiogenic inducers VEGF or sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) results in an increased stabilization of Akt3 mRNA, concurrent with a PI3 kinase-dependent, Akt1-independent increase in both the protein and its phosphorylation. Given the similarity of Akt3 regulation by VEGF and S1P, the sensitivity of VEGF stimulation to the Gi-protein uncoupling reagent, pertussis toxin was tested and shows that VEGF stimulation requires Gi-protein signaling. We show that the VEGF stimulates the expression of Edg3/S1P3 (S1P3) and that expression of this Gi-protein-coupled receptor is both sufficient and necessary for the expression of Akt3. Blockade of a single isoform does not overtly affect cellular function, whereas inhibition of both kinases results in an increase in apoptosis and a down-regulation of cyclin D3. These results suggest a model whereby extracellular cues maintain total Akt kinase levels through the regulation of specific isoform expression providing a fail-safe mechanism to maintain necessary levels of Akt kinase activity.
Organism or Cell Type:
Cell Culture: human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs)
Delivery Method:
transfection