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Regulation of Cell Signaling and Adhesion


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Project Summary: This application is to continue on-going studies of the normal and pathological functions of the death effector domain (DED)-containing phosphoprotein PEA-15. The hypothesis is that PEA-15 regulates the decision of T lymphocytes and some cancer cells to proliferate or to die. This hypothesis is based on the following observations made during the current funding period: PEA-15 is an ERK-binding protein that restricts ERK1/2 to the cytoplasm and thereby prevents ERK activation of nuclear targets. The ERK substrate RSK-2 is also a PEA-15 binding partner and PEA-15 enhances ERK activation of RSK-2. Indeed PEA-15 knock-out thymocytes do not activate RSK-2 in response to ERK activation. RSK-2 can promote cell survival and proliferation. In contrast, PEA-15 has also been reported to inhibit death receptor activated apoptosis by binding to FADD and preventing recruitment and activation of caspases. Phosphorylation of PEA-15 was found to control which of these pathways is affected. In aim 1) the molecular mechanism by which PEA-15 regulates ERK MAP kinase signaling and FADD-mediated apoptosis will be further characterized using both cell culture and knock-out derived cells. In PEA-15 knock-out mice T lymphocytes undergo uncontrolled expansion in response to T-cell receptor ligation. In aim 2) the immune phenotype of PEA-15 knock-out mice and the mechanism responsible for the increased number of T-Cells will be determined in extracted lymphocytes and in immune challenged mice. Abnormal expression of PEA-15 promotes tumor formation and may effect resistance to apoptosis-directed chemotherapies. In epithelial cells, PEA-15 in combination with activated H-Ras promotes greater tumor growth than H-Ras alone. In addition, cells expressing PEA-15 show significantly reduced migration. In aim 3) the effects of PEA-15 on Ras transformed epithelial cell growth and metastasis will be investigated both in vitro and in vivo using mouse epithelial cells. Relevance to public health: Control of cell proliferation and apoptosis is finely tuned in T cells during immune challenge and is set in cancer cells for optimum proliferation with minimal apoptosis. PEA-15 is a protein that sits at a nexus of control for these two events and may therefore tip the scales one way or the other. At the conclusion of these studies the molecular mechanisms of PEA-15 normal function in T cell immune response and abnormal function in cancer will be better understood. This will determine if PEA-15 is a suitable target for the development of new cancer therapies and if it can be used as a marker for cancer progression.
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R56CA093849

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Collapse start date
2002-07-01
Collapse end date
2008-08-31
RCMI CC is supported by the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, National Institutes of Health (NIH), through Grant Number U24MD015970. The contents of this site are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the NIH

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