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. 2000 May;278(5):C879-84.
doi: 10.1152/ajpcell.2000.278.5.C879.

Ca(2+) and p38 MAP kinase regulate mAChR-mediated c-Fos expression in avian exocrine cells

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Ca(2+) and p38 MAP kinase regulate mAChR-mediated c-Fos expression in avian exocrine cells

J P Hildebrandt et al. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol. 2000 May.
Free article

Abstract

Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs) in exocrine tissue from the avian nasal salt gland are coupled to phospholipase C and generate inositol phosphate and Ca(2+) signals upon activation. An early effect of receptor activation in the secretory cells is a transient accumulation of c-Fos protein. In cooperation with constitutively expressed Jun, Fos presumably serves as a transcription factor altering gene expression during cell growth and differentiation processes in the gland associated with adaptation to osmotic stress in animals. Nothing is known, however, about the mAChR-dependent signaling pathways leading to Fos expression in these cells. By incubation of isolated nasal gland tissue in short-term culture with activators or inhibitors of signaling pathways and quantitative Western blot analysis of Fos abundance, we have now identified the sustained elevation of the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration and the activation of the p38 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase as intermediate signaling elements for the regulation of c-Fos by muscarinic receptor activation. It is suggested that p38 MAP kinase, rather than exclusively mediating stress responses, is involved in the regulation of cellular growth and differentiation controlled by G protein-coupled receptors.

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