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Carcinogenesis, Vol. 24, No. 2, 317-325, February 2003
© 2003 Oxford University Press


CARCINOGENESIS

PKC isozyme S-cysteinylation by cystine stimulates the pro-apoptotic isozyme PKC{delta} and inactivates the oncogenic isozyme PKC{varepsilon}

Feng Chu, Nancy E. Ward and Catherine A. O’Brian1

Department of Cancer Biology, University of Texas M.D.Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA

Protein kinase C (PKC) is a family of ten isozymes that play distinct and in some cases opposing roles in cell growth and survival. We recently reported that diamide, a diazene carbonyl derivative which oxidizes thiols to disulfides through addition/displacement reactions at the diazene bond, induces potent GSH-dependent inactivation of several PKC isozymes, including the oncogenic isozyme PKC{varepsilon}, via S-glutathiolation. PKC{delta}, a pro-apoptotic isozyme, was distinguished by its resistance to inactivation. In this report, we show that PKC-regulatory S-thiolation modifications produced by physiological disulfides elicit opposing effects on PKC{delta} and PKC{varepsilon} activity. We report that PKC{delta} is stimulated 2.0–2.5 fold by GSSG, (Cys–Gly)2 and cystine, under conditions where PKC{gamma} and PKC{varepsilon} are fully inactivated by cystine, and PKC{alpha} activity is affected marginally or not at all by the disulfides. Focusing on cystine, we show that DTT quenches cystine-induced PKC{delta} stimulation and PKC{gamma} and PKC{varepsilon} inactivation, indicative of oxidative regulation. By analyzing DTT-reversible isozyme radiolabeling by [35S]cystine, we demonstrate that PKC{gamma}, PKC{delta} and PKC{varepsilon} are each [35S] S-cysteinylated in association with the concentration-dependent regulation of isozyme activity by cystine. The restricted reactivity of cystine, together with the effects of DTT and thioredoxin on cystine-induced PKC isozyme regulation reported here, indicate that the cystine-induced PKC-regulatory effects entail isozyme S-cysteinylation. We recently hypothesized that antagonism of tumor promotion/progression by small cellular thiols may involve PKC regulation via oxidant-induced S-thiolation reactions with PKC isozymes. The findings of cystine-induced PKC isozyme regulation by S-cysteinylation reported here offer correlative support to the hypothetical model. Thus, PKC{delta}, a potent antagonist of DMBA–TPA-induced tumor promotion/progression in mouse skin, is stimulated by S-cysteinylation, PKC{varepsilon}, an important mediator of the tumor promotion/progression response, is inactivated by S-cysteinylation, and PKC{alpha}, which is not influential in DMBA–TPA-induced tumor promotion/progression, is not regulated by cystine. Furthermore, PKC{gamma} has oncogenic activity, and S-cysteinylation inactivated PKC{gamma} and PKC{varepsilon} similarly. These findings provide evidence that S-cysteinyl acceptor-sites in PKC isozymes may offer attractive targets for development of novel cancer preventive agents.


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