Opposing Role of Mitogen-activated Protein Kinase Subtypes, Erk-1/2 and p38, in the Regulation of Chondrogenesis of Mesenchymes

Chun‐do Oh(Kyungpook National University), Sung-Hee Chang(Kyungpook National University), Young-Mee Yoon(Kyungpook National University), Su‐Jae Lee(Kyungpook National University), Yun‐Sil Lee(Kyungpook National University), Shin-Sung Kang(Kyungpook National University), Jang-Soo Chun(Kyungpook National University)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
February 1, 2000
Cited by 216Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The present studies were performed to determine subtype-specific roles of mitogen-activated protein kinase in chondrogenesis. Erk-1/2 activities, downstream of protein kinase C, decreased as chondrogenesis proceeded, whereas p38 activities, independent of protein kinase C, continuously increased during chondrogenesis. Inhibition of Erk-1/2 with PD98059 enhanced chondrogenesis up to 1. 7-fold, whereas inhibition of p38 with SB203580 reduced it to about 30% of the control level. Inhibition of Erk-1/2 or p38 did not affect precartilage condensation. However, cartilage nodule formation was significantly blocked by the inhibition of p38, whereas Erk-1/2 inhibition did not affect it. Modulation of chondrogenesis by the inhibition of Erk-1/2 and p38 was accompanied by altered expression of adhesion molecules in an opposite way. Expression of N-cadherin was reduced as chondrogenesis proceeded. Inhibition of p38 caused sustained expression of N-cadherin, whereas Erk-1/2 inhibition accelerated the reduction of N-cadherin expression. Expression of integrin alpha5beta1 and fibronectin were found to transiently increase during chondrogenesis. Inhibition of p38 caused continuous increase of expression of these molecules, whereas Erk-1/2 inhibition accelerated the decrease of expression of these molecules at a later period of chondrogenesis. Because temporal expression of these adhesion molecules regulates chondrogenesis, the above results indicate that Erk-1/2 and p38 conversely regulate chondrogenesis at post-precartilage condensation stages by modulating expression of adhesion molecules.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis