11 research outputs found

    Phylogenetic Analysis of the Neks Reveals Early Diversification of Ciliary-Cell Cycle Kinases

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    NIMA-related kinases (Neks) have been studied in diverse eukaryotes, including the fungus Aspergillus and the ciliate Tetrahymena. In the former, a single Nek plays an essential role in cell cycle regulation; in the latter, which has more than 30 Neks in its genome, multiple Neks regulate ciliary length. Mammalian genomes encode an intermediate number of Neks, several of which are reported to play roles in cell cycle regulation and/or localize to centrosomes. Previously, we reported that organisms with cilia typically have more Neks than organisms without cilia, but were unable to establish the evolutionary history of the gene family

    Structure, function, and evolution of plant NIMA-related kinases: implication for phosphorylation-dependent microtubule regulation

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    Chronic hypoxia induces constitutive p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase activity that correlates with enhanced cellular proliferation in fibroblasts from rat pulmonary but not systemic arteries

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    Pulmonary hypertension occurs commonly in patients with chronic hypoxic lung disease and is characterized by the remodeling of the pulmonary artery walls. The molecular mechanisms underlying such remodeling are unknown but we have recently shown that the stress-activated (Jnk and p38) mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases are activated in pulmonary artery fibroblasts following acute hypoxia. We now show that Erk and p38 MAP kinases are constitutively activated in fibroblasts derived from the remodeled pulmonary, but not the systemic circulation from rats exposed to chronically hypoxic conditions. Moreover, we find that such fibroblasts show sustained enhanced proliferative capacities relative to pulmonary artery fibroblasts derived from normoxic rats or to aortic fibroblasts from either normoxic or hypoxic rats. Finally, abrogation of p38, but not Erk MAP kinase activity by use of specific inhibitors, prevents the enhanced proliferative capacity exhibited by pulmonary artery fibroblasts. Taken together, these data suggest that enhanced p38 MAP kinase activity provides a molecular mechanism to explain the proliferation of pulmonary artery fibroblasts required for remodeling of the pulmonary vasculature.<p></p&gt

    Antiandrogens and Hair Growth: Basic Concepts and Experimental Research

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