September 1, 2014
Journal Article

ERK Oscillation-Dependent Gene Expression Patterns and Deregulation by Stress-Response

Abstract

Studies were undertaken to determine whether ERK oscillations regulate a unique subset of genes in human keratinocytes and subsequently, whether the p38 stress response inhibits ERK oscillations. A DNA microarray identified many genes that were unique to ERK oscillations, and network reconstruction predicted an important role for the mediator complex subunit 1 (MED1) node in mediating ERK oscillation-dependent gene expression. Increased ERK-dependent phosphorylation of MED1 was observed in oscillating cells compared to non-oscillating counterparts as validation. Treatment of keratinocytes with a p38 inhibitor (SB203580) increased ERK oscillation amplitudes and MED1 and phospho-MED1 protein levels. Bromate is a probable human carcinogen that activates p38. Bromate inhibited ERK oscillations in human keratinocytes and JB6 cells and induced an increase in phospho-p38 and decrease in phospho-MED1 protein levels. Treatment of normal rat kidney cells and primary salivary gland epithelial cells with bromate decreased phospho-MED1 levels in a reversible fashion upon treatment with p38 inhibitors (SB202190; SB203580). Our results indicate that oscillatory behavior in the ERK pathway alters homeostatic gene regulation patterns and that the cellular response to perturbation may manifest differently in oscillating vs non-oscillating cells.

Revised: February 6, 2015 | Published: September 1, 2014

Citation

Waters K.M., B.S. Cummings, H. Shankaran, N.E. Scholpa, and T.J. Weber. 2014. ERK Oscillation-Dependent Gene Expression Patterns and Deregulation by Stress-Response. Chemical Research in Toxicology 27, no. 9:1496–1503. PNNL-SA-101628. doi:10.1021/tx500085u