Protein Information

ID 41
Name TNFalpha
Synonyms Cachectin; DIF; TNF; TNF alpha; TNF a; TNFA; TNFSF 2; TNFSF2…

Compound Information

ID 1341
Name rotenone
CAS

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
15180991 Chen K, Thomas SR, Albano A, Murphy MP, Keaney JF Jr: Mitochondrial function is required for hydrogen peroxide-induced growth factor receptor transactivation and downstream signaling. J Biol Chem. 2004 Aug 13;279(33):35079-86. Epub 2004 Jun 4.
The transactivation of growth factor receptors is an early event in H (2) O (2)-induced signaling, although proximal targets in this process remain unclear. We found that inhibition of flavin- or heme-containing proteins eliminated H (2) O (2)-induced transactivation of the epidermal growth factor receptor and stimulation of its downstream targets, JNK and Akt. Inhibition of mitochondrial function with rotenone, antimycin A, KCN, carbonylcyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazone, or oligomycin reproduced this effect, as did generation of mitochondrial DNA-deficient (pseudo-rho (0)) cells. Mitochondrial function had no role in JNK activation in response to UV irradiation or tumor necrosis factor-alpha. The impact of mitochondrial function on H (2) O (2)-induced growth factor transactivation was ubiquitous and applied to both the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-2 receptor and the platelet-derived growth factor-beta receptor in endothelium and fibroblasts, respectively. In contrast, ligand-induced growth factor activation was unrelated to mitochondrial function. Growth factor receptor transactivation and its downstream signaling in response to H (2) O (2) appeared to involve redox-sensitive mitochondrial events as they were abrogated by a mitochondrial-targeted antioxidants but not their nontargeted counterparts. Functionally, we found that mitochondrial-targeted antioxidants inhibited H (2) O (2)-induced apoptosis and cell death but had no effect with UV irradiation. These data establish a novel role for the mitochondrion as a proximal target specific to H (2) O (2)-induced signaling and growth factor transactivation.
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