Happy birthday protein kinase C: Past, present and future of a superfamily

FB dedicates this special issue to the memory of his parents, Giuseppina Rossi and Gaetano Battaini, for their encouragement to pursue the exciting career in science.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phrs.2007.05.005Get rights and content

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Birth and early years

Protein kinase C (PKC) was born in Japan in 1977 in the Department of Biochemistry of the University of Kobe. Inoue, Kishimoto and Takai in Nishizuka's Laboratory, described in two papers in the Journal of Biological Chemistry a cyclic nucleotide-independent, proteolytically modified protein kinase from mammalian brain (named PKM, M for magnesium ions that were indispensable for activation) [1], [2]. The full length enzyme [2], subsequently demonstrated to be activated by calcium and

The first 10 years: enzymatic description and modulations of activity

In 1982, the observation by Castagna and colleagues that in human platelets the tumor promoting phorbol derivatives directly activate PKC, mimicking but not generating DAG (i.e. not inducing phospholipid hydrolysis) [8], opened the exciting area of research on PKC involvement in cell growth control. The same year, Kraft and coworkers reported the seminal discovery that activation with phorbol esters [9] leads to translocation (i.e. change in subcellular location) of PKC from the cell soluble to

The second decade: isozyme identification and their functions

The PKC isozymes contain conserved and variable regions in the catalytic and regulatory subunits [28], [29] and isozyme-selective antibodies were thus produced. A detailed study on tissue and cellular distribution of all the isozymes was published in 1992 by Bill Wetsel and co-workers in Y. Hannun's laboratory [30], the same researcher who while in Bob Bell's lab characterized sphingolipids as PKC inhibitors, thus linking PKC to sphingolipidoses [31]. The involvement of different PKC isozymes

The third decade: entering the “matured” age (regulation by phosphorylation) and new technological advances

A diversity of functions are controlled by PKC isozymes present in the same cell. Even upon the same stimulus, individual PKCs move to different subcellular sites (membrane, organelles, cytoskeleton, nucleus) where select substrate phosphorylations leads to diverse and sometimes even opposing functions. The ability to visualize the translocation (activation) of PKC in living cells was made possible in 1997 by tagging PKC with the green fluorescent protein, GFP [62].

Although post-translational

The coming years: can PKC go from bench to bedside?

While research on PKC continues to attract interest in the basic research community, applications of PKC regulating drugs has met limited success. PKCα and PKCɛ inhibitors may be useful to inhibit tumor growth and multi-drug resistance. The cardiovascular field is concentrating on β- and δ-PKC inhibitors and clinical studies have given some hope for approaching diabetic complications such as retinopathy with ruboxistaurin [84] and with a PKCδ inhibitor peptide for acute myocardial infarction.

Disclosure

DM-R is the founder and member of the board of KAI Pharmaceuticals. However, none of the work in her lab is supported by or is in collaboration with the company.

Acknowledgements

FB is supported by the grant from Italian Ministero Sanità/Regione Lazio (Progetto Alzheimer); DM-R is supported in part by NIG grants HL 52141, AA 11147, HL 76674 and NS 44350.

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