Surface Immunoglobulin-mediated Signal Transduction Involves Rapid Phosphorylation and Activation of the Protooncogene Product Raf-1 in Human B-Cells

1992 
Abstract The protooncogene product, Raf -1, is a serine/threonine kinase and has been implicated as an intermediate in signal transduction mechanisms. We examined neoplastic and normal B cells for phosphorylation and activation of Raf -1 protein in response to anti-immunoglobulin antibody (anti-Ig). Anti-Ig induced rapid phosphorylation of Raf -1 protein in both neoplastic B-cells of hairy cell leukemia and normal tonsillar B-cells which proliferated well in response to anti-Ig. The increase in phosphorylation was due primarily to an increase in phosphoserine. The immune complex kinase assay using Histone V-S as an exogenous substrate also showed an increase in Raf -1-associated kinase activity. An inhibitor of protein kinase C, H7, inhibited the proliferation as well as the Raf -1 phosphorylation in response to the proliferative signal of anti-Ig. Further, downregulation of protein kinase C by the treatment with 12-phorbol 13-myristic acid significantly abrogated the induction of Raf -1 phosphorylation. These results suggest that, in human B-cells, Raf -1 protein may be involved in the signal transduction pathway mediated by surface immunoglobulin, and that it may be, at least partially, phosphorylated by activated PKC.
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