ROCKs: multifunctional kinases in cell behaviour (original) (raw)
Aktories, K., Braun, U., Rosener, S., Just, I. & Hall, A. The rho gene product expressed in E. coli is a substrate of botulinum ADP-ribosyltransferase C3. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.158, 209–213 (1989). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Leung, T., Chen, X. Q., Manser, E. & Lim, L. The p160 RhoA-binding kinase ROKα is a member of a kinase family and is involved in the reorganization of the cytoskeleton. Mol. Cell. Biol.16, 5313–5327 (1996). This was the first study to show that ROCK II is a Rho effector that promotes the formation of stress fibres and focal adhesions. ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Somlyo, A. P. & Somlyo, A. V. Signal transduction by G-proteins, rho-kinase and protein phosphatase to smooth muscle and non-muscle myosin II. J. Physiol.522, 177–185 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Nakagawa, O. et al. ROCK-I and ROCK-II, two isoforms of Rho-associated coiled-coil forming protein serine/threonine kinase in mice. FEBS Lett.392, 189–193 (1996). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Ishizaki, T. et al. The small GTP-binding protein Rho binds to and activates a 160 kDa Ser/Thr protein kinase homologous to myotonic dystrophy kinase. EMBO J.15, 1885–1893 (1996). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Leung, T., Manser, E., Tan, L. & Lim, L. A novel serine/threonine kinase binding the Ras-related RhoA GTPase which translocates the kinase to peripheral membranes. J. Biol. Chem.270, 29051–29054 (1995). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Matsui, T. et al. Rho-associated kinase, a novel serine/threonine kinase, as a putative target for small GTP binding protein Rho. EMBO J.15, 2208–2216 (1996). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Amano, M. et al. The COOH terminus of Rho-kinase negatively regulates rho-kinase activity. J. Biol. Chem.274, 32418–32424 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Alberts, A. S., Bouquin, N., Johnston, L. H. & Treisman, R. Analysis of RhoA-binding proteins reveals an interaction domain conserved in heterotrimeric G protein β subunits and the yeast response regulator protein Skn7. J. Biol. Chem.273, 8616–8622 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Kimura, K. et al. Regulation of the association of adducin with actin filaments by Rho-associated kinase (Rho-kinase) and myosin phosphatase. J. Biol. Chem.273, 5542–5548 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Sin, W. C., Chen, X. Q., Leung, T. & Lim, L. RhoA-binding kinase α translocation is facilitated by the collapse of the vimentin intermediate filament network. Mol. Cell. Biol.18, 6325–6239 (1998). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Royal, I., Lamarche-Vane, N., Lamorte, L., Kaibuchi, K. & Park, M. Activation of cdc42, rac, PAK, and rho-kinase in response to hepatocyte growth factor differentially regulates epithelial cell colony spreading and dissociation. Mol. Biol. Cell11, 1709–1725 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Inada, H. et al. Balance between activities of Rho kinase and type 1 protein phosphatase modulates turnover of phosphorylation and dynamics of desmin/vimentin filaments. J. Biol. Chem.274, 34932–34939 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Chen, X. Q. et al. Characterization of RhoA-binding kinase ROKα implication of the pleckstrin homology domain in ROKα function using region-specific antibodies. J. Biol. Chem.277, 12680–12688 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Chevrier, V. et al. The Rho-associated protein kinase p160ROCK is required for centrosome positioning. J. Cell Biol.157, 807–817 (2002). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Amano, M. et al. Formation of actin stress fibers and focal adhesions enhanced by Rho-kinase. Science275, 1308–1311 (1997). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Uehata, M. et al. Calcium sensitization of smooth muscle mediated by a Rho-associated protein kinase in hypertension. Nature389, 990–994 (1997). The authors describe that the target for Y-27632 — an inhibitor that selectively blocks smooth-muscle contraction by inhibiting Ca2+— sensitization is ROCK, and therefore that it is an important research tool. ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Fujisawa, K. et al. Different regions of Rho determine Rho-selective binding of different classes of Rho target molecules. J. Biol. Chem.273, 18943–18949 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Feng, J. et al. Rho-associated kinase of chicken gizzard smooth muscle. J. Biol. Chem.274, 3744–3752 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Turner, M. S., Fen Fen, L., Trauger, J. W., Stephens, J. & LoGrasso, P. Characterization and purification of truncated human Rho-kinase II expressed in Sf-21 cells. Arch. Biochem. Biophys.405, 13–20 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Tan, I., Seow, K. T., Lim, L. & Leung, T. Intermolecular and intramolecular interactions regulate catalytic activity of myotonic dystrophy kinase-related Cdc42-binding kinase α. Mol. Cell. Biol.21, 2767–2778 (2001). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Bush, E. W., Helmke, S. M., Birnbaum, R. A. & Perryman, M. B. Myotonic dystrophy protein kinase domains mediate localization, oligomerization, novel catalytic activity, and autoinhibition. Biochemistry39, 8480–8490 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Ishizaki, T. et al. p160ROCK, a Rho-associated coiled-coil forming protein kinase, works downstream of Rho and induces focal adhesions. FEBS Lett.404, 118–124 (1997). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Sebbagh, M. et al. Caspase-3-mediated cleavage of ROCK I induces MLC phosphorylation and apoptotic membrane blebbing. Nature Cell Biol.3, 346–352 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Coleman, M. L. et al. Membrane blebbing during apoptosis results from caspase-mediated activation of ROCK I. Nature Cell Biol.3, 339–345 (2001). References 25 and 26 report that ROCK I, but not ROCK II, is cleavedin vivoduring apoptosis by caspase-3, generating an active form of the kinase that induces membrane blebbing. ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Ward, Y. et al. The GTP binding proteins Gem and Rad are negative regulators of the Rho–Rho kinase pathway. J. Cell Biol.157, 291–302 (2002). The first study to show that small GTPases (Gem and Rad) can inhibit ROCK function. ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Riento, K., Guasch, R. M., Garg, R., Jin, B. & Ridley, A. J. RhoE binds to ROCK I and inhibits downstream signalling. Mol. Cell. Biol. (in the press).
Bilan, P. J., Moyers, J. S. & Kahn, C. R. The ras-related protein rad associates with the cytoskeleton in a non-lipid-dependent manner. Exp. Cell Res.242, 391–400 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Piddini, E., Schmid, J. A., de Martin, R. & Dotti, C. G. The Ras-like GTPase Gem is involved in cell shape remodelling and interacts with the novel kinesin-like protein KIF9. EMBO J.20, 4076–4087 (2001). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Sumi, T., Matsumoto, K. & Nakamura, T. Specific activation of LIM kinase 2 via phosphorylation of threonine 505 by ROCK, a Rho-dependent protein kinase. J. Biol. Chem.276, 670–676 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Kawano, Y. et al. Phosphorylation of myosin-binding subunit (MBS) of myosin phosphatase by Rho-kinase in vivo. J. Cell Biol.147, 1023–1038 (1999). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Amano, M. et al. Phosphorylation and activation of myosin by Rho-associated kinase (Rho-kinase). J. Biol. Chem.271, 20246–20249 (1996). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Totsukawa, G. et al. Distinct roles of ROCK (Rho-kinase) and MLCK in spatial regulation of MLC phosphorylation for assembly of stress fibers and focal adhesions in 3T3 fibroblasts. J. Cell Biol.150, 797–806 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Iizuka, K. et al. A major role for the rho-associated coiled coil forming protein kinase in G-protein-mediated Ca2+ sensitization through inhibition of myosin phosphatase in rabbit trachea. Br. J. Pharmacol.128, 925–933 (1999). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Sward, K. et al. Inhibition of Rho-associated kinase blocks agonist-induced Ca2+ sensitization of myosin phosphorylation and force in guinea-pig ileum. J. Physiol.522, 33–49 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Hartshorne, D. J. Myosin phosphatase: subunits and interactions. Acta. Physiol. Scand.164, 483–493 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Kimura, K. et al. Regulation of myosin phosphatase by Rho and Rho-associated kinase (Rho-kinase). Science273, 245–248 (1996). This paper reports that ROCK II phosphorylates and inactivates the MBS of MLCP, therefore providing a mechanism for ROCK-induced effects on contractility. ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Velasco, G., Armstrong, C., Morrice, N., Frame, S. & Cohen, P. Phosphorylation of the regulatory subunit of smooth muscle protein phosphatase 1M at Thr850 induces its dissociation from myosin. FEBS Lett.527, 101–104 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Feng, J. et al. Inhibitory phosphorylation site for Rho-associated kinase on smooth muscle myosin phosphatase. J. Biol. Chem.274, 37385–37390 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Ohashi, K. et al. Rho-associated kinase ROCK activates LIM-kinase 1 by phosphorylation at threonine 508 within the activation loop. J. Biol. Chem.275, 3577–3582 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Maekawa, M. et al. Signaling from Rho to the actin cytoskeleton through protein kinases ROCK and LIM-kinase. Science285, 895–898 (1999). A further way for ROCKs to regulate actin filaments is presented, as the authors show that ROCK I phosphorylates and activates LIMK2, which, in turn, phosphorylates and inactivates an actin-depolymerizing protein that is known as cofilin. ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Agnew, B. J., Minamide, L. S. & Bamburg, J. R. Reactivation of phosphorylated actin depolymerizing factor and identification of the regulatory site. J. Biol. Chem.270, 17582–17587 (1995). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Arber, S. et al. Regulation of actin dynamics through phosphorylation of cofilin by LIM-kinase. Nature393, 805–809 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Yang, N. et al. Cofilin phosphorylation by LIM-kinase 1 and its role in Rac-mediated actin reorganization. Nature393, 809–812 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Sumi, T., Matsumoto, K., Takai, Y. & Nakamura, T. Cofilin phosphorylation and actin cytoskeletal dynamics regulated by rho- and Cdc42-activated LIM-kinase 2. J. Cell Biol.147, 1519–1532 (1999). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Edwards, D. C., Sanders, L. C., Bokoch, G. M. & Gill, G. N. Activation of LIM-kinase by Pak1 couples Rac/Cdc42 GTPase signalling to actin cytoskeletal dynamics. Nature Cell Biol.1, 253–259 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Ling, E., Gardner, K. & Bennett, V. Protein kinase C phosphorylates a recently identified membrane skeleton-associated calmodulin-binding protein in human erythrocytes. J. Biol. Chem.261, 13875–13878 (1986). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Kaiser, H. W., O'Keefe, E. & Bennett, V. Adducin: Ca2+-dependent association with sites of cell–cell contact. J. Cell Biol.109, 557–569 (1989). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Gary, R. & Bretscher, A. Ezrin self-association involves binding of an N-terminal domain to a normally masked C-terminal domain that includes the F-actin binding site. Mol. Biol. Cell6, 1061–1075 (1995). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Matsui, T. et al. Rho-kinase phosphorylates COOH-terminal threonines of ezrin/radixin/moesin (ERM) proteins and regulates their head-to-tail association. J. Cell Biol.140, 647–657 (1998). This study shows that the head-to-tail association of ERM proteins is disrupted by ROCK-mediated phosphorylation. ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Pietromonaco, S. F., Simons, P. C., Altman, A. & Elias, L. Protein kinase C-τ phosphorylation of moesin in the actin-binding sequence. J. Biol. Chem.273, 7594–7603 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Fukata, Y. et al. Association of the myosin-binding subunit of myosin phosphatase and moesin: dual regulation of moesin phosphorylation by Rho-associated kinase and myosin phosphatase. J. Cell Biol.141, 409–418 (1998). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Shaw, R. J., Henry, M., Solomon, F. & Jacks, T. RhoA-dependent phosphorylation and relocalization of ERM proteins into apical membrane/actin protrusions in fibroblasts. Mol. Biol. Cell9, 403–419 (1998). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Jeon, S. et al. RhoA and Rho kinase-dependent phosphorylation of moesin at Thr-558 in hippocampal neuronal cells by glutamate. J. Biol. Chem.277, 16576–16584 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Matsui, T., Yonemura, S. & Tsukita, S. Activation of ERM proteins in vivo by Rho involves phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate 5-kinase and not ROCK kinases. Curr. Biol.9, 1259–1262 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Oude Weernink, P. A. et al. Stimulation of phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate 5-kinase by Rho-kinase. J. Biol. Chem.275, 10168–10174 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Tominaga, T. & Barber, D. L. Na–H exchange acts downstream of RhoA to regulate integrin-induced cell adhesion and spreading. Mol. Biol. Cell9, 2287–2303 (1998). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Denker, S. P., Huang, D. C., Orlowski, J., Furthmayr, H. & Barber, D. L. Direct binding of the Na–H exchanger NHE1 to ERM proteins regulates the cortical cytoskeleton and cell shape independently of H+ translocation. Mol. Cell6, 1425–1436 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Denker, S. P. & Barber, D. L. Cell migration requires both ion translocation and cytoskeletal anchoring by the Na–H exchanger NHE1. J. Cell Biol.159, 1087–1096 (2002). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Goto, H. et al. Phosphorylation of vimentin by Rho-associated kinase at a unique amino-terminal site that is specifically phosphorylated during cytokinesis. J. Biol. Chem.273, 11728–11736 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Kosako, H. et al. Phosphorylation of glial fibrillary acidic protein at the same sites by cleavage furrow kinase and Rho-associated kinase. J. Biol. Chem.272, 10333–10336 (1997). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Hashimoto, R. et al. Domain- and site-specific phosphorylation of bovine NF-L by Rho-associated kinase. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.245, 407–411 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Izawa, T. et al. Elongation factor-1 α is a novel substrate of rho-associated kinase. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.278, 72–78 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Nagumo, H. et al. Rho-associated kinase phosphorylates MARCKS in human neuronal cells. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.280, 605–609 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Winder, S. J. & Walsh, M. P. Smooth muscle calponin. Inhibition of actomyosin MgATPase and regulation by phosphorylation. J. Biol. Chem.265, 10148–10155 (1990). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Kaneko, T. et al. Identification of calponin as a novel substrate of Rho-kinase. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.273, 110–116 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Arimura, N. et al. Phosphorylation of collapsin response mediator protein-2 by Rho-kinase. Evidence for two separate signaling pathways for growth cone collapse. J. Biol. Chem.275, 23973–23980 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Goshima, Y., Nakamura, F., Strittmatter, P. & Strittmatter, S. M. Collapsin-induced growth cone collapse mediated by an intracellular protein related to UNC-33. Nature376, 509–514 (1995). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Inagaki, N. et al. CRMP-2 induces axons in cultured hippocampal neurons. Nature Neurosci.4, 781–782 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Leung, T. et al. p80 ROKα binding protein is a novel splice variant of CRMP-1 which associates with CRMP-2 and modulates RhoA-induced neuronal morphology. FEBS Lett.532, 445–449 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Bourguignon, L. Y., Zhu, H., Shao, L., Zhu, D. & Chen, Y. W. Rho-kinase (ROK) promotes CD44v(3,8-10)-ankyrin interaction and tumor cell migration in metastatic breast cancer cells. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton43, 269–287 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Singleton, P. A. & Bourguignon, L. Y. CD44v10 interaction with Rho-kinase (ROK) activates inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (IP3) receptor-mediated Ca2+ signaling during hyaluronan (HA)-induced endothelial cell migration. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton53, 293–316 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Amano, M. et al. Myosin II activation promotes neurite retraction during the action of Rho and Rho-kinase. Genes Cells3, 177–188 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Chrzanowska-Wodnicka, M. & Burridge, K. Rho-stimulated contractility drives the formation of stress fibers and focal adhesions. J. Cell Biol.133, 1403–1415 (1996). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Watanabe, N., Kato, T., Fujita, A., Ishizaki, T. & Narumiya, S. Cooperation between mDia1 and ROCK in Rho-induced actin reorganization. Nature Cell Biol.1, 136–143 (1999). The authors show that both mDia1 and ROCK I are needed for the formation of actin stress fibres that resemble Rho-induced fibres. ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Palazzo, A. F., Cook, T. A., Alberts, A. S. & Gundersen, G. G. mDia mediates Rho-regulated formation and orientation of stable microtubules. Nature Cell Biol.3, 723–729 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Pruyne, D. & Bretscher, A. Polarization of cell growth in yeast. I. Establishment and maintenance of polarity states. J. Cell Sci.113, 365–375 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Watanabe, N. et al. p140mDia, a mammalian homolog of Drosophila diaphanous, is a target protein for Rho small GTPase and is a ligand for profilin. EMBO J.16, 3044–3056 (1997). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Wojciak-Stothard, B. & Ridley, A. J. Rho GTPases and the regulation of endothelial permeability. Vascul. Pharmacol.77, 1–13 (2003). Google Scholar
Walsh, S. V. et al. Rho kinase regulates tight junction function and is necessary for tight junction assembly in polarized intestinal epithelia. Gastroenterology121, 566–579 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Sahai, E. & Marshall, C. J. ROCK and Dia have opposing effects on adherens junctions downstream of Rho. Nature Cell Biol.4, 408–415 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Vaezi, A., Bauer, C., Vasioukhin, V. & Fuchs, E. Actin cable dynamics and Rho/Rock orchestrate a polarized cytoskeletal architecture in the early steps of assembling a stratified epithelium. Dev. Cell3, 367–381 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Worthylake, R. A., Lemoine, S., Watson, J. M. & Burridge, K. RhoA is required for monocyte tail retraction during transendothelial migration. J. Cell Biol.154, 147–160 (2001). The authors present evidence that ROCK activity is necessary for RhoA-mediated tail retraction, thereby delineating a role of ROCKs in cell migration. ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Alblas, J., Ulfman, L., Hordijk, P. & Koenderman, L. Activation of Rhoa and ROCK are essential for detachment of migrating leukocytes. Mol. Biol. Cell12, 2137–2145 (2001). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Somlyo, A. V. et al. Rho-kinase inhibitor retards migration and in vivo dissemination of human prostate cancer cells. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.269, 652–659 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Tsuji, T. et al. ROCK and mDia1 antagonize in Rho-dependent Rac activation in Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts. J. Cell Biol.157, 819–830 (2002). The study shows that in Rho-activated cells ROCKs mediate Rac inhibition, which therefore explains the antagonism that is seen between Rho and Rac in some cell types. ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Worthylake, R. A. & Burridge, K. RhoA and ROCK promote migration by limiting membrane protrusions. J. Biol. Chem.278, 13578–13584 (2003). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Dawe, H. R., Minamide, L. S., Bamburg, J. R. & Cramer, L. P. ADF/Cofilin controls cell polarity during fibroblast migration. Curr. Biol.13, 252–257 (2003). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Lou, Z., Billadeau, D. D., Savoy, D. N., Schoon, R. A. & Leibson, P. J. A role for a RhoA/ROCK/LIM-kinase pathway in the regulation of cytotoxic lymphocytes. J. Immunol.167, 5749–5757 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Winter, C. G. et al. Drosophila Rho-associated kinase (Drok) links Frizzled-mediated planar cell polarity signaling to the actin cytoskeleton. Cell105, 81–91 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Marlow, F., Topczewski, J., Sepich, D. & Solnica-Krezel, L. Zebrafish Rho kinase 2 acts downstream of Wnt11 to mediate cell polarity and effective convergence and extension movements. Curr. Biol.12, 876–884 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Nobes, C. D. & Hall, A. Rho, rac, and cdc42 GTPases regulate the assembly of multimolecular focal complexes associated with actin stress fibers, lamellipodia, and filopodia. Cell81, 53–62 (1995). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Sander, E. E., ten Klooster, J. P., van Delft, S., van der Kammen, R. A. & Collard, J. G. Rac downregulates Rho activity: reciprocal balance between both GTPases determines cellular morphology and migratory behavior. J. Cell Biol.147, 1009–1022 (1999). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Yoshioka, K., Nakamori, S. & Itoh, K. Overexpression of small GTP-binding protein RhoA promotes invasion of tumor cells. Cancer Res.59, 2004–2010 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Imamura, F., Mukai, M., Ayaki, M. & Akedo, H. Y-27632, an inhibitor of rho-associated protein kinase, suppresses tumor cell invasion via regulation of focal adhesion and focal adhesion kinase. Jpn. J. Cancer Res.91, 811–816 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Itoh, K. et al. An essential part for Rho-associated kinase in the transcellular invasion of tumor cells. Nature Med.5, 221–225 (1999). Importantly, this paper shows that the ROCK inhibitor Y-27632 or a dominant-negative kinase-defective ROCK reduce tumour-cell invasionin vivo. ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Pawlak, G. & Helfman, D. M. Post-transcriptional down-regulation of ROCKI/Rho-kinase through an MEK-dependent pathway leads to cytoskeleton disruption in Ras-transformed fibroblasts. Mol. Biol. Cell13, 336–347 (2002). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Izawa, I., Amano, M., Chihara, K., Yamamoto, T. & Kaibuchi, K. Possible involvement of the inactivation of the Rho–Rho-kinase pathway in oncogenic Ras-induced transformation. Oncogene17, 2863–2871 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Sahai, E., Olson, M. F. & Marshall, C. J. Cross-talk between Ras and Rho signalling pathways in transformation favours proliferation and increased motility. EMBO J.20, 755–766 (2001). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Zondag, G. C. et al. Oncogenic Ras downregulates Rac activity, which leads to increased Rho activity and epithelial–mesenchymal transition. J. Cell Biol.149, 775–782 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Tran Quang, C., Gautreau, A., Arpin, M. & Treisman, R. Ezrin function is required for ROCK-mediated fibroblast transformation by the Net and Dbl oncogenes. EMBO J.19, 4565–4576 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Sahai, E., Ishizaki, T., Narumiya, S. & Treisman, R. Transformation mediated by RhoA requires activity of ROCK kinases. Curr. Biol.9, 136–145 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Caron, E. & Hall, A. Identification of two distinct mechanisms of phagocytosis controlled by different Rho GTPases. Science282, 1717–1721 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Olazabal, I. et al. Rho-kinase and myosin–II control phagocytic cup formation during CR, but not FcγR, phagocytosis. Curr. Biol.12, 1413–1418 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Mills, J. C., Stone, N. L., Erhardt, J. & Pittman, R. N. Apoptotic membrane blebbing is regulated by myosin light chain phosphorylation. J. Cell Biol.140, 627–636 (1998). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Shiratsuchi, A., Mori, T. & Nakanishi, Y. Independence of plasma membrane blebbing from other biochemical and biological characteristics of apoptotic cells. J. Biochem.132, 381–386 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Fujita, A., Hattori, Y., Takeuchi, T., Kamata, Y. & Hata, F. NGF induces neurite outgrowth via a decrease in phosphorylation of myosin light chain in PC12 cells. Neuroreport12, 3599–3602 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Katoh, H., Aoki, J., Ichikawa, A. & Negishi, M. p160 RhoA-binding kinase ROKα induces neurite retraction. J. Biol. Chem.273, 2489–2492 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Hirose, M. et al. Molecular dissection of the Rho-associated protein kinase (p160ROCK)-regulated neurite remodeling in neuroblastoma N1E-115 cells. J. Cell Biol.141, 1625–1636 (1998). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Bito, H. et al. A critical role for a Rho-associated kinase, p160ROCK, in determining axon outgrowth in mammalian CNS neurons. Neuron26, 431–441 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Wahl, S., Barth, H., Ciossek, T., Aktories, K. & Mueller, B. K. Ephrin-A5 induces collapse of growth cones by activating Rho and Rho kinase. J. Cell Biol.149, 263–270 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Dontchev, V. D. & Letourneau, P. C. Nerve growth factor and semaphorin 3A signaling pathways interact in regulating sensory neuronal growth cone motility. J. Neurosci.22, 6659–6669 (2002). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Dergham, P. et al. Rho signaling pathway targeted to promote spinal cord repair. J. Neurosci.22, 6570–6577 (2002). These results show that the ROCK inhibitor Y-27632 stimulates axon regeneration after injury of the spinal cord. ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Yamazaki, M. et al. Phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate 5-kinase is essential for ROCK-mediated neurite remodeling. J. Biol. Chem.277, 17226–17230 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Birkenfeld, J., Betz, H. & Roth, D. Inhibition of neurite extension by overexpression of individual domains of LIM kinase 1. J. Neurochem.78, 924–927 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Aizawa, H. et al. Phosphorylation of cofilin by LIM-kinase is necessary for semaphorin 3A-induced growth cone collapse. Nature Neurosci.4, 367–373 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Yamaguchi, Y., Katoh, H., Yasui, H., Mori, K. & Negishi, M. RhoA inhibits the nerve growth factor-induced Rac1 activation through Rho-associated kinase-dependent pathway. J. Biol. Chem.276, 18977–18983 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Tanaka, H. et al. Cytoplasmic p21(Cip1/WAF1) regulates neurite remodeling by inhibiting Rho-kinase activity. J. Cell Biol.158, 321–329 (2002). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Hall, C. et al. Collapsin response mediator protein switches RhoA and Rac1 morphology in N1E-115 neuroblastoma cells and is regulated by Rho kinase. J. Biol. Chem.276, 43482–43486 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Fukata, Y. et al. CRMP-2 binds to tubulin heterodimers to promote microtubule assembly. Nature Cell Biol.4, 583–591 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Drechsel, D. N., Hyman, A. A., Hall, A. & Glotzer, M. A requirement for Rho and Cdc42 during cytokinesis in Xenopus embryos. Curr. Biol.7, 12–23 (1997). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Kosako, H. et al. Rho-kinase/ROCK is involved in cytokinesis through the phosphorylation of myosin light chain and not ezrin/radixin/moesin proteins at the cleavage furrow. Oncogene19, 6059–6064 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Yasui, Y. et al. Roles of Rho-associated kinase in cytokinesis; mutations in Rho-associated kinase phosphorylation sites impair cytokinetic segregation of glial filaments. J. Cell Biol.143, 1249–1258 (1998). These authors present beautiful pictures of mitotic cells in which the segregation of glial filaments is impaired when cells express a GFAP construct that has mutations at the ROCK phosphorylation sites. ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Piekny, A. J. & Mains, P. E. Rho-binding kinase (LET-502) and myosin phosphatase (MEL-11) regulate cytokinesis in the early Caenorhabditis elegans embryo. J. Cell Sci.115, 2271–2282 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Madaule, P. et al. Role of citron kinase as a target of the small GTPase Rho in cytokinesis. Nature394, 491–494 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Coelho, C. M. & Leevers, S. J. Do growth and cell division rates determine cell size in multicellular organisms? J. Cell Sci.113, 2927–2934 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Sordella, R. et al. Modulation of CREB activity by the Rho GTPase regulates cell and organism size during mouse embryonic development. Dev. Cell2, 553–565 (2002). This interesting study shows that inhibition of ROCK function increases the reduced size of cells from p190-B RhoGAP-deficient mice. ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Farah, S., Agazie, Y., Ohan, N., Ngsee, J. K. & Liu, X. J. A rho-associated protein kinase, ROKα, binds insulin receptor substrate-1 and modulates insulin signaling. J. Biol. Chem.273, 4740–4746 (1998). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Ohan, N. et al. RHO-associated protein kinase α potentiates insulin-induced MAP kinase activation in Xenopus oocytes. J. Cell Sci.112, 2177–2184 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Sordella, R., Jiang, W., Chen, G. -C., Curto, M. & Settleman, J. Modulation of Rho GTPase signaling regulates a switch between adipogenesis and myogenesis. Cell113, 147–158 (2003). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Jaffer, Z. M. & Chernoff, J. p21-activated kinases: three more join the Pak. Int. J. Biochem. Cell Biol.34, 713–717 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Davies, S. P., Reddy, H., Caivano, M. & Cohen, P. Specificity and mechanism of action of some commonly used protein kinase inhibitors. Biochem. J.351, 95–105 (2000). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Muranyi, A. et al. Myotonic dystrophy protein kinase phosphorylates the myosin phosphatase targeting subunit and inhibits myosin phosphatase activity. FEBS Lett.493, 80–84 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Ikenoya, M. et al. Inhibition of rho-kinase-induced myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS) phosphorylation in human neuronal cells by H-1152, a novel and specific Rho-kinase inhibitor. J. Neurochem.81, 9–16 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Ishizaki, T. et al. Pharmacological properties of Y-27632, a specific inhibitor of rho-associated kinases. Mol. Pharmacol.57, 976–983 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Byers, H. R., White, G. E. & Fujiwara, K. Organization and function of stress fibers in cells in vitro and in situ. A review. Cell Muscle Motil.5, 83–137 (1984). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Koyama, M. et al. Phosphorylation of CPI-17, an inhibitory phosphoprotein of smooth muscle myosin phosphatase, by Rho-kinase. FEBS Lett.475, 197–200 (2000). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Thompson, J. D., Higgins, D. G. & Gibson, T. J. CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice. Nucleic Acids Res.22, 4673–4680 (1994). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Leung, T., Chen, X. Q., Tan, I., Manser, E. & Lim, L. Myotonic dystrophy kinase-related Cdc42-binding kinase acts as a Cdc42 effector in promoting cytoskeletal reorganization. Mol. Cell. Biol.18, 130–140 (1998). ArticleCASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Fujisawa, K., Fujita, A., Ishizaki, T., Saito, Y. & Narumiya, S. Identification of the Rho-binding domain of p160ROCK, a Rho-associated coiled-coil containing protein kinase. J. Biol. Chem.271, 23022–23028 (1996). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Sanders, L. C., Matsumura, F., Bokoch, G. M. & de Lanerolle, P. Inhibition of myosin light chain kinase by p21-activated kinase. Science283, 2083–2085 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
van Leeuwen, F. N., van Delft, S., Kain, H. E., van der Kammen, R. A. & Collard, J. G. Rac regulates phosphorylation of the myosin-II heavy chain, actinomyosin disassembly and cell spreading. Nature Cell Biol.1, 242–248 (1999). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Begum, N., Sandu, O. A., Ito, M., Lohmann, S. M. & Smolenski, A. Active Rho kinase (ROK-α) associates with insulin receptor substrate–1 and inhibits insulin signaling in vascular smooth muscle cells. J. Biol. Chem.277, 6214–6222 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar