Signal Transduction Mechanisms Mediating Surfactant Phospholipid Secretion in Isolated Type II Cell

Type II Cell 분리체로부터 Surfactant 인지질의 분비를 매개하는 신호변환 기전

  • Park, Sung-Soo (Department of Pulmonary Medicine, College of Medicine, Hanyang University)
  • 박성수 (한양대학교 의과대학 내과학교실)
  • Published : 1996.04.30

Abstract

Secretion of surfactant phospholipid can be stimulated by a variety of agonists acting via at least three different signal transduction mechanisms. These include the adenylate cyclase system with activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase; activation of protein kinase C either directly or subsequent to activation of phosphoinositide-specific phospholipase C and generation of diacylglycerols and inositol trisphosphate; and a third mechanism that involves incresed $Ca^{2+}$ levels and a calmodulin-dependent step. ATP stimulates secretion via all three mechanisms. The protein kinase C pathway is also coupled to phopholipase D which, acting on relatively abundant cellular phospholipids, generates diacylglycerols that further activate protein kinase C. Sustained protein kinase C activation can maintain phosphatidylcholine secretion for a prolonged period of time. It is likely that interactions between the different signaling pathways have an important role in the overall physiological regulation of surfactant secretion.

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