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Circulation Research. 2007;100:10-12
doi: 10.1161/01.RES.0000255894.25293.82
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(Circulation Research. 2007;100:10.)
© 2007 American Heart Association, Inc.


Editorials

Myosin Phosphatase Regulatory Pathways

Different Functions or Redundant Functions?

Thomas M. Lincoln

From the Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, University of South Alabama, Mobile.

Correspondence to Thomas M. Lincoln, Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, University of South Alabama, Mobile, AL 36688. E-mail tlincoln@usouthal.edu


Key Words: phosphorylation • calcium • cyclic GMP • smooth muscle


An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract.
 

In many ways, the smooth muscle cell (SMC) has been at the forefront in defining cellular signaling pathways. For example, the initial description of agonist-dependent intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) transients was made on vertebrate vascular SMC using aqueorin as the indicator.1 Delineation of nitric oxide (NO) and cGMP signaling was first accomplished in smooth muscle.2,3 And more recently, insights into the general mechanisms of gene transcription that dictate phenotypic traits of cells are being defined by smooth muscle specific gene expression.4,5 It should come as no surprise then that the interactions among many signaling pathways in cells should be explained first in the SMC. Perhaps the reason for the central position of the SMC in defining paradigms in cellular biology is that there are well-defined physiologic end points amenable to measurement (ie, contractile force) and even better described and easily quantified biochemical pathways that underlie said physiologic end points (ie, myosin regulatory light chain phosphorylation).

From a historical perspective, the role of protein phosphorylation in smooth muscle contraction as a paradigm for cell signaling follows only that for the control of glycogen metabolism (see 6,7 for reviews). Increases in the levels of cytosolic [Ca2+]i initiate smooth muscle contraction by binding to the universal intracellular Ca2+ receptor protein, calmodulin (CaM), which in turn binds to and activates smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLCK). Activated MLCK catalyzes the phosphorylation serine-19 of the regulatory myosin light chain (MLC) thereby increasing cross-bridge cycling and the rate of tension development. Dephosphorylation of MLC . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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