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Vol. 56, Issue 2, 377-382, August 1999
Departments of Pharmacology and Medicine (Å.B.G., L.L.B.) and the
Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program (Å.B.G.), University of
California at San Diego, La Jolla, California
The fungal metabolite balanol is a potent inhibitor of
protein kinase A (PKA) and protein kinase C (PKC) in vitro that acts by
competing with ATP for binding (Ki ~ 4 nM); congeners of balanol show specificity for PKA over PKC. We have
characterized the effects of balanol and 10"-deoxybalanol in intact
cells to determine whether these compounds cross the cell membrane and
whether the potency and specificity noted in vitro are preserved in
vivo. In neonatal rat myocytes and cultured A431 cells transiently
transfected with a cyclic AMP response element-luciferase reporter
construct, balanol inhibits the induction of luciferase activity by
isoproterenol, indicating inhibition of PKA. Western analysis shows
that both balanol and 10"-deoxybalanol reduce phosphorylation of cAMP
response element-binding protein in isoproterenol-stimulated A431
cells; inhibition is concentration dependent with an IC50
value of ~3 µM. Balanol, but not 10"-deoxybalanol, inhibits
phosphorylation of the myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate
protein, a PKC substrate, in phorbol ester-stimulated A431 cells
(IC50 ~ 7 µM). Our data demonstrate that balanol
is a potent inhibitor of PKA and PKC in several whole-cell systems and
causes no obvious toxicity. In addition, balanol congeners inhibit PKA
and PKC with the specificity and potency predicted by in vitro experiments.
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