Oncotarget

Research Papers:

Multisite phosphorylation of P-Rex1 by protein kinase C

Juan Carlos Montero, Samuel Seoane, Sara García-Alonso and Atanasio Pandiella _

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Oncotarget. 2016; 7:77937-77949. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12846

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Abstract

Juan Carlos Montero1, Samuel Seoane1, Sara García-Alonso1, Atanasio Pandiella1

1Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular del Cáncer, CSIC-Universidad de Salamanca, Spain

Correspondence to:

Atanasio Pandiella, email: [email protected]

Keywords: P-Rex1, PKC, GEFs, Rac, breast cancer

Received: June 30, 2016    Accepted: October 12, 2016    Published: October 24, 2016

ABSTRACT

P-Rex proteins are guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) that act on the Rho/Rac family of GTP binding proteins. The activity of P-Rex proteins is regulated by several extracellular stimuli. In fact, activation of growth factor receptors has been reported to activate a phosphorylation/dephosphorylation cycle of P-Rex1. Such cycle includes dephosphorylation of serines 313 and 319 which negatively regulate the GEF activity of P-Rex1, together with phosphorylation of serines 605 and 1169 which favour P-Rex1 GEF activity. However, the kinases that regulate phosphorylation at these different regulatory sites are largely unknown. Here we have investigated the potential regulatory action of several kinases on the phosphorylation of P-Rex1 at S313, S319, S605 and S1169. We show that activation of protein kinase C (PKC) caused phosphorylation of S313, S319 and S1169. Activation of growth factor receptors induced phosphorylation of S1169 through a mechanism that was independent of PKC, indicating that distinct kinases and mechanisms control the phosphorylation of P-Rex1 at different regulatory serines. Genetic and biochemical studies confirmed that the PKC isoform PKCδ was able to directly phosphorylate P-Rex1 at S313. Functional studies using cells with very low endogenous P-Rex1 expression, transfected with wild type P-Rex1 or a mutant form in which S313 was substituted by alanine, indicated that phosphorylation at that residue negatively regulated P-Rex1 exchange activity. We suggest that control of P-Rex1 activity depends on a highly dynamic interplay among distinct signalling routes and its multisite phosphorylation is controlled by the action of different kinases.


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