Cell type-specific and tyrosine phosphorylation-independent nuclear presence of STAT1 and STAT3

被引:76
作者
Meyer, T
Gavenis, K
Vinkemeier, U
机构
[1] Forschungsinst Mol Pharmakol, Nachwuchsgrp Zellulare Signalverarbeitung, D-13125 Berlin, Germany
[2] Free Univ Berlin, Inst Kristallog, D-1000 Berlin, Germany
关键词
D O I
10.1006/excr.2001.5405
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Tyrosine phosphorylation in response to cytokine stimulation of cells is believed to be required for the nuclear translocation of cytoplasmic STAT proteins (signal transducers and activators of transcription). In this study we examined the nucleocytoplasmic distribution of STAT1 and STAT3 in transformed cell lines and primary cells prior to stimulation with cytokines. It was found that both STAT1 and STAT3 are constitutively nuclear in resting cells. Moreover., the extent of nuclear presence of both proteins differed in a cell type-specific mode as revealed by immunocytochemistry and confocal microscopy. We investigated whether varying degrees of tyrosine phosphorylation could account for these differences. The results show that depletion of type I interferons from culture medium with blocking antibodies did not influence the STAT1 distribution in unstimulated cells. In addition, blocking tyrosine kinase activity with staurosporine also did not influence the nucleocytoplasmic STAT1 distribution in resting cells. Nuclear extracts from unstimulated HeLa-S3 cells, which are demonstrated to be exceptionally high in the nuclear concentration of STAT1, did not contain detectable quantities of tyrosine-phosphorylated STAT1. In addition, the nucleocytoplasmic distribution of a STAT1 mutant which can no longer be phosphorylated or dimerize did not differ from wild-type protein. Thus, these data indicate that tyrosine phosphorylation of STATs does not constitute a mandatory requirement for the nuclear presence of these transcription factors. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science.
引用
收藏
页码:45 / 55
页数:11
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]   Constitutive activation of STAT5 by a point mutation in the SH2 domain [J].
Ariyoshi, K ;
Nosaka, T ;
Yamada, K ;
Onishi, M ;
Oka, Y ;
Miyajima, A ;
Kitamura, T .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2000, 275 (32) :24407-24413
[2]   Nucleocytoplasmic translocation of Stat1 is regulated by a leucine-rich export signal in the coiled-coil domain [J].
Begitt, A ;
Meyer, T ;
van Rossum, M ;
Vinkemeier, U .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2000, 97 (19) :10418-10423
[3]   How Stat1 mediates constitutive gene expression: a complex of unphosphorylated Stat1 and IRF1 supports transcription of the LMP2 gene [J].
Chatterjee-Kishore, M ;
Wright, KL ;
Ting, JPY ;
Stark, GR .
EMBO JOURNAL, 2000, 19 (15) :4111-4122
[4]   Crystal structure of a tyrosine phosphorylated STAT-1 dimer bound to DNA [J].
Chen, XM ;
Vinkemeier, U ;
Zhao, YX ;
Jeruzalmi, D ;
Darnell, JE ;
Kuriyan, J .
CELL, 1998, 93 (05) :827-839
[5]   A Stat3-interacting protein (StlP1) regulates cytokine signal transduction [J].
Collum, RG ;
Brutsaert, S ;
Lee, G ;
Schindler, C .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2000, 97 (18) :10120-10125
[6]   JAK-STAT PATHWAYS AND TRANSCRIPTIONAL ACTIVATION IN RESPONSE TO IFNS AND OTHER EXTRACELLULAR SIGNALING PROTEINS [J].
DARNELL, JE ;
KERR, IM ;
STARK, GR .
SCIENCE, 1994, 264 (5164) :1415-1421
[7]   STATs and gene regulation [J].
Darnell, JE .
SCIENCE, 1997, 277 (5332) :1630-1635
[8]   GAS elements: A few nucleotides with a major impact on cytokine-induced gene expression [J].
Decker, T ;
Kovarik, P ;
Meinke, A .
JOURNAL OF INTERFERON AND CYTOKINE RESEARCH, 1997, 17 (03) :121-134
[9]   EPS15, A NOVEL TYROSINE KINASE SUBSTRATE, EXHIBITS TRANSFORMING ACTIVITY [J].
FAZIOLI, F ;
MINICHIELLO, L ;
MATOSKOVA, B ;
WONG, WT ;
DIFIORE, PP .
MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY, 1993, 13 (09) :5814-5828
[10]   A nuclear protein tyrosine phosphatase is required for the inactivation of Stat1 [J].
Haspel, RL ;
Darnell, JE .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1999, 96 (18) :10188-10193