Protein kinase A directly regulates the activity and proteolysis of cubitus interruptus

被引:145
作者
Chen, Y
Gallaher, N
Goodman, RH
Smolik, SM
机构
[1] Oregon Hlth & Sci Univ, Dept Cell & Dev Biol L215, Portland, OR 97201 USA
[2] Oregon Hlth & Sci Univ, Vollum Inst, Portland, OR 97201 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1073/pnas.95.5.2349
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Cubitus interruptus (Ci) is a transcriptional factor that is positively regulated by the hedgehog (hh) signaling pathway. Recent work has shown that a 75-kDa proteolytic product of the full-length CI protein translocates to the nucleus and represses the transcription of CI target genes. In cells that receive the hh signal, the proteolysis of CI is inhibited and the full-length protein can activate the hh target genes. Because protein kinase A (PKA) inhibits the expression of the hh target genes in developing embryos and discs and the loss of PKA activity results in elevated levels of full-length CI protein, PKA might be involved directly in the regulation of CI proteolysis. Here we demonstrate that the PKA pathway antagonizes the hh pathway by phosphorylating CI. We show that the PKA-mediated phosphorylation of CI promotes its proteolysis from the full-length active form to the 75-kDa repressor form. The PKA catalytic subunit increases the proteolytic processing of CI and the PKA inhibitor, PKI, blocks the processing. In addition, cells do not process the CI protein to the 75-kDa repressor when all of the PKA sites in CI are mutated. Mutant CI proteins that cannot be phosphorylated by PKA have increased transcriptional activity compared with wild-type CI. In addition, exogenous PKA can increase further the transcriptional activity of the CI mutant, suggesting that PKA has a second positive, indirect effect on CI activity. In summary, we show that the modulation of the hh signaling pathway by PKA occurs directly at the level of CI phosphorylation.
引用
收藏
页码:2349 / 2354
页数:6
相关论文
共 44 条
  • [1] Drosophila CBP is a co-activator of cubitus interruptus in hedgehog signalling
    Akimaru, H
    Chen, Y
    Dai, P
    Hou, DX
    Nonaka, M
    Smolik, SM
    Armstrong, S
    Goodman, RH
    Ishii, S
    [J]. NATURE, 1997, 386 (6626) : 735 - 738
  • [2] The Drosophila smoothened gene encodes a seven-pass membrane protein, a putative receptor for the hedgehog signal
    Alcedo, J
    Ayzenzon, M
    VonOhlen, T
    Noll, M
    Hooper, JE
    [J]. CELL, 1996, 86 (02) : 221 - 232
  • [3] Transcriptional activation of hedgehog target genes in Drosophila is mediated directly by the cubitus interruptus protein, a member of the GLI family of zinc finger DNA-binding proteins
    Alexandre, C
    Jacinto, A
    Ingham, PW
    [J]. GENES & DEVELOPMENT, 1996, 10 (16) : 2003 - 2013
  • [4] Catching a Gli-mpse of Hedgehog
    Altaba, ARI
    [J]. CELL, 1997, 90 (02) : 193 - 196
  • [5] ARIAS AM, 1988, DEVELOPMENT, V103, P157
  • [6] Proteolysis that is inhibited by Hedgehog targets Cubitus interruptus protein to the nucleus and converts it to a repressor
    AzaBlanc, P
    RamirezWeber, FA
    Laget, MP
    Schwartz, C
    Kornberg, TB
    [J]. CELL, 1997, 89 (07) : 1043 - 1053
  • [7] COMPARTMENT BOUNDARIES AND THE CONTROL OF DROSOPHILA LIMB PATTERN BY HEDGEHOG PROTEIN
    BASLER, K
    STRUHL, G
    [J]. NATURE, 1994, 368 (6468) : 208 - 214
  • [8] THE PRIMARY STRUCTURE OF TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR TFIIIA HAS 12 CONSECUTIVE REPEATS
    BROWN, RS
    SANDER, C
    ARGOS, P
    [J]. FEBS LETTERS, 1985, 186 (02) : 271 - 274
  • [9] 2-TIERED REGULATION OF SPATIALLY PATTERNED ENGRAILED GENE-EXPRESSION DURING DROSOPHILA EMBRYOGENESIS
    DINARDO, S
    SHER, E
    HEEMSKERKJONGENS, J
    KASSIS, JA
    OFARRELL, PH
    [J]. NATURE, 1988, 332 (6165) : 604 - 609
  • [10] FORBES AJ, 1993, DEVELOPMENT, P115