Gene interactions and pathways from curated databases and text-mining
J Biol Chem 2007, PMID: 17463001

Serine 64 phosphorylation enhances the antiapoptotic function of Mcl-1.

Kobayashi, Shogo; Lee, Sun-Hee; Meng, Xue W; Mott, Justin L; Bronk, Steven F; Werneburg, Nathan W; Craig, Ruth W; Kaufmann, Scott H; Gores, Gregory J

Mcl-1 is an antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family member that is highly regulated and when dysregulated contributes to cancer. The Mcl-1 protein is phosphorylated at multiple sites in response to different signaling events. Phosphorylations at Thr163 (by ERK) and Ser159 (by glycogen-synthase kinase 3beta) have recently been shown to slow and enhance, respectively, Mcl-1 protein turnover. Phosphorylation is also known to be stimulated at other, as-yet uncharacterized sites in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle. Using an S peptide-tagged Mcl-1 T163A mutant, Ser64 was identified as a novel Mcl-1 phosphorylation site by mass spectrometry. Immunoblotting demonstrated that phosphorylation at this site was maximal in cells in G2/M phase, was enhanced by tumor necrosis factor-alpha-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) treatment, was blocked by inhibitors of CDK (but not ERK or glycogen-synthase kinase 3beta), and was stimulated in vitro by CDK 1, CDK2, and JNK1. The half-life of a nonphosphorylatable S64A Mcl-1 mutant was indistinguishable from that of the wild type polypeptide. In contrast, this mutant failed to protect cells from TRAIL-mediated apoptosis, whereas reconstitution with the phosphomimetic S64E Mcl-1 mutant rendered cells TRAIL-resistant. This anti-apoptotic phenotype of the S64E Mcl-1 mutant was also associated with enhanced binding to the proapoptotic proteins Bim, Noxa, and Bak. A pharmacological CDK inhibitor that reduced Ser64 phosphorylation also sensitized cells to TRAIL cytotoxicity. Collectively, these observations not only identify G2/M-associated phosphorylation at Ser64 as a critical determinant of the antiapoptotic activity of Mcl-1 but also elucidate a novel mechanism by which CDK1/2 inhibitors can enhance the effectiveness of the cytotoxic cytokine TRAIL.

Document information provided by NCBI PubMed

Text Mining Data

ERK → CDK 1: " Immunoblotting demonstrated that phosphorylation at this site was maximal in cells in G2/M phase, was enhanced by tumor necrosis factor-alpha related apoptosis inducing ligand ( TRAIL ) treatment, was blocked by inhibitors of CDK ( but not ERK or glycogen-synthase kinase 3beta ), and was stimulated in vitro by CDK 1 , CDK2, and JNK1 "

ERK → CDK2: " Immunoblotting demonstrated that phosphorylation at this site was maximal in cells in G2/M phase, was enhanced by tumor necrosis factor-alpha related apoptosis inducing ligand ( TRAIL ) treatment, was blocked by inhibitors of CDK ( but not ERK or glycogen-synthase kinase 3beta ), and was stimulated in vitro by CDK 1, CDK2 , and JNK1 "

glycogen-synthase kinase 3beta → CDK 1: " Immunoblotting demonstrated that phosphorylation at this site was maximal in cells in G2/M phase, was enhanced by tumor necrosis factor-alpha related apoptosis inducing ligand ( TRAIL ) treatment, was blocked by inhibitors of CDK ( but not ERK or glycogen-synthase kinase 3beta ), and was stimulated in vitro by CDK 1 , CDK2, and JNK1 "

glycogen-synthase kinase 3beta → CDK2: " Immunoblotting demonstrated that phosphorylation at this site was maximal in cells in G2/M phase, was enhanced by tumor necrosis factor-alpha related apoptosis inducing ligand ( TRAIL ) treatment, was blocked by inhibitors of CDK ( but not ERK or glycogen-synthase kinase 3beta ), and was stimulated in vitro by CDK 1, CDK2 , and JNK1 "

Manually curated Databases

No curated data.