Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences (Apr 2023)

MAPKAP Kinase-2 phosphorylation of PABPC1 controls its interaction with 14-3-3 proteins after DNA damage: A combined kinase and protein array approach

  • Justine R. Stehn,
  • Scott R. Floyd,
  • Erik W. Wilker,
  • H. Christian Reinhardt,
  • Scott M. Clarke,
  • Qiuying Huang,
  • Roberto D. Polakiewicz,
  • Nahum Sonenberg,
  • Yi Wen Kong,
  • Yi Wen Kong,
  • Michael B. Yaffe,
  • Michael B. Yaffe,
  • Michael B. Yaffe,
  • Michael B. Yaffe,
  • Michael B. Yaffe,
  • Michael B. Yaffe

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2023.1148933
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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14-3-3 proteins play critical roles in controlling multiple aspects of the cellular response to stress and DNA damage including regulation of metabolism, cell cycle progression, cell migration, and apoptotic cell death by binding to protein substrates of basophilic protein kinases following their phosphorylation on specific serine/threonine residues. Although over 200 mammalian proteins that bind to 14-3-3 have been identified, largely through proteomic studies, in many cases the relevant protein kinase responsible for conferring 14-3-3-binding to these proteins is not known. To facilitate the identification of kinase-specific 14-3-3 clients, we developed a biochemical approach using high-density protein filter arrays and identified the translational regulatory molecule PABPC1 as a substrate for Chk1 and MAPKAP Kinase-2 (MK2) in vitro, and for MK2 in vivo, whose phosphorylation results in 14-3-3-binding. We identify Ser-470 on PABPC1 within the linker region connecting the RRM domains to the PABC domain as the critical 14-3-3-binding site, and demonstrate that loss of PABPC1 binding to 14-3-3 results in increased cell proliferation and decreased cell death in response to UV-induced DNA damage.

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