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  4. Cyclin Y phosphorylation- and 14-3-3-binding-dependent activation of PCTAIRE-1/CDK16
 
research article

Cyclin Y phosphorylation- and 14-3-3-binding-dependent activation of PCTAIRE-1/CDK16

Shehata, Saifeldin N.
•
Deak, Maria
•
Morrice, Nicholas A.
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2015
Biochemical Journal

PCTAIRE-1 [also known as cyclin-dependent kinase 16 (CDK16)] is implicated in various physiological processes such as neurite outgrowth and vesicle trafficking; however, its molecular regulation and downstream targets are largely unknown. Cyclin Y has recently been identified as a key interacting/activating cyclin for PCTAIRE-1; however, the molecular mechanism by which it activates PCTAIRE-1 is undefined. In the present study, we initially performed protein sequence analysis and identified two candidate phosphorylation sites (Ser(12) and Ser(336)) on cyclin Y that might be catalysed by PCTAIRE-1. Although in vitro peptide analysis favoured Ser(12) as the candidate phosphorylation site, immunoblot analysis of cell lysates that had been transfected with wild-type (WT) or kinase-inactive (KI) PCTAIRE-1 together with WT or phospho-deficient mutants of cyclin Y suggested Ser(336), but not Ser(12), as a PCTAIRE-1-dependent phosphorylation site. Monitoring phosphorylation of Ser(336) may provide a useful read-out to assess cellular activity of PCTAIRE-1 in vivo; however, a phospho-deficient S336A mutant displayed normal interaction with PCTAIRE-1. Unbiased mass spectrometry and targeted mutagenesis analysis of cyclin Y identified key phosphorylation sites (Ser(100) and Ser(326)) required for 14-3-3 binding. Recombinant WT cyclin Y, but not a S100A/S326A mutant, prepared in 2COS-1 cells co-purified with 14-3-3 and was able to activate bacterially expressed recombinant PCTAIRE-1 in cell-free assays. Finally, we observed that recently identified PCTAIRE-1 variants found in patients with intellectual disability were unable to interact with cyclin Y, and were inactive enzymes. Collectively, the present work has revealed a new mechanistic insight into activation of PCTAIRE-1, which is mediated through interaction with the phosphorylated form of cyclin Y in complex with 14-3-3.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1042/Bj20150486
Web of Science ID

WOS:000361053400008

Author(s)
Shehata, Saifeldin N.
Deak, Maria
Morrice, Nicholas A.
Ohta, Eriko
Hunter, Roger W.
Kalscheuer, Vera M.
Sakamoto, Kei
Date Issued

2015

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd

Published in
Biochemical Journal
Volume

469

Issue

3

Start page

409

End page

420

Subjects

14-3-3

•

cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)

•

intellectual disability

•

mass spectrometry

•

protein kinase

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SV  
Available on Infoscience
December 2, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/120950
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