Regulation of receptor-mediated protein kinase C membrane trafficking by autophosphorylation.

Autor: Feng, X, Becker, K P, Stribling, S D, Peters, K G, Hannun, Y A
Zdroj: Journal of Biological Chemistry; June 2000, Vol. 275 Issue: 22 p17024-34, 11p
Abstrakt: Signal transduction via protein kinase C (PKC) is closely regulated by its subcellular localization. In response to activation of cell-surface receptors, PKC is directed to the plasma membrane by two membrane-targeting domains, namely the C1 and C2 regions. This is followed by the return of the enzyme to the cytoplasm, a process shown recently to require PKC autophosphorylation (Feng, X., and Hannun, Y. A. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 26870-26874). In the present study, we examined mechanisms of translocation and reverse translocation and the role of autophosphorylation in these processes. By visualizing the trafficking of wild-type as well as mutant PKCbetaII in live cells, we demonstrated that in response to cell-surface receptor activation, the function of the C1 region is required but not sufficient for recruitment of the enzyme to the plasma membrane. The C2 region is also critical in anchoring the enzyme to the plasma membrane. Furthermore, the inability of a kinase-deficient PKC to undergo reverse translocation was restored by the addition of intracellular calcium chelators, suggesting a role for the C2 region in the persistent phase of translocation. On the other hand, the inability of a C2 deletion mutant (C1 region intact) to translocate in response to agonist was reversed in mutants lacking kinase activity or by mutation of the Ser(660) autophosphorylation site to alanine, suggesting that autophosphorylation of this site is required for opposing the action of the C2 region. Therefore, the membrane-targeting function of the C1 region is facilitated by the C2 region and appears to be opposed by autophosphorylation. Taken together, these findings provide novel evidence of the functional regulation of reversible PKC membrane localization by autophosphorylation, and they show that the dynamic translocation of PKC in response to agonists is tightly regulated in a collaborative fashion by the C1 and C2 regions in balance with the effects of autophosphorylation.
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