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Molecular and Cellular Biology, June 1999, p. 4525-4534, Vol. 19, No. 6
0270-7306/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Protein Kinase B Localization and Activation
Differentially Affect S6 Kinase 1 Activity and Eukaryotic Translation
Initiation Factor 4E-Binding Protein 1 Phosphorylation
Almut
Dufner,1
Mirjana
Andjelkovic,1
Boudewijn
M. T.
Burgering,2
Brian A.
Hemmings,1 and
George
Thomas1,*
Friedrich Miescher Institute, CH-4058 Basel,
Switzerland,1 and Laboratory of
Physiological Chemistry, Utrecht University, 3584 CG Utrecht, The
Netherlands2
Received 21 December 1998/Returned for modification 25 January
1999/Accepted 23 March 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
Recent studies indicate that phosphatidylinositide-3OH kinase
(PI3K)-induced S6 kinase (S6K1) activation is mediated by protein kinase B (PKB). Support for this hypothesis has largely relied on
results obtained with highly active, constitutively membrane-localized alleles of wild-type PKB, whose activity is independent of PI3K. Here
we set out to examine the importance of PKB signaling in S6K1
activation. In parallel, glycogen synthase kinase 3
(GSK-3
) inactivation and eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E-binding protein 1 (4E-BP1) phosphorylation were monitored as markers of the
rapamycin-insensitive and -sensitive branches of the PI3K signaling
pathway, respectively. The results demonstrate that two activated
PKB
mutants, whose basal activity is equivalent to that of
insulin-induced wild-type PKB, inhibit GSK-3
to the same extent as a
highly active, constitutively membrane-targeted wild-type PKB allele.
However, of these two mutants, only the constitutively
membrane-targeted allele of PKB induces S6K1 activation. Furthermore,
an interfering mutant of PKB, which blocks insulin-induced PKB
activation and GSK-3
inactivation, has no effect on S6K1 activation.
Surprisingly, all the activated PKB mutants, regardless of constitutive
membrane localization, induce 4E-BP1 phosphorylation and the
interfering PKB mutant blocks insulin-induced 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. The results demonstrate that PKB mediates S6K1 activation only as a
function of constitutive membrane localization, whereas the activation
of PKB appears both necessary and sufficient to induce 4E-BP1
phosphorylation independently of its intracellular location.
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INTRODUCTION |
Mitogens induce the coordinated
activation of a number of anabolic events which culminate in cell
growth and division (41). Recent studies have defined the
distinction between growth and proliferation, demonstrating the
dominance of growth in this process (42, 58). An important
component of the growth response is the generation of new translational
machinery, required to accommodate the increased demand for additional
proteins (56). The enhanced expression of protein synthetic
components, most notably ribosomal proteins and elongation factors, is
largely controlled at the translational level (5, 39). The
transcripts for ribosomal proteins and elongation factors are
characterized by an oligopyrimidine tract, termed 5'TOP, at their
translational start site (5, 39). More importantly, it has
been shown that the translational upregulation of these transcripts is
mediated, in part, by the activation of the 40S ribosomal protein S6
kinase (S6K1) (32), presumably through the increased
phosphorylation of S6 (33, 34). The importance of S6K1 in
cell growth was initially inferred from the microinjection of
neutralizing antibodies into cells (38, 50) and the use of
the immunosuppressant rapamycin, each inhibiting mitogen-induced S6K1
activation and impeding cell growth (33, 34). Recently, the
significance of S6K1 in cell growth has been emphasized by the
generation of S6K1-deficient mice, which are significantly reduced in
size (55), and by the discovery of a new, highly homologous
S6 kinase, S6K2 (28, 55).
The signal transduction pathway which mediates S6K1 activation has
received considerable attention because of its implied importance in
the growth response (25, 47). Early studies demonstrated
that mitogen-induced S6K1 activation is initiated at a specific growth
factor receptor docking site distinct from that utilized by the
mitogen-activated protein kinase-Ras signaling pathway (40).
The use of the inhibitory fungal metabolite wortmannin and
platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptor mutants led to the
identification of phosphatidylinositide-3OH kinase (PI3K) as the
effector which initiates downstream signaling from the receptor
(17). The activation of S6K1 appears to be mediated in a
hierarchical manner, initiated by the phosphorylation of a set of sites
in its autoinhibitory domain (24) that facilitate subsequent
phosphorylation at T389 in the adjacent linker domain. These two sets
of initial phosphorylation events act in a synergistic manner to
regulate T229 phosphorylation in the catalytic domain and thus kinase
activation (24). Except for the recent identification of
phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase 1 (PDK1) as the S6K1-T229 kinase (4, 49), little is known concerning the identity of the other kinases which regulate the additional phosphorylation of S6K1
(49). The key step in the activation process is T389 phosphorylation, which unlike the phosphorylation of T229, appears to
be positively regulated by a wortmannin-sensitive PI3K-dependent input
(23). Although the S6K1-T389 kinase has yet to be
identified, recent studies have suggested that this step is mediated by
PI3K through the activation of protein kinase B (PKB) (15).
Like S6K1, PKB activation is mediated by PI3K through the increased phosphorylation of T308 and S473, the sites homologous to T229 and T389
in S6K1, respectively (1). The dependence of PKB activation on PI3K as well as its wortmannin sensitivity can be circumvented by
constitutively anchoring PKB to the membrane (6). This leads to increased levels of T308 and S473 phosphorylation, highly activates PKB (6), and induces S6K1 activation (15). These
findings have led to the hypothesis that PKB mediates PI3K-induced S6K1 activation.
Membrane-targeted alleles of PKB also induce the phosphorylation of two
additional signaling components which regulate the translational
machinery. One is glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK-3), whose direct
phosphorylation by PKB leads to its inactivation (21). A key
substrate of GSK-3 is the
subunit of protein synthesis initiation
factor eIF2B (65), whose phosphorylation suppresses eIF2B
GDP-GTP exchange activity, inhibiting translation (65). The
inhibition of GSK-3 activity by PKB increases eIF2B GDP-GTP exchange
activity, raising the amount of active eIF2-GTP and leading to
increased rates of global translation (19). The second
downstream target of PKB is eukaryotic translation initiation factor
4E-binding protein 1 (4E-BP1) (27, 36, 53, 60). The
phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 disrupts its interaction with the mRNA
m7G cap-binding protein eIF4E, allowing eIF4E to form a
productive initiation complex (44). Unlike GSK-3, the
effects of PKB on increased 4E-BP1 phosphorylation are indirect and may
be mediated by a second kinase, possibly mTOR, the target of rapamycin
(14, 53), or a kinase tightly bound to mTOR (43).
Indeed, 4E-BP1 is thought to reside on the same rapamycin-sensitive
PI3K-dependent signaling pathway as S6K1 (64).
Although highly activated alleles of PKB lead to S6K1 activation, the
same is also true for activated oncogenic alleles of Ras
(10). However, the activation of wild-type Ras by mitogens is neither sufficient nor necessary to bring about S6K1 activation (40). This raised the possibility that highly activated
alleles of PKB or constitutive membrane localization may not reflect
wild-type PKB signaling. To test the role of PKB signaling in S6K1
activation we have compared the abilities of specific variants of PKB
to activate and confer wortmannin resistance on S6K1, as well as the
ability of interfering mutants to block this response. In parallel, we
have used GSK-3
inactivation and 4E-BP1 phosphorylation to
independently monitor the effects of the different PKB alleles on
rapamycin-sensitive and -insensitive PKB downstream signaling. The
results demonstrate that constitutive membrane localization of active
PKB is essential for its ability to signal S6K1 and that the pathway
leading to 4E-BP1 phosphorylation, but surprisingly not S6K1
activation, is dominantly regulated by PKB.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Construction of expression vectors.
The S6K1 construct was
tagged by the insertion of the myc 9E10 epitope immediately
following the S6K1 initiator ATG codon as described previously
(40). Myc-S6K1-GST (63) and the pCMV constructs
encoding human hemagglutinin (HA)-PKB
, T308D-S473D PKB
,
myristylated and palmitylated PKB
, and kinase-dead PKB have been
described (1, 6, 7). GSK-3
cDNA was amplified from a
template construct and subcloned into a prk5 expression vector. The PCR
primers served to add a myc tag at the C terminus of GSK-3
and provide the suitable XbaI/NotI restriction
sites for subcloning. The construct was verified by DNA sequencing. Myc-PKB was generated by PCR with HA-PKB
(7) as a
template. The resulting product was subcloned as a
BglII-EcoRI fragment into the pECE vector and
then transferred as a BglII-XbaI fragment into a
pCMV5 vector. The construction of untagged PKB-CaaX (61) and
HA-4E-BP1 (63) have been described previously. PKB-CaaX was
subcloned into a pCMV5 expression vector.
Cell culture and transfection.
Human embryonic kidney 293 cells were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium containing
10% fetal calf serum as described previously (40) and
seeded at 106 cells per 10-cm-diameter plate 24 h
prior to transfection. Transient transfection was performed overnight
by using a modified calcium phosphate procedure with 10 µg of plasmid
DNA (45). The next day, cells were washed twice with
Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium to remove the serum and then made
quiescent by incubation in the same medium for 24 h. Prior to
lysis the cells were stimulated with specific agonists or inhibitors as
described in the text. Insulin was employed at a concentration of 1 µM (stock, 10 mg/ml in 1% acetic acid). In the case of the
wortmannin pretreatment, either the vehicle dimethyl sulfoxide or 250 nM wortmannin was added.
Immunoprecipitation and in vitro kinase assays.
Human 293 cell extracts were prepared by lysing cells in a buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 1% Nonidet P-40, 120 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 6 mM
EGTA, 1 mM benzamidine, 15 mM sodium diphosphate, 30 mM 4-nitrophenyl
phosphate (disodium salt), and 0.2 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride.
Lysates were centrifuged for 15 min at 12,000 × g at
4°C. PKB was immunoprecipitated with either monoclonal 12CA5 or 9E10
antibody, and S6K1 was immunoprecipitated with a monoclonal 9E10
antibody. Immunocomplexes were collected with protein G-Sepharose
beads. PKB
activity was assayed with the peptide GRPRTSSFAEG as a
substrate, as described previously (21). The kinase assay
for S6K1 has been reported (30). Cells transfected with
Myc-GSK-3
were lysed in buffer A, which contains 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH
7.5), 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM EGTA, 1% (by volume) Triton X-100, 1 mM sodium
orthovanadate, 10 mM sodium glycerophosphate, 50 mM NaF, 5 mM sodium
pyrophosphate, 1 µM Microcystin-LR, 0.27 M sucrose, 1 mM benzamidine,
0.2 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, and
0.1% (vol/vol) 2-mercaptoethanol. The lysate was centrifuged as
described above, and an aliquot of the supernatant was incubated for
1 h on a shaking platform with 5 µl of protein G-Sepharose
coupled to 2 µg of 9E10 monoclonal antibody. The protein
G-Sepharose-antibody-Myc-GSK-3
complex was washed twice with
buffer A containing 0.5 M NaCl and twice with buffer B (50 mM Tris-HCl
[pH 7.5], 0.1 mM EGTA, 0.1% 2-mercaptoethanol), and the
immunoprecipitate was assayed for GSK-3
activity after incubation
with either protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) or microcystin in an assay
buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl, 0.1 mM EGTA, 10 mM MgCl, 2.5 µM
PKI, 100 µM ATP, and 30 µM phospho-glycogen synthase peptide 2 with
the sequence YRRAAVPPSPSLSRHSSPHQpSEDEEE. For the PP2A
reaction the beads were incubated for 30 min at 30°C in buffer B
containing 1 mg of bovine serum albumin per ml with the catalytic
subunit of PP2A (final concentration, 25 mU/ml), and the reaction was
stopped by adding 5 µM microcystin to the mixture.
Phosphorylation of 4E-BP1.
Human 293 cells transfected with
HA-4E-BP1 were lysed in a buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5),
1% Nonidet P-40, 120 mM NaCl, 25 mM NaF, 40 mM
-glycerophosphate,
0.1 mM sodium vanadate, 1 mM benzamidine, and 0.2 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride. Western blot analysis of 4E-BP1 was
carried out as previously described (64), except that the
12CA5 antibody was used for the detection and the
N,N'-methylenebisacrylamide content of the
gel was lowered to 0.25%.
Western blot analysis.
The protein concentration in samples
was determined with the Bio-Rad D/C protein assay. Protein samples (40 µg) were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis and then electrophoretically transferred to Immobilon P
membranes (Millipore). Construct expression was quantified by Western
blotting with monoclonal antibody 9E10 or 12CA5, rabbit anti-mouse
immunoglobulin G (DAKO), and finally with fluorescein isothiocyanate
(FITC)-labelled swine anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G (DAKO) or goat
anti-mouse immunoglobulin G coupled to horseradish peroxidase (DAKO) as
a secondary antibody. Endogenous PKB was quantified with a polyclonal
anti-PKB antibody raised against the C terminus of PKB (6)
and FITC-labelled swine anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G (DAKO) or mouse
anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G coupled to horseradish peroxidase (DAKO)
as a secondary antibody. Enhanced chemiluminescence or storage
phosphorimagery and fluorimetry (Molecular Dynamics) were used to
visualize expression levels and S6K1 activity as phosphate
incorporation into 40S ribosomal protein S6.
Two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping.
Human 293 cells were
transiently transfected with the indicated construct and labelled with
0.2 mCi of 32Pi per ml, 3 h prior to
extraction. Myc-S6K1-GST was precipitated from labelled extracts with
glutathione-Sepharose (Sigma) and purified by electroelution
(63). Trichloroacetic acid precipitation, performic
acid oxidation, trypsin-chymotrypsin digestion, and two-dimensional
phosphopeptide mapping were carried out as described previously
(45). Phosphopeptides were visualized with a PhosphorImager.
Immunofluorescence.
Human 293 cells were transfected on
coverslips with the indicated PKB construct, fixed, permeabilized, and
incubated with a polyclonal anti-PKB antibody before being stained with
an FITC-conjugated secondary antibody, as described previously
(6).
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RESULTS |
Activation of PKB variants.
To address the importance of PKB
activation in S6K1 signaling, we compared the activity of wild-type PKB
and its sensitivity to wortmannin with those of two activated alleles
of PKB, one of which was constitutively membrane targeted. The latter
allele contains the myristylation and palmitylation signal of the
proto-oncogene lck attached to its amino terminus (Fig.
1A), which constitutively localizes the
PKB variant to the membrane (see reference 6 and
below). The second variant of PKB contains acidic residues at the
primary sites of phosphorylation associated with PKB activation, T308,
in the activation loop, and S473, near the carboxy terminus (Fig. 1A)
(1). Wild-type PKB and each of the variants were HA epitope
tagged, transiently transfected into human 293 cells, and analyzed for
basal and insulin-stimulated activity, with Crosstide (21)
as a peptide substrate (Fig. 1B). In contrast to the HA epitope-tagged
wild-type PKB, HA-PKB
, both variants had high basal kinase activity
which was not further augmented by insulin stimulation (Fig. 1B). The
activity of the double acidic variant, HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D, was
equivalent to that of insulin-stimulated HA-PKB
, whereas the
membrane-targeted variant, m/p-HA-PKB
, was approximately fourfold
more active than insulin-stimulated HA-PKB
(Fig. 1B). Furthermore,
in contrast to HA-PKB
, both HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D and m/p-HA-PKB
were resistant to wortmannin (Fig. 1B). Thus, the two activated alleles
of PKB, though displaying distinct levels of activity, were
unresponsive to mitogen stimulation and the effects of wortmannin.

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FIG. 1.
Activation of PKB mutants. (A) Schematic presentation of
the PKB mutants employed. Membrane-targeted forms of PKB contain
either the lck myristylation and palmitylation signal (m/p)
at the N terminus or the CaaX box from Ki-Ras at the C terminus. PH,
pleckstrin homology domain. All the PKB constructs are HA epitope
tagged at the N terminus, except for PKB -CaaX. (B) Ectopically
expressed PKB variants from extracts of human 293 cells were assayed as
described in Materials and Methods. The extracts are derived from the
cotransfection experiment with S6K1 described in the legend to Fig. 2A.
The cells were serum starved for 24 h and either extracted
immediately, stimulated for 30 min with 1 µM insulin, or pretreated
with 250 nM wortmannin for 1 h prior to stimulation with insulin,
as indicated. Error bars indicate standard deviations.
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Differential regulation of S6K1 by PKB.
To determine the
effect of PKB on S6K1 activation, each of the HA epitope-tagged PKB
constructs was cotransfected with a Myc epitope-tagged S6K1 reporter,
Myc-S6K1. Consistent with the results of earlier studies the wild-type
construct had little effect on S6K1 activation (4), whereas
m/p-HA-PKB
led to full S6K1 activation in the absence of insulin
treatment (Fig. 2A) (15). In
contrast to wild-type PKB, m/p-HA-PKB
also conferred wortmannin
resistance on the Myc-S6K1 reporter construct (Fig. 2A). Unexpectedly,
the cotransfection of the HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D variant did not raise S6K1 values above those of the wild-type construct and was ineffective at protecting S6K1 from inactivation by wortmannin treatment. The
activation of S6K1 is associated with increased phosphorylation of
T229, in the activation loop, and acute phosphorylation of T389 in the
linker domain (23, 46, 49), as shown for the Myc-S6K1-GST
reporter in 293 cells treated with insulin (Fig. 2B). Consistent with
the observation that the HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D variant had no effect on
S6K1 activation, it had no effect on either T229 or T389
phosphorylation, whereas the m/p-HA-PKB
was nearly as potent as
insulin in inducing increased phosphorylation of the two sites (Fig.
2B). Thus, even though the HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D construct is as active
as insulin-induced wild-type PKB it has no effect on S6K1 activation or
on the two critical sites of phosphorylation associated with kinase
activation, T229 and T389.

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FIG. 2.
Effects of PKB variants on S6K1 activation. (A) The
activity of ectopically expressed S6K1 from extracts of human 293 cells
cotransfected with the empty vector or indicated PKB variants, as
labeled in Fig. 1, was assayed. S6K1 activity is presented as
32P incorporation into 40S ribosomal protein S6 (lower
panel). Cells were deprived of serum for 24 h and either extracted
immediately, stimulated for 30 min with 1 µM insulin, or pretreated
with 250 nM wortmannin for 1 h prior to stimulation with insulin,
as indicated. Protein extracts were analyzed by Western blotting for
PKB expression with the 12CA5 antibody (upper panel) and for S6K1 with
the 9E10 antibody (middle panel) (see Materials and Methods). m/p,
myristylation and palmitylation signal. (B) Phosphopeptide analysis of
myc-tagged S6K1-GST coexpressed with the empty vector or the
indicated PKB variant, as labeled in Fig. 1, in 293 cells. Prior to
lysis cells were incubated for 3 h with 0.2 mCi of
32Pi per ml. In the case of the empty vector
control 1 µM insulin was added 30 min before lysis. The Myc-S6K1-GST
phosphopeptides were analyzed by two-dimensional thin-layer
electrophoresis and chromatography as described in Materials and
Methods. m/p, m/p-HA-PKB .
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Differential signaling of PKB to GSK-3.
One possibility is
that HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D is not capable of signaling to downstream
effector molecules under the conditions employed here. To determine the
effectiveness of HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D in downstream signaling, both of
the activated alleles were analyzed for their abilities to inhibit the
activity of an Myc epitope-tagged GSK-3
reporter (21).
The results demonstrate that insulin stimulation decreased
Myc-GSK-3
activity to approximately 70% of the value detected in
quiescent cells (Fig. 3), in good
agreement with values observed by others (54). Despite their
differential effects on S6K1 activity (Fig. 2A), the coexpression of
either HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D or m/p-HA-PKB
lowered Myc-GSK-3
activity to the same extent, an effect which was not further
potentiated by insulin (data not shown). The coexpression of HA-PKB
was also as efficient as that of either of the two activated constructs
in lowering Myc-GSK-3
activity, possibly reflecting the
overexpression of HA-PKB
and the high affinity of the two kinases
for one another (61). However, the kinase-inactive form of
PKB
, in which K179 in the ATP binding site had been replaced by an
alanine (Fig. 1A), had no effect on Myc-GSK-3
activity (Fig. 3).
Thus, the overexpression of wild-type PKB is sufficient to induce
GSK-3
inactivation, but not S6K1 activation, and although the double
acidic mutant has no effect on S6K1 activity (Fig. 2A), it is
unimpaired in its ability to signal GSK-3
(Fig. 3).

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FIG. 3.
Effect of PKB variants on GSK-3 inactivation. The
activity of ectopically expressed GSK-3 was assayed from extracts of
human 293 cells cotransfected with the indicated PKB variants or the
empty vector. GSK-3 activity is measured as a percentage of
PP2A-induced activity. Cells were treated as described in the legend to
Fig. 2A. Protein extracts were analyzed by Western blotting for PKB
expression with the 12CA5 antibody (lower panel) and GSK-3 expression
with the 9E10 antibody (middle panel) (see Materials and Methods).
Error bars indicate standard deviations. m/p, myristylation and
palmitylation signal.
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Membrane targeting of PKB.
A potential explanation for the
inability of the double acidic PKB to activate S6K1, versus
m/p-HA-PKB
, is that such activation requires the constitutive
membrane targeting of PKB. To test this possibility the double acidic
mutant was constitutively targeted to the membrane by virtue of the
myristylation and palmitylation signal. However, this form of the
kinase was inactive, even in the presence of insulin (Fig.
4A). Therefore, to resolve this issue we
exploited an m/p-HA-PKB
variant in which S473 was mutated to
alanine, m/p-HA-PKB
-S473A (6). This mutant has basal
activity equal to that of HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D and is significantly
less active than the m/p-HA-PKB
parent construct (Fig. 4A and 1B). The addition of insulin slightly raises the kinase activity of m/p-HA-PKB
-S473A, although the level of activation is lower than that of the wild-type enzyme in the presence of insulin (Fig. 4A).
Furthermore, this construct was as potent as the m/p-HA-PKB
parent
construct in lowering basal Myc-GSK-3
activity (Fig. 4B). Despite
the significantly lower basal activity of m/p-HA-PKB
-S473A compared
with that of m/p-HA-PKB
(Fig. 4A), the constitutive targeting of
this construct to the membrane led to the full activation of
coexpressed Myc-S6K1, an effect not further augmented by insulin (Fig.
4C). To ensure that this effect was due to membrane targeting, the same
variant lacking the myristylation and palmitylation signal, HA-PKB
-S473A, was coexpressed with Myc-S6K1. Like the double acidic
mutant, HA-PKB
-S473A did not potentiate S6K1 activation beyond that
of wild-type HA-PKB
(Fig. 4D). As with the double acidic mutant, we
have also found that the m/p-HA-PKB
construct harboring an alanine
at T308 is inactive and fails to induce S6K1 activation (data not
shown). Taken together the data demonstrate that full S6K1 activation
is a function of the constitutive membrane localization of active PKB
rather than its specific activity.

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FIG. 4.
Membrane targeting of PKB is required for S6K1
activation. (A and C) Wild-type HA-PKB , HA-PKB -T308D/S473D, and
m/p-HA-PKB -S473A were cotransfected into human 293 cells with an
Myc-S6K1 reporter construct. Panel A shows the activity of the
indicated PKB constructs as well as that of m/p-HA-PKB -T308D/S473D.
S6K1 activity is presented as in Fig. 2 (C, upper panel). Expression
levels of Myc-S6K1 and the different HA-tagged PKB constructs are shown
in the lower panels (A and C). (B) Myc-GSK-3 was cotransfected with
the empty vector, m/p-HA-PKB -S473A, or m/p-HA-PKB . GSK-3 activity
is presented as a percentage of PP2A-induced activity. (D) Wild-type
HA-PKB and HA-PKB -S473A were expressed together with S6K1. S6
kinase activity is shown in the upper panel (Fig. 2), and expression
levels are shown in the middle and lower panels, as indicated. Error
bars indicate standard deviations.
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Effect of an interfering PKB mutant on S6K1 activation.
The
data above indicate that PKB-mediated S6K1 activation requires the
membrane localization of an active allele. Consistent with this model
and their effects on S6K1 activation (Fig. 2A), immunofluorescence data
show that the double acidic HA-PKB
-T308/S473D mutant, like wild-type
HA-PKB
, largely resides in the cytoplasm of quiescent 293 cells,
whereas the m/p-HA-PKB
construct is localized at the membrane (Fig.
5). However, recent observations have
demonstrated that mitogen stimulation leads to the transient,
wortmannin-sensitive membrane translocation and activation of PKB
(6), a finding which would be consistent with the hypothesis
that PKB mediates insulin-induced S6K1 activation. To test this
hypothesis we initially analyzed the effects of a kinase-dead variant
of PKB
, HA-PKB
-K179A (Fig. 1A), and a PKB
mutant having
alanines at positions 308 and 473 (1) on insulin-induced
S6K1 activation. However, the overexpression of either construct or the
HA-PKB
-K179A construct having a myristylation and palmitylation
signal failed to attenuate the insulin-induced activation of an
epitope-tagged reporter PKB construct (data not shown). In recent
studies it has been shown that when PKB is targeted to the membrane by
a CaaX box from Ki-Ras it is catalytically inactive and blocks the
insulin-induced activation of an epitope-tagged reporter PKB construct
(61). As shown by immunofluorescence this construct is
constitutively targeted to the membrane (Fig. 5). The coexpression of
this construct with a Myc epitope-tagged PKB or GSK-3 reporter
attenuates insulin-induced PKB activation and GSK-3 inactivation (Fig.
6A and B) (61), whereas it had
no effect on insulin-induced S6K1 activation (Fig. 6C). These data
demonstrate that insulin-induced PKB activation is not necessary for
S6K1 activation.

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FIG. 5.
Localization of HA-PKB -T308D/S473D and PKB -CaaX.
Human 293 cells were transfected with 0.5 µg of the indicated
HA-tagged construct per ml or 1 µg of PKB-CaaX per ml on glass
coverslips. They were then processed for immunofluorescence as
described in Materials and Methods. m/p, m/p-HA-PKB .
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FIG. 6.
Insulin-induced PKB activation is not necessary for S6K1
activation but is required for GSK3 inhibition. (A) Human 293 cells
were transiently transfected with Myc-tagged PKB and PKB -CaaX or
the empty vector. The serum-deprived cells were lysed directly or first
were stimulated for 20 min with 1 µM insulin. Cell extracts were
analyzed by Western blotting with a polyclonal antibody (1)
raised against the C terminus of PKB (upper panel). The activity of
Myc-tagged PKB was measured as described in Materials and Methods
with the monoclonal 9E10 antibody for immunoprecipitation (lower
panel). Error bars indicate standard deviations. (B) Myc-tagged
GSK-3 was cotransfected with PKB -CaaX or the empty vector. The
cells were left untreated or were stimulated as in the experiment
described in panel A. GSK-3 activity was measured as described in
Materials and Methods, except that the PP2A step was omitted. The
expression levels of Myc-GSK-3 (upper panel) and PKB -CaaX (middle
panel) were quantified with the 9E10 and the polyclonal PKB antibodies,
respectively. Error bars indicate standard deviations. (C) Human 293 cells were transiently transfected with Myc-tagged S6K1 and either the
empty vector or PKB -CaaX and treated as described for panel A. Cell
extracts were analyzed by Western blotting with either the 9E10
antibody to quantify S6K1 expression (upper panel) or the polyclonal
anti-PKB antibody (middle panel). S6K1 activity was measured as
described in Materials and Methods (lower panel).
|
|
PKB regulation of 4E-BP1 phosphorylation.
Although S6K1 and
GSK-3 reside on a PI3K-dependent signaling pathway, only the S6K1
branch of this pathway is regulated by mTOR, the target of rapamycin
(59). Recent studies have demonstrated that the repressor of
initiation factor 4E, 4E-BP1, resides on the same PI3K-dependent,
rapamycin-sensitive signaling pathway as S6K1 (64). As with
S6K1, activated alleles of PKB lead to increased 4E-BP1 phosphorylation
(27, 36, 60), and insulin-induced 4E-BP1 phosphorylation is
blocked by interfering mutants of PKB (27). However, given
their similar modes of regulation, it was reasoned that 4E-BP1 should
be regulated by PKB in a manner similar to S6K1. To test this
possibility we first examined the effects of insulin on 4E-BP1
phosphorylation, as demonstrated by its reduced mobility on sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels (64), in the absence and
presence of coexpressed wild-type PKB
. Although the coexpression of
wild-type PKB
slightly raised 4E-BP1 phosphorylation levels, full
activation required insulin (Fig. 7A).
Furthermore, in both cases, the increases in 4E-BP1 phosphorylation
were blocked by pretreatment with wortmannin (Fig. 7A). Surprisingly,
in contrast to S6K1 activation (Fig. 4C), HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D alone
is as potent in inducing 4E-BP1 phosphorylation as it is in the
presence of insulin (Fig. 7A). Moreover, the effect of
HA-PKB
-T308D/S473D on 4E-BP1 phosphorylation is equivalent to that
of the constitutively membrane-targeted m/p-HA-PKB
variant, and
neither effect is blocked by pretreatment with wortmannin (Fig. 7A).
Consistent with these findings, we found in separate studies that the
m/p-HA-PKB
-S473A variant was as potent as the two activated PKB
alleles in inducing 4E-BP1 phosphorylation and that this effect was not
blocked by wortmannin and was as strong in the absence of insulin (Fig.
7B). Thus, 4E-BP1 phosphorylation is affected by the activated alleles of PKB in a manner similar to that observed for GSK-3
. As the PKB
-CaaX interfering mutant has no effect on insulin-induced S6K1
activation, we also examined its effect on 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. Again, in contrast to S6K1 activation (Fig. 4C), the PKB
-CaaX interfering mutant blocked insulin-induced 4E-BP1 phosphorylation (Fig.
7C). Taken together the results demonstrate that in 293 cells PKB plays
an essential role in regulating 4E-BP1 phosphorylation and GSK-3
inactivation but is dispensable for S6K1 activation.

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|
FIG. 7.
PKB activation is necessary and sufficient for 4E-BP1
phosphorylation. (A and B) The indicated PKB constructs, as labeled in
Fig. 1, were cotransfected with HA-4E-BP1 as described in the legend
to Fig. 2A. After serum deprivation cells were either left untreated,
stimulated with insulin for 20 min prior to lysis, or pretreated with
250 nM of wortmannin for 1 h prior to stimulation with insulin, as
indicated. m/p, myristylation and palmitylation signal. (C) PKB -CaaX
or the empty vector was cotransfected in human 293 cells with HA-tagged
4E-BP1, and the cells were treated as described in the legend to Fig.
6A. 4E-BP1 electrophoretic mobility shifts were detected, as described
in Materials and Methods. The upper panels show the expression of the
cotransfected PKB constructs, detected with either the 12CA5 antibody
(A and B) or the polyclonal anti-PKB antibody (C), as described in
Materials and Methods.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The results presented here demonstrate that activated alleles of
PKB will induce S6K1 activation only when these alleles are constitutively localized to the membrane. The results further show that
such membrane localization is not required for activated alleles of PKB
to signal GSK-3 or 4E-BP1. In the case of 4E-BP1, this was an
unexpected observation, as 4E-BP1 phosphorylation is thought to be
regulated by the same rapamycin-sensitive pathway as S6K1
(64). Indeed, the results support a model in which PKB plays
a dominant role in signaling 4E-BP1, whereas the input to S6K1 appears
dispensable (see Fig. 8).

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|
FIG. 8.
Model for differential PKB signaling to S6K1 and 4E-BP1.
PI3K signaling to S6K1 is PKB independent, whereas 4E-BP1 and GSK-3
phosphorylation are PKB dependent. However, when PKB is constitutively
targeted to the membrane it artificially activates Xm, a
potential mediator of the PI3K-dependent signaling pathway to S6K1.
Asterisk indicates active PKB. m, membrane; c, cytoplasm.
|
|
The finding that activated alleles of PKB, but not wild-type PKB,
mediate S6K1 activation is similar to observations of the effects of
activated alleles of Ras on S6K1 activation (10, 40).
Activated oncogenic alleles of Ras induce S6K1 activation; however,
interfering mutants of Ras do not block insulin, epidermal growth
factor, or PDGF activation of S6K1 (40). Moreover,
PDGF-induced activation of Ras and its downstream effector,
mitogen-activated protein kinase, are unaffected in cells expressing a
mutant of the PDGF receptor lacking the kinase insert domain, whereas
S6K1 activation is abolished (40). Similarly, fibroblast
growth factor induces potent activation of endogenous Ras but has no
effect on lamellipodium formation, despite the finding that activated oncogenic Ras will induce lamellipodium formation in the same cell type
(62). It has been shown that activated Ras can bind to and
activate the p110 catalytic subunit of PI3K
(51, 52); however, endogenous Ras does not appear to be a major route utilized by
growth factors in signaling PI3K. In the case of activated oncogenic
Ras, its increased potency in signaling is due to it being in the
constitutively highly active GTP-bound state. Likewise, in the case of
PKB, constructs targeted to the membrane are also much more active than
their wild-type counterparts (Fig. 1) (6). However, here we
demonstrate that the essential element controlling S6K1 activation is
not the specific activity of PKB but its intracellular location.
Consistent with this conclusion, recent studies have shown that
myristylated PKB
or myristylated PKB
-S473A induce oncogenic
transformation in chicken embryo fibroblasts and hemangiosarcomas in
young chickens (8). In contrast, cytosolic
PKB
-T308D/S473D was weakly transforming and induced no tumors,
similar to wild-type PKB
, despite the fact that its level of
intrinsic PKB activity was higher than that of the myristylated
PKB
-S473A variant (8). In the case of S6K1, it could be
envisaged that activated alleles of PKB constitutively targeted to the
membrane artificially induce the activation of a membrane-localized
S6K1 signaling component, leading in turn to S6K1 activation (Fig. 8).
The results demonstrate that conclusions drawn from studies with
constitutively membrane-targeted active alleles of PKB concerning the
role of endogenous PKB in downstream signaling must be viewed with
caution, as pointed out by others (3).
The findings that the insulin-induced activation of S6K1 is not blocked
by interfering mutants of PKB, despite the negative effects of this
mutant on 4E-BP1 phosphorylation and GSK-3 inactivation, strongly imply
that PKB does not signal S6K1. Similar conclusions have been drawn from
experiments carried out by Conus et al., who showed that the depletion
of intracellular stores of Ca2+ had no effect on PKB
activation but abolished S6K1 activation (20). In parallel,
they demonstrated that an increase in intracellular Ca2+
results in full S6K1 activation, which is wortmannin sensitive, but has
little to no effect on PKB. It has been shown in at least one cell type
that a dominant interfering mutant of PKB inhibits S6K1 activation at
very similar doses to those that block PKB activation (35).
In this case, the dominant interfering mutant employed contained
alanines at T308 and S473 and was delivered to the cell by utilizing an
adenovirus infection strategy. In parallel, these authors observed
little to no effect of the same mutant on insulin-induced S6K1
activation in a second cell type (35). As
phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase 1 is the activation loop
kinase for both S6K1 and PKB (2, 4, 49, 57), it may be that
the effect on S6K1 activation is accomplished not through the
inhibition of PKB but through the inhibition of a parallel pathway.
Indeed, recent results from this laboratory have clearly demonstrated
that interfering mutants of S6K1 can affect parallel pathways (see
reference 63 and below). Although the results
presented here do not exclude a role for PKB in S6K1 activation, they
strongly support a model whereby PKB resides on a pathway parallel to
that of S6K1 (Fig. 8).
Rapamycin inhibits mitogen-induced 4E-BP1 and S6K1 phosphorylation
(9, 18, 37, 48, 64), whereas rapamycin-resistant mutants of
mTOR protect both S6K1 (12) and 4E-BP1 (14, 27, 31) phosphorylation from the effects of rapamycin. Although mTOR
has significant homology with lipid kinases of the PI3K family (11), in vitro it autophosphorylates and can phosphorylate
the rapamycin-sensitive sites in S6K1 (16) and 4E-BP1
(13). However, not all the data are consistent with the role
of mTOR as the 4E-BP1 and S6K1 kinase. First, the sites of
phosphorylation in 4E-BP1 contain a proline in the +1 position
(14, 26), whereas in S6K1 the critical residue, T389, is
flanked by large aromatic residues (45). More importantly, a
mutant of S6K1 lacking both the amino and carboxy termini, although
still sensitive to wortmannin inhibition, is resistant to
rapamycin-induced T389 dephosphorylation (23). These latter
studies led to the hypothesis that rapamycin may block S6K1 activation
by activating a phosphatase which is negatively regulated by mTOR
(22, 23). In the case of 4E-BP1, five phosphorylation sites
were initially identified as the targets of mTOR in vitro and in vivo
(26). More recent studies suggest that only two of these
sites may serve as in vitro targets and that they may be highly
phosphorylated in quiescent cells, acting as priming sites for an
unidentified mitogen-activated kinase (see references
16 and 22). mTOR contains 16 36- to 47-amino-acid repeats, termed HEAT domains, which are characterized
by a series of spaced hydrophobic amino acids (22), which
have been shown in the A subunit of PP2A to serve as a protein docking
site (29). Consistent with the existence of HEAT domains,
recent studies have shown that other kinases may be tightly associated
with mTOR (43). Obviously it will be important to identify
mTOR-associated kinases and to determine whether they serve as either
4E-BP1 or S6K1 kinases.
The differential effects of PKB signaling on 4E-BP1 and S6K1 were
unexpected. As stated above, 4E-BP1 and S6K1 reside on the same
PI3K-dependent signaling pathway and both are sensitive to rapamycin.
Furthermore, the overexpression of S6K1 blocks 4E-BP1 phosphorylation
at the same sites as rapamycin, suggesting that the 4E-BP1 and S6K1
signaling pathway bifurcates just upstream of S6K1, with the most
obvious point of bifurcation being mTOR (63). One possible
explanation that reconciles these seemingly disparate observations is
that mTOR acts as both a kinase and a scaffold for other interacting
proteins, as we have recently suggested (22). In this case,
PKB signaling to 4E-BP1 would be accomplished through mTOR or an
associated kinase, as indicated by recent findings (43, 53),
but this event would not act on the S6K1 signaling pathway. In this
model, S6K1 may still require mTOR for activation but in a
PKB-independent manner. The overexpression of S6K1 would sequester mTOR
or a molecule which interacts with mTOR and block 4E-BP1
phosphorylation. The validation of this model will require more
knowledge concerning mTOR structure and function.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank P. B. Dennis, D. Evans, R. Meier, and N. Pullen for
their critical reading of the manuscript. In addition we are grateful
to D. Alessi, M. Shaw, and P. Cohen for their help in establishing the
GSK-3 assays.
Part of these studies was supported by a short-term EMBO fellowship to
A.D. This work was partially supported by grants from the Human
Frontier Science Program and European Economic Communities to G.T.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Friedrich
Miescher Institute, Maulbeerstrasse 66, CH-4058 Basel, Switzerland.
Phone: 41-61-6973012. Fax: 41-61-6976681. E-mail:
gthomas{at}fmi.ch.
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