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Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 2000, p. 3558-3567, Vol. 20, No. 10
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Multiple Mechanisms Control Phosphorylation of PHAS-I in Five
(S/T)P Sites That Govern Translational Repression
Isabelle
Mothe-Satney,1
Daqing
Yang,1,
Patrick
Fadden,1
Timothy A. J.
Haystead,1 and
John C.
Lawrence Jr.1,2,*
Departments of
Pharmacology1 and
Medicine,2 University of Virginia
School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908
Received 16 September 1999/Returned for modification 1 November
1999/Accepted 3 February 2000
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ABSTRACT |
Control of the translational repressor, PHAS-I, was investigated by
expressing proteins with Ser/Thr
Ala mutations in the five (S/T)P
phosphorylation sites. Results of experiments with HEK293 cells reveal
at least three levels of control. At one extreme is nonregulated
phosphorylation, exemplified by constitutive phosphorylation of Ser82.
At an intermediate level, amino acids and insulin stimulate the
phosphorylation of Thr36, Thr45, and Thr69 via mTOR-dependent processes
that function independently of other sites in PHAS-I. At the third
level, the extent of phosphorylation of one site modulates the
phosphorylation of another. This control is represented by
Ser64 phosphorylation, which depends on the phosphorylation of all
three TP sites. The five sites have different influences on
the electrophoretic properties of PHAS-I and on the affinity of PHAS-I
for eukaryotic initiation factor 4E (eIF4E). Phosphorylation of Thr45 or Ser64 results in the most dramatic decreases in eIF4E binding in vitro. However, each of the sites influences mRNA
translation, either directly by modulating the binding affinity of
PHAS-I and eIF4E or indirectly by affecting the phosphorylation of
other sites.
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INTRODUCTION |
PHAS-I, also known as 4E-BP1, is a
117-amino-acid (Mr
12,400) member of a
family of eukaryotic initiation factor 4E (eIF4E)-binding proteins that
are involved in the control of mRNA translation (19, 29,
36). In eukaryotic cells, the 5' end of almost all mRNA is capped
with m7GpppN (where N is any nucleotide) (35).
The availability of eIF4E, the mRNA cap-binding protein, limits the
rate of translation initiation (31, 36). To facilitate
translation, eIF4E must bind eIF4G, a scaffolding protein that also
binds eIF4A, an ATP-dependent helicase that allows more efficient
translation of mRNAs with structured 5' untranslated regions. The
complex of eIF4E, eIF4G, and eIF4A increases translation by increasing
the efficiency of binding and/or scanning by the 40S ribosomal subunit,
which is linked to eIF4G by eIF3. Nonphosphorylated PHAS-I binds
eIF4E and prevents eIF4E from binding to eIF4G
(13). Thus, when overexpressed in cells, PHAS-I
inhibits the translation of capped mRNA but does not inhibit
cap-independent translation initiated from a viral internal ribosomal
entry site (IRES) (27). When PHAS-I is phosphorylated in the
appropriate site(s), the PHAS-I-eIF4E complex dissociates (20,
27), freeing eIF4E to bind eIF4G and thereby increasing translation initiation.
Five phosphorylation sites conforming to a (S/T)P motif
have been identified in PHAS-I (8). The sites surround the
residues (Arg50 to Met59) that have been implicated in eIF4E binding
(23) and are conserved in the two other PHAS family members
(28). Another site, Ser111, found only in PHAS-I, is
phosphorylated in vitro by casein kinase II (9, 15).
Phosphorylation decreases the electrophoretic mobility of PHAS-I, and
three electrophoretic forms, designated
,
, and
in order of
decreasing mobility, are typically resolved by polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (PAGE) in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)
(20). The sites that are most important in controlling
electrophoretic mobility, eIF4E binding, and mRNA translation in cells
have not been determined.
PHAS-I is controlled by the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)
signaling pathway. The effects of amino acids (14, 17, 39)
and/or insulin (3, 21) on increasing the phosphorylation of
PHAS-I are attenuated by rapamycin, which inhibits the function of TOR
proteins (1). Expressing mTOR in cells increases the phosphorylation of PHAS-I, and mTOR is able to phosphorylate PHAS-I in
vitro (4-6, 10, 14). It was recently proposed that the phosphorylation of PHAS-I in cells occurs by an ordered mechanism in
which the phosphorylation of Thr36 and Thr45 by mTOR must occur before
the other sites in PHAS-I can be phosphorylated (10).
In the present study, PHAS-I proteins having mutations in the five
(S/T)P sites were overexpressed in HEK293 cells to investigate the role
of the different phosphorylation sites. The results allow the
identification of sites that are responsible for the gel shift and that
are important in regulating eIF4E binding and mRNA translation. In
addition, we demonstrate definitively that Thr36 and Thr45 do not need
to be phosphorylated in cells for phosphorylation of Thr69 and Ser82 to occur.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
PHAS-I expression vectors.
Ser64 was mutated to Cys, Asp,
Glu, Asn, and Thr in wild-type (WT) PHAS-I cDNA, and Ala64 in 5A PHAS-I
cDNA was mutated to Glu and Asp, by oligonucleotide-directed
mutagenesis as described previously for the preparation of cDNA
encoding PHAS-I proteins with Ser/Thr to Ala mutations in the five
(S/T)P sites (40). To disrupt eIF4E binding, Ala mutations
of Leu and Met at positions 58 and 59 were created (23). The
coding region of each plasmid was sequenced and found to be free of
undesired mutations. For expression in cells, PHAS-I cDNA was excised
from pBluescript SK(
) with HindIII and XbaI
and inserted between the HindIII and XbaI
sites of pCMV4 (2).
Cell culture and transfections.
Human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cells (ATTC CRL 1573) were seeded at 2 × 104
cells/cm2 and cultured for 24 h in growth medium
composed of 10% (vol/vol) horse serum in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's
medium (DMEM). Transfections were performed using a method involving
calcium phosphate precipitation (7). To obtain equal levels
of expression, it was necessary to use different amounts of the
respective pCMV4 constructs (0.3 µg/cm2 for WT and A64
PHAS-I, and 0.1 µg/cm2 for all others). The precipitated
DNA was removed after 16 h, and the cells were incubated in growth
medium for 5 h and then used in experiments as described below.
32P-labeling experiments.
Two protocols were
used to label cells with 32P. Protocol 1 was used to assess
the acute regulation of phosphorylation. To induce a quiescent state,
transfected cells (in 35- or 60-mm-diameter dishes) were incubated
without serum in DMEM supplemented with 0.2% bovine serum albumin
(BSA). After 15 h, the cells were rinsed once and incubated in
low-phosphate (Pi) buffer (0.2 ml/cm2)
supplemented with 0.5 mCi of 32Pi (ICN
Pharmaceuticals) per ml. Low-Pi buffer contained 145 mM NaCl, 5.4 mM KCl, 1.4 mM CaCl2, 1.4 mM MgSO4,
0.1 mM sodium phosphate, 10 mM sodium HEPES, 25 mM NaHCO3,
5 mM glucose, and 0.5% BSA (pH 7.4). The incubations were terminated
after 3 h. Where indicated, rapamycin (final concentration, 50 nM)
(Calbiochem) was added after 90 min and recombinant human insulin
(final concentration, 700 nM) and/or amino acids (25-fold dilution of
50× minimal essential medium amino acids plus L-glutamine)
(GIBCO BRL) were added after 150 min. To terminate the incubation,
cells were rinsed with buffer A (150 mM NaCl, 10 mM EDTA, 10 mM sodium
pyrophosphate, 2 mM sodium orthovanadate, 100 mM NaF, 50 mM sodium
HEPES [pH 7.5]) and then lysed at 0°C in buffer A (30 µl/cm2) supplemented with 1% NP-40, 200 nM
microcystin-LR, 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, 10 µg of
aprotinin per ml, and 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride.
Protocol 2 was used to assess the phosphorylation of PHAS-I proteins
under the conditions used to investigate mRNA translation. The
transfected cells were incubated for 15 h in DMEM supplemented with 0.2% BSA and 700 nM insulin. This relatively high concentration of insulin, at which the receptors for both insulin and insulinlike growth factor type 1 are activated, was used to attempt to maximally stimulate the phosphorylation of PHAS-I. The medium was then replaced with phosphate-free DMEM that was supplemented with BSA, insulin, and
0.1 mM Na32Pi. After 3 h, the incubations
were terminated as described for protocol 1.
Immunoprecipitation of PHAS-I and affinity purification of
PHAS-I-eIF4E complexes.
PHAS-I-eIF4E complexes were partially
purified by using m7GTP-Sepharose beads, and PHAS-I was
immunoprecipitated as described previously (20). Samples
were subjected to SDS-PAGE (18). PHAS-I and eIF4E were
identified by immunoblotting (22). Binding of PHAS-I
proteins to eIF4E in vitro was assessed by far Western analyses using a
32P-labeled FLAG-eIF4E fusion protein (27).
32P-labeled proteins were detected by autoradiography or phosphorimaging.
Phosphopeptide mapping of PHAS-I.
PHAS-I immune complexes
were suspended in 50 µl of 20 mM EDTA-0.1% 2-mercaptoethanol-50 mM
Tris-HCl (pH 6.8) and incubated at 100°C for 15 min. PHAS-I proteins,
which are relatively heat stable, were recovered in the supernatants
after centrifuging the samples at 16,000 × g for 10 min. Samples were incubated at 37°C with lysyl endopeptidase (20 µg/ml) for 15 h, and the resulting phosphopeptides were resolved
by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) as described previously
(8).
Preparation and phosphorylation of recombinant PHAS-I
proteins.
PHAS-I proteins were expressed in bacteria and purified
(40). The PHAS-I proteins (20 µg/ml) were incubated with
recombinant mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase (7 µg/ml),
activated as described previously (8), in 1 mM
dithiothreitol-7.5 mM MgCl2-40 mM sodium HEPES (pH 7.4)
with either 0.5 mM ATP (for FLAG-eIF4E-binding experiments) or 0.5 mM
[
-32P]ATP (to measure phosphorylation).
Measurements of cap-dependent and -independent mRNA
translation.
A bicistronic reporter, designated pRLIRESFL,
encoding Renilla luciferase and firefly luciferase was used
to investigate cap-dependent mRNA translation. To make pRLIRESFL, a
cDNA fragment including the Renilla luciferase coding region
and stop codon was generated using PCR with pRL-CMV (Promega) as
template and primers that introduced EcoRI sites in both
ends. After digestion with EcoRI, the fragment was inserted
into the EcoRI cloning site of p2332 (provided by John
Majors, Washington University). The p2332 plasmid contains the promoter
from cytomegalovirus upstream of the EcoRI site and contains
sequences encoding the IRES from encephalomyocarditis virus followed by
firefly luciferase and the simian virus 40 t-intron and polyadenylation
signal downstream of the EcoRI site. pRLIRESFL directs the
synthesis of an mRNA from which Renilla luciferase is
translated in a manner dependent on the 5' cap and firefly luciferase
is translated in a cap-independent manner through the IRES.
For expression studies, HEK293 cells in 22-mm-diameter dishes were
cotransfected with pRLIRESFL (0.05 µg/dish) and the pCMV4-PHAS-I
constructs. DNA precipitates were removed after 16 h, and the
cells were incubated in growth medium for 5 h. The medium was
then
replaced with DMEM supplemented with 0.2% BSA, and the cells
were
incubated for 15 h with 700 nM insulin. To terminate the
incubation, the cells were rinsed with phosphate-buffered saline
and
incubated at 0°C for 15 min in 250 µl of passive lysis buffer
(Promega) supplemented with 10 µg of leupeptin per ml, 10 µg of
aprotinin per ml, 1 mM PMSF, and 200 nM microcystin-LR. Lysates
were
centrifuged at 16,000 ×
g for 15 min at 4°C. The
activities
of the two luciferases were measured in triplicate samples
of
the supernatants by using the dual-luciferase reporter assay system
(Promega).
 |
RESULTS |
Influence of phosphorylation site mutations on electrophoretic
mobility and phosphorylation.
To investigate the roles of
different phosphorylation sites in controlling PHAS-I, Ser/Thr
Ala
mutations were introduced into the five (S/T)P sites (Fig.
1). HEK293 cells expressing PHAS-I proteins were incubated with 32Pi and a
maximally effective concentration of insulin. The proteins were
immunoprecipitated and subjected to SDS-PAGE. After transfer to a
membrane, an autoradiogram (Fig. 2A) and
PHAS-I immunoblot (Fig. 2B) were prepared. No PHAS-I was detected in
extracts from cells that had been transfected with the pCMV4 vector
alone (Fig. 2B). Therefore, we were able to use PHAS-I antibody to
identify the overexpressed proteins, obviating the need for
an epitope tag, which could affect the properties of the
relatively small PHAS-I protein. In both the autoradiogram and
immunoblot, WT PHAS-I appeared as two bands, corresponding to the
and
forms. No 32P was incorporated into 5A PHAS-I (Fig.
2A), and 5A PHAS-I migrated as a single band corresponding to the
form (Fig. 2B), as did all of the nonphosphorylated mutant proteins
purified from bacteria (Fig. 2C).

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FIG. 1.
Mutant PHAS-I proteins. Ser/Thr Ala or other
mutations in the five (S/T)P phosphorylation sites in PHAS-I are
indicated by bold type.
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FIG. 2.
Effect of mutations on phosphorylation and
electrophoretic mobility. PHAS-I proteins were expressed in HEK293
cells, which were incubated with 32Pi and
insulin (see protocol 2 in Materials and Methods). The proteins were
immunoprecipitated, subjected to SDS-PAGE, and transferred to an
Immobilon membrane. (A) Phosphorimage showing
32P-labeled PHAS-I proteins. (B) PHAS-I immunoblot of the
membrane. (C) Coomassie blue stain of recombinant PHAS-I proteins
purified from bacteria.
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The mobilities of the mutant proteins from HEK293 cells differed
markedly, due to differences in the sites of phosphorylation.
The
32P content in A36 PHAS-I (Fig.
2A) and the relative
amount of the
protein found in the

form (Fig.
2B) were lower than
in WT PHAS-I.
The mobility of A36 PHAS-I

was slightly higher than
the mobility
of WT PHAS-I

(Fig.
2A). As might be expected,
phosphorylation
of T36 PHAS-I slightly decreased its mobility (Fig.
2A). However,
phosphorylation of T36 did not result in the appearance
of

or

forms, indicating that phosphorylation of sites other
than Thr36
are needed to generate these forms. The effects of mutating
Thr45
were similar to those of mutating Thr36. However, the mobility
of A45 PHAS-I

was indistinguishable from that of WT PHAS-I

.
T45 PHAS-I was phosphorylated in cells, but the protein remained
in the

form. Thus, phosphorylation of Thr45 appears insufficient
to
affect the mobility of PHAS-I. A64 PHAS-I was phosphorylated
when
expressed in HEK293 cells. Interestingly, almost all of the
protein was
found in the

form, although a small amount of
form was
detected. These findings suggest that Ser64 phosphorylation
is needed
for the optimum generation of the fully retarded electrophoretic
form
of PHAS-I. Mutating Thr69 had the most pronounced influence
on the
electrophoretic mobility of PHAS-I. A69 PHAS-I was phosphorylated
in
HEK293 cells, but almost all of it remained in the

form.
T69 PHAS-I
not only was phosphorylated but also accumulated in
the

form,
indicating that the

-to-

shift is due to phosphorylation
of T69.
The fact that the mobility of nearly all of T69 PHAS-I
was retarded
indicates that Thr69 was almost completely phosphorylated.
Thus, it is
clear that phosphorylation of Thr69 is not dependent
on the
phosphorylation of Thr36 and/or Thr45. The
32P content and
electrophoretic pattern of A82 PHAS-I were very
similar to those of WT
PHAS-I. Thus, Ser82 does not appear to
be phosphorylated as
highly as the other sites. As might be expected,
the phosphorylation of
S82 PHAS-I was also relatively low in HEK293
cells. The
phosphorylated form of S82 PHAS-I exhibited reduced
electrophoretic
mobility resembling that of recombinant S82 PHAS-I
phosphorylated by
MAP kinase in vitro (
40). However, the influence
of Ser82
phosphorylation on mobility was less than that of Thr69
phosphorylation.
Effect of mutations on the phosphorylation of Ser64 and Thr69.
S64 PHAS-I was not appreciably phosphorylated (Fig. 2A). To determine
whether HEK293 cells lacked the kinase to phosphorylate Ser64 or
whether the phosphorylation of Ser64 was dependent on the
phosphorylation of other sites, WT PHAS-I was immunoprecipitated from 32P-labeled cells and digested with lysyl
endopeptidase. Three major peaks, labeled LE-P1, LE-P2, and LE-P3, were
observed after fractionating the digest by reverse-phase HPLC (Fig.
3A). The phosphopeptides found in these
peaks were previously identified by amino acid sequencing
(8). LE-P1 contains the Thr69 peptide, LE-P2 contains the
Ser64 peptide, and LE-P3 contains a mixture of peptides including one
with Ser82 and another with both Thr36 and Thr45. The presence of
32P in LE-P2 indicated that Ser64 was phosphorylated in
wild-type PHAS-I.

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FIG. 3.
Evidence of interactions among phosphorylation sites.
HEK293 cells expressing WT PHAS-I, A36 PHAS-I, A45 PHAS-I, or A69
PHAS-I were incubated with 32Pi and insulin
(protocol 2). PHAS-I proteins were immunoprecipitated and digested with
lysyl endopeptidase. The digests were fractionated by HPLC. (A) Elution
profile of 32P-labeled peptides derived from WT PHAS-I and
A36 PHAS-I. The three major peaks of 32P are designated
LE-P1, LE-P2, and LE-P3. The phosphorylation sites previously
identified (8) in these peaks are shown in parentheses. (B)
Decreased phosphorylation of Ser64 in mutants lacking any one of the
three TP sites. The amounts of 32P in the Ser64 peaks from
the mutant proteins are expressed as percentages of the 32P
content of the Ser64 peak from WT PHAS-I. The results are mean values
plus half the range from two experiments. (C) Enhanced phosphorylation
of Thr69 in mutants lacking Thr36 and Thr45. The 32P
contents of the Thr69 peaks from the mutant proteins were determined
and are expressed relative to that from WT PHAS-I. (D) Effect of
disrupting the eIF4E-binding domain on PHAS-I phosphorylation. Cells
were transfected with pCMV4 alone (Vec) or with constructs encoding WT
PHAS-I, NBPHAS-I, S64 PHAS-I, or S64 NBPHAS-I and incubated with
32P and insulin, and the PHAS-I proteins were
immunoprecipitated. A PHAS-I blot (Blot) and phosphorimage
(32P) are presented.
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Experiments with single Ala mutants of PHAS-I were performed to
determine which of the other sites contribute to the control
of
Ser64 phosphorylation. The initial fractions in LE-P3 contain
the Ser82
peptide and the doubly phosphorylated Thr36 and Thr45
peptide. Mutation
of either Thr36 (Fig.
3A) or Thr45 (results
not shown)
allows the resolution of two peaks in LE-P3: the phosphorylated
Ser82
peptide, which elutes at 50 min, and the singly phosphorylated
Thr36 or
Thr45 peptide, which elutes 5 min later. The phosphorylation
of Ser64
in A36 PHAS-I was much lower than in WT PHAS-I (Fig.
3A). However,
mutation of either Thr45 or Thr69 also decreased
Ser64 phosphorylation
(Fig.
3B), indicating that phosphorylation
of all three TP sites is
needed for optimal phosphorylation of
Ser64. Interestingly, Thr69 in
A36 PHAS-I contained over twice
as much
32P as the site in
WT PHAS-I does (Fig.
3A and C). Thr69 phosphorylation
was also
increased after Thr45 was mutated, although the effect
was smaller than
that of mutating Thr36 (Fig.
3C). An implication
is that
phosphorylation of Thr36 and/or Thr45 enhances the phosphorylation
of
Thr69.
In vitro MAP kinase rapidly phosphorylates Ser64 in free PHAS-I
(
8); however, binding to eIF4E dramatically inhibits
phosphorylation
by MAP kinase (
21). Thus, when PHAS-I is
complexed with eIF4E,
the Ser64 site appears to be less accessible, at
least to certain
kinases. To investigate the possibility that
phosphorylation of
Ser64 in cells occurred secondarily to dissociation
of the PHAS-I-eIF4E
complex, we performed experiments with a S64
NBPHAS-I. This protein
has Leu58

Ala and Met59

Ala mutations,
which have been shown
to abolish high-affinity binding of WT PHAS-I to
eIF4E (
24).
Control experiments confirmed that the mutations
inhibited the
binding of S64 PHAS-I to eIF4E (I. Mothe-Satney and
J. C. Lawrence,
Jr., unpublished data). Disrupting eIF4E
binding per se did not
prevent phosphorylation of PHAS-I, since the
nonbinding form of
the protein having the five (S/T)P sites was
phosphorylated as
well as WT PHAS-I (Fig.
3D). The nonbinding
form of S64 PHAS-I
was not phosphorylated, and its electrophoretic
mobility was identical
to that of S64 PHAS-I (Fig.
3D).
Control of PHAS-I phosphorylation by amino acids, insulin, and
rapamycin.
To investigate hormonal control of PHAS-I, HEK293 cells
were incubated without amino acids or serum to induce quiescence. Under
these conditions, most of the WT PHAS-I was found in the
and
forms (Fig. 4A). Supplying amino acids or
insulin decreased the amount of the
form and increased that of the
form. The combination of amino acids plus insulin almost abolished
the
form, and more than 60% of PHAS-I was present in the
form
(Fig. 4B). Rapamycin decreased the levels of the
and
forms and
markedly increased that of the
form. The mobility changes are
consistent with the established effects of insulin and amino acids on
increasing the phosphorylation of PHAS-I and of rapamycin on decreasing
the phosphorylation of the protein (19). The results of
experiments in which the 32P content of PHAS-I was
determined were also consistent (Fig. 4A and
5A). However, the effects of insulin and
rapamycin, as well as those of amino acids, on 32P labeling
of PHAS-I (Fig. 5A) were smaller than suggested by the dramatic changes
in the electrophoretic mobility of the protein (Fig. 4A). These
findings indicated that the sites having the most pronounced influence
on electrophoretic mobility were affected to a greater extent than the
sites that do not affect mobility. To investigate this
hypothesis, 32P-labeling experiments were conducted
with cells expressing T36 PHAS-I, T45 PHAS-I, T69 PHAS-I, or S82
PHAS-I. The phosphorylation of T36 PHAS-I was increased approximately
2.5-fold by incubating cells with either insulin or amino acids (Fig.
4D). The effect of the combination was approximately equal to the
additive effects of the two treatments (Fig. 5B). Rapamycin attenuated
the effects of insulin plus amino acids on increasing the
phosphorylation of T36 PHAS-I but had no effect on the basal level of
phosphorylation. The effects of insulin, amino acids, and
rapamycin on the phosphorylation of T45 PHAS-I closely resembled the
effects of these agents on T36 PHAS-I (Fig. 5B and C).

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FIG. 4.
Stimulation of PHAS-I phosphorylation by amino acids and
insulin. Cells expressing WT PHAS-I, T36 PHAS-I, T45 PHAS-I, T69
PHAS-I, or S82 PHAS-I were incubated with 32Pi
(see protocol 1 in Materials and Methods) for 3 h before extracts
were prepared. Prior to terminating the incubations, the cells were
treated as follows: no additions, amino acids [AA] and/or insulin
[INS] for 30 min, rapamycin [RAP] for 90 min, and rapamycin for 60 min followed by rapamycin plus insulin and amino acids for 30 min.
PHAS-I proteins were immunoprecipitated from extracts, subjected to
SDS-PAGE, and transferred to Immobilon membranes. (A) Immunoblot
depicting the , , and forms of WT PHAS-I (Blot) and a
phosphorimage showing the 32P-labeled protein
(32P). (B) Relative proportions of , , and of WT
PHAS-I. The optical density of each of the forms was determined by
scanning laser densitometry and is expressed as a percentage of the
total. Means and standard errors from three experiments are presented.
(C) Immunoblots showing T36 PHAS-I, T45 PHAS-I, T69 PHAS-I, and S82
PHAS-I. (D) Phosphorimages showing the 32P-labeled mutant
proteins.
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FIG. 5.
Regulated phosphorylation of Thr36, Thr45, and Thr69
does not require phosphorylation of other sites. Experiments were
performed as described in the legend to Fig. 4. In addition, WT PHAS-I
was immunoprecipitated and incubated with lysyl endopeptidase. The
digests were fractionated by reverse-phase HPLC as described in the
legend to Fig. 3, and the amounts of 32P in the peak
fractions containing the Ser64 phosphopeptide were determined. The
relative amounts of 32P associated with WT PHAS-I (A), T36
PHAS-I (B), T45 PHAS-I (C), Ser64 in WT PHAS-I (D), T69 PHAS-I (E), and
S82 PHAS-I (F) were determined after correcting for the amounts of the
proteins estimated by immunoblotting. The results are expressed as a
percentages of the respective maximum values and are mean values and
standard errors from three experiments.
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Both insulin and amino acids increased the phosphorylation of T69
PHAS-I, although the effect of insulin was about twice that
of
amino acids (Fig.
4D and
5E). As expected, the increases in
T69 phosphorylation were associated with increases in the amount
of the protein found in the

form (Fig.
4C). Rapamycin markedly
decreased the basal phosphorylation of T69 PHAS-I and essentially
abolished the effect of insulin plus amino acids on increasing
the
phosphorylation of PHAS-I (Fig.
4D and
5E). These effects
of rapamycin
were associated with a total loss of the

form and
a corresponding
increase in the level of the

form (Fig.
4C).
Thus, the
phosphorylation of T69 was particularly sensitive to
rapamycin.
The phosphorylation of Ser82 was distinctly different from that of the
other sites (Fig.
4C). Neither insulin nor amino acids
changed the
32P content of Ser82 PHAS-I or the electrophoretic mobility
of the
protein (Fig.
4D). The phosphorylation of S82 was also
insensitive
to rapamycin (Fig.
5F).
Because the phosphorylation of Ser64 was markedly reduced by mutation
of the three TP sites, S64 PHAS-I could not be used
to investigate the
control of Ser64 phosphorylation. The effects
of amino acids and
insulin on this site were investigated by peptide
mapping of WT PHAS-I
(Fig.
5D). Lysyl endopeptidase C digests
of protein that had been
immunoprecipitated from
32P-labeled cells
were subjected to HPLC, and the amounts of
32P in the peak
fractions containing the Ser64 peptide were determined.
Insulin
and amino acids increased the
32P content of Ser64 3- and
3.5-fold, respectively, and the combination
increased phosphorylation
of the site 5-fold (Fig.
5D). Rapamycin
alone had little, if any,
effect on the
32P content of Ser64. However, rapamycin
markedly inhibited the
phosphorylation of this site in response to
insulin and amino
acids.
Effect of phosphorylation site mutations on eIF4E binding.
To
investigate the role of the five (S/T)P sites in controlling eIF4E
binding, mutant PHAS-I proteins were phosphorylated in vitro with
purified MAP kinase. Samples of the phosphorylated proteins were
subjected to SDS-PAGE, transferred to Immobilon membranes, and
probed with a 32P-labeled FLAG-eIF4E fusion protein.
Phosphorylation of WT PHAS-I almost abolished binding to FLAG-eIF4E
(Fig. 6A). None of the individual site
mutations prevented the loss of FLAG-eIF4E binding, indicating that
phosphorylation of no single site is essential for the loss of eIF4E
binding. The effects of phosphorylating T36 PHAS-I, T45 PHAS-I, and S82
PHAS-I on FLAG-eIF4E binding were recently described
(40). To investigate the effect of Ser64 phosphorylation,
S64 PHAS-I was incubated for increasing times with MAP kinase.
FLAG-eIF4E binding decreased with a time course essentially
identical to that of phosphate incorporation (Fig. 6B).

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FIG. 6.
Effect of phosphorylating mutant PHAS-I proteins in
vitro on eIF4E binding. (A) Proteins were incubated with ATP in the
absence ( ) or presence (+) of MAP kinase (MAPK) for 5 h. Samples
were subjected to SDS-PAGE before the proteins were transferred to an
Immobilon membrane. A far Western blot (FW) prepared using
32P-labeled FLAG-eIF4E and a PHAS-I immunoblot are shown.
(B) S64 PHAS-I was incubated for increasing times with recombinant MAP
kinase and either [ -32P]ATP or unlabeled ATP before
samples were subjected to SDS-PAGE. Gels containing
32P-labeled samples were stained with Coomassie blue. The
S64 PHAS-I bands were excised, and the 32P contents were
determined by scintillation counting. The results are expressed as
moles of phosphate incorporated per mole of S64 PHAS-I. S64 PHAS-I that
had been phosphorylated with unlabeled ATP was transferred to an
Immobilon membrane, which was probed with 32P-labeled
FLAG-eIF4E. The results represent the inhibition of binding due to MAP
kinase. The results for phosphorylation ( ) and FLAG-eIF4E binding
( ) are mean values and standard errors from three experiments.
|
|
Far Western blotting was also used to investigate the role of
phosphorylation sites in controlling eIF4E binding of PHAS-I
derived from cells. WT PHAS-I and mutant proteins were
expressed
in HEK293 cells, which were incubated with amino acids and a
maximally
effective concentration of insulin before
32P-labeled FLAG-eIF4E binding was measured. Little, if
any, of
the probe bound to WT PHAS-I (Fig.
7A), although a small
amount
of binding to WT PHAS-I was detected in some experiments. These
differences among experiments are presumably related to differences
in
the extent of insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of PHAS-I.
An
immunoblot of the same membrane used for the far Western blot
revealed
that essentially all of the WT PHAS-I was present in
the phosphorylated

and

forms (Fig.
7B). The immunoblot also
confirmed that the
levels of expression of WT PHAS-I and the mutant
proteins were similar.

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|
FIG. 7.
Effect of mutations on eIF-4E binding. HEK293 cells were
transfected and incubated as described in Materials and Methods
(protocol 2). PHAS-I proteins were immunoprecipitated from extracts and
subjected to SDS-PAGE. (A) Far Western blot showing binding to
32P-labeled FLAG-eIF4E. (B) PHAS-I immunoblot of the
membrane used for the far Western blot. (C) Copurification of mutant
proteins with endogenous eIF-4E. PHAS-I-eIF4E complexes were isolated
from extracts by using m7GTP-Sepharose, and the relative
levels of PHAS-I and eIF4E were determined by immunoblotting. The
results represent the amounts of the different PHAS-I proteins that
were isolated with the cap affinity resin expressed as a percentage of
the 5A PHAS-I that was recovered and are mean values and standard
errors from three experiments. (D) Copurification with eIF4E of PHAS-I
proteins with different substitutions at position 64. Mean values plus
half the range from two experiments are presented.
|
|
Mutating either Thr36 or Thr45 to Ala markedly increased
32P-labeled FLAG-eIF4E binding, suggesting that these sites
contribute
to the control of the association state of PHAS-I and eIF4E
(Fig.
7A). Mutating Thr69 also increased binding but to a lesser extent
than that caused by mutations in the other two TP sites. In contrast,
mutating Ser64 to Ala had little, if any, effect on increasing
FLAG-eIF4E binding. Mutating Ser82 only slightly increased binding.
FLAG-eIF4E binding to the mutant lacking both SP sites was similar
to
that observed with A82 PHAS-I. FLAG-eIF4E binding was markedly
increased by mutating all five S/TP sites. This finding was not
surprising, since 5A PHAS-I is not phosphorylated in cells. None
of the
proteins having mutations in four of the five available
sites exhibited
lower binding to eIF4E than did 5A PHAS-I, except
for Thr69 PHAS-I,
whose binding was approximately equal to that
of A36 PHAS-I and A45
PHAS-I (Mothe-Satney and Lawrence,
unpublished).
The conditions used to assess binding by far Western analysis differ
from those used for intact cells. Moreover, it is possible
that
phosphorylation of certain sites might be sufficient to inhibit
the
association of PHAS-I and eIF4E, but insufficient to promote
dissociation of eIF4E once the PHAS-I-eIF4E complex has formed.
To
address these issues, the amounts of the mutant proteins bound
to eIF4E
in cells were determined by isolating PHAS-I-eIF4E complexes
with
m
7GTP-Sepharose. The results are expressed relative to
the amount
of 5A PHAS-I that copurified with eIF4E (Fig.
7C). Binding
of
WT PHAS-I to endogenous eIF4E was only 8% of that of 5A
PHAS-I,
consistent with the relatively high level of phosphorylation of
WT PHAS-I. The Thr36 and Thr45 mutations had the largest impact
of any
of the single-site mutations, increasing binding by approximately
eightfold. Mutating Thr69 increased binding by sixfold. The recovery
of
A64 PHAS-I and A82 PHAS-I with eIF4E was approximately twice
that of WT
PHAS-I, although the differences were within the range
of
experimental variability. Thus, the effects of mutating individual
SP
sites on binding were smaller than the effects of mutating
the TP
sites. The binding of the double mutant lacking both Ser64
and Ser82
was approximately four times that of the wild-type
protein.
The lack of effect of mutating Ser64 on eIF4E binding was surprising,
in view of the striking effect of phosphorylating Ser64
on eIF4E
binding (Fig.
6). Therefore, we investigated the effect
of expressing
proteins having other substitutions in position
64 (Fig.
7D). The
binding of C64 PHAS-I and N64 PHAS-I (Fig.
1),
which cannot be
phosphorylated at this position, to endogenous
eIF4E was not
significantly different from that of A64 PHAS-I
(Fig.
7D). T64 PHAS-I
also exhibited very low binding to eIF4E.
To investigate the effect of
introducing a negative charge at
position 64, we expressed mutant
proteins having Glu or Asp substitutions.
The effects of D64 PHAS-I and
E64 PHAS-I on binding were no different
from those of A64 PHAS-I.
However, because Ser64 was highly phosphorylated
under these
conditions, it would have been difficult to detect
an effect of the
acidic substitutions. For this reason, we also
introduced Asp into
position 64 in the 5A mutant. 5A PHAS-I and
4AD64 exhibited almost
the same binding to endogenous
eIF4E.
Effect of phosphorylation site mutations on cap-dependent mRNA
translation.
mRNA translation was investigated using a dual
luciferase reporter, which allowed assessment of the effects of the
PHAS-I proteins on cap-dependent and cap-independent translation.
Measuring cap-independent translation driven by the IRES element should allow the detection of nonspecific inhibitory effects of the PHAS-I proteins on the translation machinery (27). None of the
constructs used inhibited cap-independent translation (results not
presented). Thus, the inhibitory effects of expressing the PHAS-I
proteins on cap-dependent translation were presumably related to
inhibition of the function of eIF4E. In these experiments, 5A PHAS-I
inhibited translation of the reporter by approximately 60% and WT
PHAS-I inhibited translation by only 20%. Nevertheless, we were
concerned that the effects of some of the mutations might have been
limited by the availability of eIF4E. If this were the case, it
would not have been possible to detect differences in translation among the mutants that bound more tightly to eIF4E. This did not appear to be
a problem, since the same relationships among the mutants with respect
to translation inhibition were observed when cells were transfected
with 25-fold less cDNA (Mothe-Satney and Lawrence, unpublished).
A64 PHAS-I did not inhibit cap-dependent translation (Fig. 8A); however, all of the other
single mutations generated proteins that had greater inhibitory effects
on translation than that of WT PHAS-I. Mutating Thr36 or Thr45 had the
most dramatic effects, approaching the inhibition produced by 5A
PHAS-I. The Thr69
Ala mutation had the next largest effect,
followed by the Ser82
Ala mutation.

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|
FIG. 8.
Effect of mutations on cap-dependent mRNA translation.
HEK293 cells were cotransfected with pRLIRESFL and the PHAS-I
expression vectors. The cells were incubated as described in the legend
to Fig. 7 before the activities of the two luciferases were measured.
None of the PHAS-I proteins decreased firefly luciferase activity,
which was used to correct for small differences in the transfection
efficiency of the reporter construct among samples. Approximately equal
amounts of the different PHAS-I proteins were expressed (see Fig. 7B,
for example). (A) Inhibition of cap-dependent translation resulting
from PHAS-I proteins, expressed relative to that produced by 5A PHAS-I
(mean values and standard errors from three experiments). (B)
Relationship between eIF4E binding and inhibition of cap-dependent mRNA
translation. The relative amounts of PHAS-I proteins copurifying with
eIF-4E ( ) or the relative amounts of FLAG-eIF4E binding ( ) from
Fig. 7 are plotted against the inhibition of cap-dependent mRNA
translation. The line and correlation coefficient (r) were
generated by linear regression analysis of translation inhibition
versus PHAS-I protein recovered with m7GTP-Sepharose.
|
|
As shown in Fig.
8B, there was a direct correlation between translation
inhibition and eIF4E binding, assessed by either far
Western analysis
or copurification of PHAS-I proteins. This relationship
provides
additional evidence that the inhibition of translation
by the mutant
proteins is due to specific inhibition of the function
of eIF4E. As
indicated by the
y intercept on the plot in Fig.
8B,
significant inhibition of translation can occur in the absence
of
detectable binding. Presumably, this inhibition is due to
lower-affinity
interactions that are not detected by the available
methods to
assess the binding of PHAS-I to eIF4E in
cells.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The role of the five (S/T)P sites in controlling PHAS-I was
investigated by expressing mutant PHAS-I proteins in HEK293 cells. As
with all overexpression studies, there is the issue of whether the
effects observed are representative of events that occur with the
endogenous proteins. The present finding that phosphorylation was
confined to the same five (S/T)P sites previously identified in
endogenous PHAS-I in rat adipocytes indicates that ectopic phosphorylation of the proteins expressed in HEK293 cells did not occur
(8). Furthermore, insulin stimulated the phosphorylation of
PHAS-I expressed in HEK293 cells in the same four sites that were
phosphorylated in response to the hormone in adipocytes (8), and phosphorylation occurred via a rapamycin-sensitive pathway, as with
the endogenous PHAS-I proteins in other cell types (3, 12).
These findings argue that regulation of the phosphorylation of the
expressed PHAS-I proteins occurs by normal signaling mechanisms. The
results obtained with these proteins have important implications with
respect to the mechanisms involved in the regulation of phosphorylation and the roles of the different sites in controlling the function of the
PHAS-I protein.
It has become common practice to use a gel shift assay to evaluate the
phosphorylation of PHAS-I. A caveat in using this assay to evaluate
functional control of PHAS-I is that sites having the largest influence
on electrophoretic mobility do not necessarily have the largest effects
on eIF4E binding. Phosphorylation of either Thr45 (40) or
Ser64 alone did not affect mobility, although phosphorylation of either
of these two sites abolished eIF4E binding in vitro. PHAS-1
is
generated by phosphorylation of Thr69 or Ser82. PHAS-I
results from
the phosphorylation of Thr69 and either Ser64 or Ser82. Phosphorylated
Thr36 and Thr45 may appear in the
,
, and
forms, since these
two sites do not significantly influence electrophoretic mobility.
With multisite phosphorylation, the potential exists for interactions
among phosphorylation sites. It was recently proposed that PHAS-I
phosphorylation involves a two-step mechanism in which phosphorylation
of Thr36 and Thr45, occurring when PHAS-I is bound to eIF4E, is
required for the phosphorylation of the other sites (10). We
have confirmed that mutating Thr36 or Thr45 decreases the
phosphorylation of Ser64 in HEK293 cells. However, other findings are
clearly incompatible with certain aspects of the two-step model
(10). For example, mutating Thr69 also markedly decreased the phosphorylation of Ser64, indicating that Ser64 phosphorylation depends on the phosphorylation of all three TP sites. Also, PHAS-I proteins lacking Thr36 and Thr45 could be phosphorylated in both Thr69
and Ser82. Indeed, the absence of Thr36 or Thr45 actually enhanced the
phosphorylation of Thr69, and the phosphorylation of Thr69 was
regulated in a rapamycin-sensitive manner by amino acids and insulin in
the mutant lacking the four other sites. The finding that the three
PHAS-I proteins having an individual TP site with mutations in the four
remaining sites were phosphorylated implies that there is not an
obligate order in the phosphorylation of Thr36, Thr45, and Thr69. S64
NBPHAS-I was not phosphorylated, indicating that dissociation of the
PHAS-I-eIF4E complex, which occurs in response to phosphorylation of
the TP sites, is not sufficient for Ser64 phosphorylation. Moreover,
since phosphorylation of Ser64 still required the TP sites when PHAS-I
was rendered incapable of high-affinity binding to eIF4E, the ordered
phosphorylation of Ser64 does not have to occur when PHAS-I is bound to
eIF4E as proposed in the two-step model (10).
Hierarchal phosphorylation, a mechanism in which phosphorylation of one
site creates a consensus site for phosphorylation of a second site
(32), might explain the dependence of Ser64 on prior
phosphorylation of the TP sites. Phosphorylated Ser or Thr residues
([S/T]*) are found in the consensus motifs,
[S/T]XXX[S/T]* and
[S/T]*XX[S/T], for phosphorylation by glycogen
synthase kinase 3 and casein kinase I, respectively (32). If
such a mechanism is involved in the control of Ser64 phosphorylation,
the consensus motif is likely to be complex, since three sites were
required for the phosphorylation of Ser64. As suggested previously
(10), phosphorylation might create a recognition motif that
recruits the Ser64 kinase and/or other regulatory factors to PHAS-I.
However, the ordered-phosphorylation model is based on studies in
intact cells, and there are other potential explanations of the data.
For example, phosphorylation could appear to be ordered if
phosphorylation of the TP sites protected the Ser64 site from
dephosphorylation. Interestingly, evidence for such a mechanism was
recently obtained for the control of nPKC
, another downstream
protein in the mTOR signaling pathway (26). In this case,
phosphorylation of Thr505 in the activation loop of the kinase appears
to markedly decrease the rate of Ser662 dephosphorylation.
In view of the complexities in the control of PHAS-I, the simple
hypothesis that the five (S/T)P sites in PHAS-I are regulated by a
common mechanism can be eliminated. Ser82 was not phosphorylated in
response to insulin or amino acids, indicating that Ser82 is not
subject to the same control as the other sites whose
phosphorylation was increased by these agents. Insulin and amino
acids increased the phosphorylation of T36 PHAS-I, T45 PHAS-I, and T69
PHAS-I, indicating that the stimulatory effects of these agents
on the phosphorylation of Thr36, Thr45, and Thr69 occurred
independently of other sites. Although the accumulation of phosphate in
Ser64 is complicated by the dependence on prior phosphorylation
of the TP sites, the finding that amino acids and insulin increased the phosphorylation of the same four sites is consistent with the hypothesis that these agents act via a common upstream effector. The
effect of insulin on increasing the phosphorylation of PHAS-I is
mediated by the protein kinase B (PKB) signaling pathway (11, 33,
37); however, PKB is not activated by amino acids (14, 39). mTOR is a more likely common effector, since the
effects of both insulin and amino acids are attenuated by
rapamycin. The PHAS-I kinase activity of mTOR is increased in response
to insulin (33, 34). Activation of mTOR occurs by a
PKB-dependent pathway, which leads to an increase in phosphorylation of
Ser2448 in the COOH-terminal region of mTOR (25, 33). Amino
acids appear to have a permissive effect on the phosphorylation of mTOR
by PKB (25).
The marked effects of rapamycin on decreasing the phosphorylation of
Thr69 suggest that this site might be directly phosphorylated in cells
by mTOR, which is able to phosphorylate Thr69 in vitro (4).
Decreasing Thr69 phosphorylation by rapamycin would be expected to
reduce the phosphorylation of Ser64. Nevertheless, it is paradoxical
that phosphorylation of Thr36 and Thr45, the sites preferred by mTOR in
vitro (6, 10, 40), is less sensitive to rapamycin than is
the phosphorylation of Thr69 and Ser64. A kinase that associates with
mTOR and that can be released upon incubation with an mTOR antiserum
was recently described (16). This enzyme was reported to
specifically phosphorylate Ser64 and to promote the dissociation of the
PHAS-I-eIF4E complex, but the kinase phosphorylated PHAS-I only
when it was bound to eIF4E, a finding that would seem to exclude
a role in phosphorylating Ser64 in the free PHAS-I protein. It was
recently concluded that MAP kinase participates in the control of
PHAS-I (30), as was proposed several years ago
(20). However, it has been argued that MAP kinase activation
is neither necessary nor sufficient for the phosphorylation of PHAS-I
(38). Additional work is needed to identify the kinases that
phosphorylate PHAS-I in cells.
Far Western analysis was used to investigate the effect of
phosphorylating PHAS-I in vitro on eIF4E binding. An advantage of this
method is that it allows a direct assessment of eIF4E binding to
purified PHAS-I proteins phosphorylated in defined sites. We recently
demonstrated that phosphorylation of Thr45 in T45 PHAS-I markedly
decreased FLAG-eIF4E binding whereas phosphorylating Thr36 in T36
PHAS-I or Ser82 in S82 PHAS-I had less pronounced inhibitory effects on
binding (40). In the present study, phosphorylation of S64
PHAS-I by MAP kinase in vitro was found to abolish FLAG-eIF4E binding.
Interestingly, introducing Asp at position 64 in 5A PHAS-I did not
decrease eIF4E binding, indicating that acidic substitutions do not
mimic the effect of phosphorylating the mutant protein in Ser64. The
excellent correlation between the loss of eIF4E binding and the
stoichiometry of S64 PHAS-I phosphorylation leaves little doubt that
Ser64 phosphorylation inhibits binding. In an earlier study in which WT
PHAS-I was phosphorylated by MAP kinase, the loss of binding did not
appear to correlate with the extent of phosphorylation of Ser64, and it
was concluded that phosphorylating Ser64 did not inhibit eIF4E binding
(8). Imprecision in measuring the stoichiometry of
phosphorylation of Ser64, which was complicated by the presence of
other sites in this previous study, is the likely reason for the
erroneous conclusion. We have been unable to efficiently phosphorylate
Thr69 in vitro; however, Thr69 in T69 PHAS-I may be almost completely
phosphorylated in cells, as evidenced by the accumulation of most of
the protein in the
electrophoretic form. FLAG-eIF4E binding to this
phosphorylated form was attenuated (Mothe-Satney and Lawrence,
unpublished), indicating that phosphorylation of Thr69 decreases the
affinity of PHAS-I for eIF4E. Taken together, the results of far
Western analyses of the phosphorylated forms of T36, T45, S64, T69, and S82 PHAS-I indicate the following order for the influence of
phosphorylation on eIF4E binding in vitro: Ser64 > Thr45 > Thr69 > Thr36 > Ser82. Thr45 and Ser64 flank the
eIF4E-binding motif (23), which may explain their greater
influence relative to the other sites.
The effects of mutating the different sites on eIF4E binding of PHAS-I
proteins in cells were assessed by both far Western analyses and
copurification of mutant proteins with endogenous eIF4E. Presumably,
the presence of other endogenous proteins, such as eIF4G, that
influence the binding of PHAS-I to eIF4E in cells could lead to
differences between binding assessed by the two methods. It is
reassuring that when expressed relative to the binding of 5A PHAS-I,
there was reasonably good agreement between binding results obtained by
far Western analysis and by copurification with eIF4E. In contrast, the
relative influence of in vitro phosphorylation of the different sites
on eIF4E binding did not correlate with the relative effects of
mutating the sites on eIF4E binding of PHAS-I proteins expressed in
cells. For example, mutating Ser64 had little, if any, effect on the
amount of PHAS-I bound to eIF4E in cells. To investigate the
possibility that the Ala mutation itself might have decreased binding,
we expressed proteins with Asn, Cys, and Thr substitutions at position
64. Our choice of these substitutions was influenced by the recent discussion of unpublished structural studies in which Ser64 was placed
in close proximity to Glu70 in eIF4E. If they are positioned appropriately, a hydrogen bond could form between these two residues. If this were the case, introducing an Ala mutation in place of Ser64
would reduce the binding affinity, since Ala cannot participate in
hydrogen bonding. The three alternative substitutions have the
potential to participate in hydrogen bonding but (except for Thr)
cannot be phosphorylated. The result that binding of C64 PHAS-I and N64
PHAS-I to eIF4E in cells was very similar to that of A64 PHAS-I
supports the conclusion that phosphorylation of Ser64 is not necessary
for the dissociation of the PHAS-I-eIF4E complex. Whether Ser64
phosphorylation is sufficient to inhibit binding in cells is still not clear.
We also found that mutating Ala36 increased eIF4E binding much more
than expected on the basis of the modest effect of Thr36 phosphorylation on eIF4E binding in vitro observed previously (40). The fact that the Ala36 mutation not only
ablates the Thr36 site but also decreases the phosphorylation of Ser64
in cells is a potential explanation. The result that binding of eIF4E to PHAS-I
, which may be generated by the phosphorylation of Ser64 in
combination with Thr69, is never observed supports the concept that
phosphorylation of Ser64 may act in combination with the phosphorylation of other sites to modulate the affinity of PHAS-I for
eIF4E. While such interactions also complicate the interpretation of
the findings with A45 PHAS-I and A69 PHAS-I, they provide an elegant
mechanism through which the phosphorylation of the TP sites can control
eIF4E binding by facilitating the accumulation of phosphate in Ser64.
Mutating any individual site except Ser64 increased eIF4E binding, and
there was a very good correlation between the amount of PHAS-I bound to
eIF4E and the inhibition of cap-dependent mRNA translation. Thus,
each of the TP sites appears to be able to influence mRNA translation,
either directly by modulating the binding affinity of PHAS-I and eIF4E
or indirectly by affecting the phosphorylation of Ser64. The
equivalents of Thr36, Thr45, Ser64, and Thr69 are found in all members
of the PHAS family thus far discovered in species ranging from slime
mold to humans on the evolutionary scale. Presumably, the functional
importance explains why the sites are so highly conserved.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This research was supported in part by National Institutes of
Health grants DK52753 and DK28312 (to J.C.L.), NIH grants HL19242 and
DK52378 (to T.A.J.H.), and a fellowship from the Juvenile Diabetes
Foundation (to I.M.-S.).
We thank John Majors for p2332, Kevin Bowman for expert technical
assistance, and Gregory Brunn and Angus Scrimgeour for their critical
reading of the manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Pharmacology, University of Virginia Health System, P.O. Box 800735, Charlottesville, VA 22908. Phone: (804) 924-1584. Fax: (804) 982-3575. E-mail: JCL3p{at}Virginia.edu.
Present address: Department of Hematology and Oncology, St.
Judes Children's Hospital, 335 North Lauderdale, Memphis, TN 38105.
 |
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 2000, p. 3558-3567, Vol. 20, No. 10
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