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Vol. 13, No. 11, pp. 1422-1437, June 1, 1999
1 Department of Biochemistry and McGill Cancer Center, McGill University, Montréal, Québec, H3G 1Y6, Canada; 3 Department of Molecular Biotechnology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195-7730 USA; 4 Cell Signaling Laboratory, New England Biolabs, Beverly, Massachusetts 01915 USA; 5 Department of Pharmacology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27710 USA; 6 Signal Pharmaceutical, San Diego, California 92121 USA
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Abstract |
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The multisubunit eukaryotic translation initiation factor (eIF) 4F recruits 40S ribosomal subunits to the 5' end of mRNA. The eIF4F subunit eIF4E interacts directly with the mRNA 5' cap structure. Assembly of the eIF4F complex is inhibited by a family of repressor polypeptides, the eIF4E-binding proteins (4E-BPs). Binding of the 4E-BPs to eIF4E is regulated by phosphorylation: Hypophosphorylated 4E-BP isoforms interact strongly with eIF4E, whereas hyperphosphorylated isoforms do not. 4E-BP1 is hypophosphorylated in quiescent cells, but is hyperphosphorylated on multiple sites following exposure to a variety of extracellular stimuli. The PI3-kinase/Akt pathway and the kinase FRAP/mTOR signal to 4E-BP1. FRAP/mTOR has been reported to phosphorylate 4E-BP1 directly in vitro. However, it is not known if FRAP/mTOR is responsible for the phosphorylation of all 4E-BP1 sites, nor which sites must be phosphorylated to release 4E-BP1 from eIF4E. To address these questions, a recombinant FRAP/mTOR protein and a FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitate were utilized in in vitro kinase assays to phosphorylate 4E-BP1. Phosphopeptide mapping of the in vitro-labeled protein yielded two 4E-BP1 phosphopeptides that comigrated with phosphopeptides produced in vivo. Mass spectrometry analysis indicated that these peptides contain phosphorylated Thr-37 and Thr-46. Thr-37 and Thr-46 are efficiently phosphorylated in vitro by FRAP/mTOR when 4E-BP1 is bound to eIF4E. However, phosphorylation at these sites was not associated with a loss of eIF4E binding. Phosphorylated Thr-37 and Thr-46 are detected in all phosphorylated in vivo 4E-BP1 isoforms, including those that interact with eIF4E. Finally, mutational analysis demonstrated that phosphorylation of Thr-37/Thr-46 is required for subsequent phosphorylation of several carboxy-terminal serum-sensitive sites. Taken together, our results suggest that 4E-BP1 phosphorylation by FRAP/mTOR on Thr-37 and Thr-46 is a priming event for subsequent phosphorylation of the carboxy-terminal serum-sensitive sites.
[Key Words: Phosphorylation regulation; translation initiation; rapamycin; signal transduction]
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Introduction |
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Regulation of translation plays an important role in controlling
cell growth and proliferation (Conlon and Raff 1999
).
An increase in translation rates is necessary for entry into and transit through the G1 phase of the cell cycle (Brooks 1977
). Deregulation of translation is associated with aberrant growth, tumorigenicity, and apoptosis (Sonenberg 1993
; Polunovsky et al. 1996
).
In eukaryotes, the predominant step of translational regulation is the
recruitment of the small ribosomal subunit to mRNA. This occurs through
the binding of eIF4E to the mRNA 5' cap structure (m7GpppX, where X is any nucleotide). eIF4E
is a component of the tripartite eIF4F (eukaryotic
translation initiation factor
4F) complex, along with two other subunits, eIF4G and
eIF4A. eIF4A is an RNA helicase posited to unwind mRNA secondary
structure. eIF4G serves as a modular scaffolding protein that binds
eIF4E, eIF4A, eIF3, and the poly(A)-binding protein, and that bridges the 40S ribosome and the mRNA (for review, see Merrick and Hershey 1996
; Hentze 1997
).
Cap-dependent translation is regulated in part by the eIF4E-binding
proteins (4E-BPs; also known as PHAS, for phosphorylated heat- and acid-stable), a
family of three small (10-12 kD) acidic proteins that compete with
eIF4G for binding to a common binding site on eIF4E. Both the 4E-BPs
and eIF4G interact with eIF4E through an eIF4E-binding motif
(YXXXXL
, where X is any amino acid and
is a hydrophobic
residue). Consistent with this observation, overexpression of 4E-BPs in
mammalian cells, or addition of 4E-BPs to translation extracts, results
in the inhibition of cap-dependent, but not cap-independent,
translation (Pause et al. 1994
).
Binding of the 4E-BPs to eIF4E is reversible and is dependent on the
phosphorylation status of 4E-BP. Hypophosphorylated 4E-BP1 interacts
strongly with eIF4E, whereas hyperphosphorylation of 4E-BP1 drastically
decreases its binding to eIF4E. Exposure of cells to various
extracellular stimuli (such as hormones, mitogens, growth factors,
cytokines, and G-protein-coupled receptor agonists) induces an increase
in 4E-BP1 phosphorylation that coincides (in most cases) with an
increase in translation rates. Conversely, nutrient or growth factor
deprivation results in 4E-BP1 dephosphorylation, an increase in eIF4E
binding, and a concomitant decrease in cap-dependent translation (for
review, see Kleijn et al. 1998
; Sonenberg and Gingras 1998
; Raught and
Gingras 1999
). Infection with certain viruses, such as
encephalomyocarditis virus (EMCV), also causes a decrease in 4E-BP1
phosphorylation that coincides with the shut-off of host protein
synthesis (Gingras et al. 1996
).
The pathway leading to 4E-BP1 phosphorylation involves the
phosphoinositide-3 (PI3) kinase and its downstream effector, the serine-threonine kinase Akt (for review, see Sonenberg and Gingras 1998
; Raught and Gingras 1999
). The role of PI3 kinase in 4E-BP1 phosphorylation was demonstrated in several ways; for example, treatment of cells with LY294002 and wortmannin, two potent PI3-kinase inhibitors, prevents 4E-BP1 hyperphosphorylation following hormone or
growth factor stimulation. Conversely, expression of an activated form
of the catalytic subunit of PI3 kinase increases 4E-BP1 phosphorylation (von Manteuffel et al. 1996
; Gingras et al. 1998
). Akt (also known as
protein kinase B), which prevents cell death in many cell systems (for
review, see Franke et al. 1997
; Downward 1998
) was also shown to affect
4E-BP1 phosphorylation. Overexpression of a constitutively active,
membrane-targeted form of Akt induces 4E-BP1 phosphorylation on the
same sites that are phosphorylated in vivo after serum stimulation
(Gingras et al. 1998
; Kohn et al. 1998
). Conversely, overexpression of
a kinase-dead Akt acts in a dominant-negative fashion to prevent
insulin-induced 4E-BP1 phosphorylation (Gingras et al. 1998
).
Expression of the activated Akt mutant confers wortmannin but not
rapamycin resistance to 4E-BP1 phosphorylation (Gingras et al. 1998
),
indicating that the rapamycin-sensitive signaling pathway component
lies downstream of Akt.
The rapamycin-sensitive component in the 4E-BP1 phosphorylation pathway
is FRAP/mTOR
(FKBP12-rapamycin associated
protein/mammalian target of rapamycin), also
known as RAFT1 (rapamycin and 12-kD FK506 binding protein target
1), a member of the PIK
(phosphoinositide kinase-related) family of kinases. The PIK family also
includes kinases such as DNA-PK and ATM (for review, see Hoekstra
1997
). FRAP/mTOR is the target of the immunosuppressive
drug rapamycin that, in a complex with the immunophilin FKBP-12, binds
to FRAP/mTOR to inhibit its function.
FRAP/mTOR is the mammalian homolog of the yeast TOR
proteins, which regulate G1 progression, and which modulate
translation in response to nutrient availability (for review, see
Thomas and Hall 1997
). Recent results indicate that regulation of
translation by FRAP/mTOR in response to nutrient availability also operates in mammals: Amino acid deprivation decreases
the phosphorylation of 4E-BP1, likely through modulation of
FRAP/mTOR activity (Fox et al. 1998
; Hara et al. 1998
;
Wang et al. 1998
; Xu et al. 1998
). Overexpression of a
rapamycin-resistant form of FRAP/mTOR confers rapamycin
resistance to 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. Immunoprecipitates of
FRAP/mTOR from rat brain, or from cells transfected with
a tagged form of mTOR, contain a kinase activity capable of
phosphorylating 4E-BP1. Immunoprecipitates of a catalytically inactive
FRAP/mTOR mutant from mammalian cells fail to
phosphorylate 4E-BP1, indicating that FRAP kinase activity is required
for 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. Similarly, addition of a complex of
FKBP12-rapamycin to the kinase reaction abrogates phosphorylation of
4E-BP1, indicating that the kinase activity present in the FRAP
immunoprecipitates is sensitive to rapamycin (Brunn et al. 1997a
,b
;
Burnett et al. 1998
). There is disagreement, however, as to the number
and identity of the sites phosphorylated by FRAP/mTOR.
Brunn et al. (1997a)
reported the phosphorylation of five 4E-BP1
Ser/Thr-Pro sites by a FRAP/mTOR
immunoprecipitate in vitro, and concluded that FRAP/mTOR
was responsible for the phosphorylation of all in vivo 4E-BP1
phosphorylation sites (Fadden et al. 1997
). However, Burnett et al.
(1998)
subsequently reported that only two 4E-BP1 sites, threonines 37 and 46 (the numbering throughout this paper is according to the human
4E-BP1 protein), were phosphorylated by FRAP/mTOR. When
threonines 37 and 46 were mutated to alanines, binding to eIF4E was
reported to be constitutive (Burnett et al. 1998
). These authors
concluded that phosphorylation of Thr-37 and Thr-46 leads to the
dissociation of 4E-BP1 from eIF4E. Another report demonstrated however
that 4E-BP1 phosphorylated on Thr-37 is associated with eIF4E (Fadden
et al. 1997
).
4E-BP1 is phosphorylated in vivo on multiple residues (Fadden et al.
1997
; Heesom et al. 1998
). However, the order of phosphate addition and
the functional significance of each phosphorylation event regarding the
interaction of 4E-BP1 with eIF4E is unknown. The relative sensitivity
of each site to different stimuli and pharmacological inhibitors also
remains unknown. For example, one report indicates that all of the
phosphorylation sites are sensitive to serum and rapamycin (Fadden et
al. 1997
), whereas other groups have observed a differential
sensitivity for different subsets of sites (von Manteuffel et al. 1997
;
Gingras et al. 1998
).
Here, we show that the phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 by both a FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitate and a baculovirus-expressed FRAP/mTOR protein occurs on two sites only, Thr-37 and Thr-46. FRAP/mTOR is demonstrated to phosphorylate 4E-BP1 in an eIF4E/4E-BP1 complex. Thr-37 and Thr-46 are phosphorylated to a high degree in serum-starved cells, in which most of the 4E-BP1 is complexed to eIF4E. Although phosphorylation of Thr-37 and Thr-46 by FRAP is not sufficient to abolish the eIF4E/4E-BP1 interaction, mutational analysis indicates that it serves as a priming event for subsequent phosphorylation of other Ser/Thr-Pro sites in 4E-BP1.
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Results |
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Both recombinant FRAP/mTOR and a FRAP/mTOR immune complex phosphorylate 4E-BP1
Phosphopeptide mapping has proven to be a powerful method in the
study of the sensitivity of specific phosphorylation sites to various
stimuli (see, e.g., Fleurent et al. 1997
; von Manteuffel et al. 1997
;
Burnett et al. 1998
; Gingras et al. 1998
). This technique is also
applied to the identification of putative kinases by comparing the
pattern of the phosphopeptides generated in vitro with those phosphorylated in vivo. Here it was used to better define the role of
FRAP/mTOR in 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. A rat brain FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitate
and a purified baculovirus-expressed Flag-tagged FRAP/mTOR fusion
protein were used in an in vitro kinase assay with recombinant human
4E-BP1 as a substrate. 32P-Labeled 4E-BP1 was separated via
SDS-PAGE, then transferred to nitrocellulose membranes, which were
subjected to autoradiography. 4E-BP1 was readily phosphorylated by both
preparations of FRAP/mTOR (data not shown). The membrane
piece bearing the labeled 4E-BP1 protein was excised and incubated in a
trypsin/chymotrypsin mixture, and two-dimensional
phosphopeptide mapping was performed on the liberated peptides. The map
prepared from 4E-BP1 phosphorylated by the rat brain
FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitate yielded two major phosphopeptides (indicated as 1 and 2; Fig. 1A). In
parallel, serum-stimulated 293 cells were labeled in vivo with
[32P]orthophosphate, and endogenous 4E-BP1 was subjected to
tryptic/chymotryptic mapping (Fig. 1B). Mixing of the in
vitro- and the in vivo-labeled products demonstrated that the two
phosphopeptides generated by FRAP/mTOR labeling comigrate
with the two most prominent in vivo phosphopeptides (Fig. 1C). The same
major phosphopeptides were observed in 4E-BP1 phosphorylated by a
recombinant baculovirus-expressed FRAP/mTOR (Fig. 1D),
consistent with the notion that 4E-BP1 phosphorylation on these sites
is catalyzed by FRAP/mTOR itself, and not by a contaminating kinase in the immunoprecipitate.
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It should be noted that it remains possible that an endogenous kinase from the insect cells coprecipitates with FRAP/mTOR during the purification procedure; this possibility would be excluded by the use of bacterially-expressed FRAP/mTOR. However, attempts to express FRAP/mTOR in bacteria have been unsuccessful in our laboratory and others. The peptide of lower intensity observed in Figure 1A next to peptide 1 was obtained in several experiments and appears to comigrate with an in vivo peptide. However, unlike peptides 1 and 2, its intensity decreases drastically if the FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitate is washed at higher stringency, or if recombinant 4E-BP1 is incubated for shorter times with the FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitate. Also, phosphorylation of this peptide was extremely weak in the 4E-BP1 sample phosphorylated with baculovirus-expressed FRAP/mTOR. Thus, phosphorylation at this residue may arise as a consequence of a contaminating kinase activity in our preparations of FRAP/mTOR. Other peptides are visible in some experiments, but also appear to be due to a contaminating kinase activity. Because the immunoprecipitated material is more readily available, FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitates were used in all subsequent experiments.
Identification of in vivo 4E-BP1 phosphorylation sites
To identify in vivo 4E-BP1 phosphorylation sites, 293 cells were grown to confluence, then starved of serum. A portion of the cells was then incubated with [32P]orthophosphate, stimulated with serum, and lysed. The remainder of the cells was treated in the same manner, without the labeling step. 4E-BP1 was then immunoprecipitated and the labeled and unlabeled immunoprecipitates were mixed, separated by SDS-PAGE, and transferred onto a nitrocellulose membrane. After autoradiography, the protein was subjected to two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping (a representative map is shown in Fig. 2A). Peptides 1 and 2, which comigrated with the in vitro FRAP/mTOR phosphorylated 4E-BP1 peptides, as well as peptides 3-5, which migrated in the same area as peptide 2, were scraped from the two-dimensional phosphopeptide map and eluted. Phosphopeptides were identified by capillary liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). The tandem mass spectrum for phosphopeptide 1 corresponds to 44-STTPGGTR-51, with the phosphorylation site being Thr-46 (Fig. 2B). Peptide 2 was identified as 21-VVLGDGVQLPPGDYSTTPGGTLF-43, with the phosphorylation site being Thr-37 (data not shown). Peptides 3-5, whose intensities varied from experiment to experiment, contain both phospho-Thr-37 and phospho-Thr-46 and are derived from partially digested products (data not shown). The sequence of each identified phosphopeptide and the position of the phosphorylated amino acids are shown in Figure 2C. In agreement with these findings, all of these peptides contained only phosphothreonine, as detected by phosphoaminoacid analysis (data not shown). Threonines 37 and 46 are located in the middle of 4E-BP1, immediately amino-terminal to the eIF4E-binding site (Fig. 2D).
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FRAP/mTOR phosphorylates Thr-37 and Thr-46
To confirm that the in vivo phosphorylation sites were the same as those phosphorylated in vitro by FRAP/mTOR, histidine-tagged mutants of 4E-BP1 containing either a Thr-37-Ala or a Thr-46-Ala mutation were phosphorylated by a FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitate. Quantitatively, both mutant proteins were phosphorylated to approximately half the extent of wild-type 4E-BP1 (data not shown). Tryptic/chymotryptic mapping of the mutants was also performed. Whereas the map of the wild-type protein shows the presence of the two phosphopeptides containing Thr-37 and Thr-46, the map of the Thr-37-Ala mutant contains only phosphorylated Thr-46 (cf. Fig. 3, B and A). Similarly, the map from the Thr-46-Ala mutant confirms Thr-46 as a target for FRAP/mTOR (Fig. 3C). When both sites are mutated to alanines, or when the region containing both threonines (amino acids 34-52 in human 4E-BP1) is deleted, the phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 by FRAP/mTOR is almost abolished (these mutants are labeled to <5% of the levels observed for the wild-type protein; data not shown). Thus, Thr-37 and Thr-46 are the two primary amino acids phosphorylated by FRAP/mTOR.
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FRAP/mTOR phosphorylates a 4E-BP1/eIF4E complex
Hypophosphorylated 4E-BPs interact strongly with eIF4E, and one or
more kinases are posited to induce the disruption of the eIF4E/4E-BP complex by phosphorylation of the 4E-BPs.
Thus, the in vivo substrate for a 4E-BP kinase should be a
4E-BP/eIF4E complex, and a physiological 4E-BP kinase(s)
should be able to phosphorylate 4E-BP when bound to eIF4E. To determine
whether the FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitate can phosphorylate
a 4E-BP1/eIF4E complex in vitro, an equimolar quantity
(Fig. 4A, lane 2) or a twofold molar excess of eIF4E
(lane 3) was preincubated with 4E-BP1, then a kinase assay was
performed. As a control for the specificity of the kinase reaction,
4E-BP1 was also phosphorylated under the same conditions with the MAP
kinase ERK2. ERK2 was reported previously to phosphorylate 4E-BP1
preferentially on Ser65 (Haystead et al. 1994
), but is unable to
phosphorylate 4E-BP1 complexed with eIF4E (Lin et al. 1995
). The
presence of eIF4E did not reduce FRAP/mTOR phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 (Fig. 4A, cf. lanes 2 and 3 to lane 1). In
contrast, although ERK2 readily phosphorylated free 4E-BP1, it failed
to phosphorylate 4E-BP1 in the presence of a twofold molar excess of
eIF4E (cf. lanes 6 and 4). eIF4E prevented phosphorylation of the
wild-type 4E-BP1 by ERK2, but not of a 4E-BP1 mutant lacking the eIF4E
binding site (Fig. 4A, lanes 7 and 8), indicating that the inhibition
by eIF4E is a direct consequence of its interaction with 4E-BP1. eIF4E
was not a substrate for FRAP/mTOR, nor for ERK2 (Fig.
4A). 4E-BP1 phosphorylated by FRAP/mTOR in the presence (Fig. 4B) or absence (Fig. 4C) of eIF4E was analyzed by two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping. In both cases, Thr-37 and Thr-46 were the
primary phosphorylation sites. Phosphorylation of the
4E-BP1/eIF4E complex by a FRAP/mTOR
immunoprecipitate is consistent with it (or an associated kinase) being
a physiological 4E-BP1 kinase.
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FRAP/mTOR phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 does not disrupt the 4E-BP1/eIF4E complex
After establishing that FRAP/mTOR can phosphorylate 4E-BP1 complexed with eIF4E, it was important to determine whether phosphorylation of Thr-37/Thr-46 disrupts the 4E-BP1/eIF4E complex. A 4E-BP1/eIF4E complex was phosphorylated by FRAP/mTOR, then incubated with a cap analog (m7GDP) coupled to agarose beads, washed, and subjected to SDS-PAGE. As demonstrated in Figure 4, the addition of eIF4E did not affect the phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 by FRAP/mTOR (Fig. 5A, bottom panel, cf. lanes 1 and 2). Importantly, most of the 32P-labeled 4E-BP1 (~65%) was retained on the m7GDP beads in the presence of eIF4E (Fig. 5A, cf. lane 2, top and lane 2, bottom panel). A portion of 4E-BP1 (~35%) was found in the unbound fraction after the m7GDP-agarose pull-down (cf. middle and bottom panels, lane 2). This procedure does not quantitatively sequester eIF4E either, however, as ~20% of the eIF4E is also present in the unbound fraction (data not shown). 4E-BP1 in the bound and unbound fractions was analyzed by two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping. Similar levels of phospho-Thr-37 and phospho-Thr-46 were observed in each case (Fig. 5B), demonstrating that the phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 on Thr-37 and Thr-46 does not disrupt the 4E-BP1/eIF4E complex. It cannot be ruled out, however, that only monophosphorylated 4E-BP1 molecules interact with eIF4E and that the proteins phosphorylated on both residues do not bind. Nevertheless, more phosphorylated 4E-BP1 remains bound to eIF4E than dissociates after incubation with FRAP/mTOR. This indicates that the kinase activity present in the FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitate is insufficient to disrupt the 4E-BP1:eIF4E complex. Consistent with this result, a deletion of the region encompassing Thr-37 and Thr-46 (amino acids 34-50) binds to eIF4E to the same extent as the wild-type protein, indicating that these amino acids are not involved in mediating eIF4E binding (data not shown). Furthermore, a bacterially expressed double mutant of 4E-BP1 Thr-37-Glu/Thr-46-Glu (designed to mimic phosphorylation at these residues) was also without effect on eIF4E binding (data not shown).
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Thr-37 and Thr-46 are phosphorylated to a high stoichiometry in serum-starved cells and are detected in all phosphorylated isoforms in vivo
Multiple sites on 4E-BP1 are phosphorylated following the addition of serum to serum-starved cells. However, 4E-BP1 is phosphorylated to a significant extent even in 293 cells deprived of serum. To map the phosphoaminoacids present in serum-starved cells, starved or stimulated 293 cells were labeled with [32P]orthophosphate in vivo, and phosphopeptide maps were generated from immunoprecipitated 4E-BP1. Phosphopeptides containing phospho-Thr-37 and -Thr-46 are present at relatively high levels in serum-starved cells, and their total quantity increased only marginally following serum-stimulation relative to the quantity of protein present, in contrast to the serum-induced phosphopeptides a-d (Fig. 6, cf. panels A and B; phosphopeptides a-d are very sensitive to minor variations in serum treatment. Depending on the confluency and passage number of the cells, the time span of serum-starvation and stimulation and even the batch of serum, the quantity of these phosphopeptides vary; see, e.g., Figs. 1B, 2A, and 6B).
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An increase in 4E-BP1 phosphorylation is accompanied by a decrease in
its electrophoretic mobility. To determine the order of phosphate
addition, each of the forms separated by SDS-PAGE was mapped. As
previously observed (e.g., Beretta et al. 1996
; Gingras et al. 1996
;
von Manteuffel et al. 1997
; Gingras et al. 1998
), multiple isoforms of
human 4E-BP1 incorporate 32P in vivo (3-5 distinct bands,
depending on the cell type and resolution of the gel; in Fig. 7A,
inset, three bands were separated). Tryptic maps from
the slowest (Fig. 7A) and the fastest (Fig. 7B) migrating isoform are
shown. Phosphopeptides containing Thr-37 and Thr-46 are present in both
4E-BP1 isoforms (cf. panels B and A). This observation is not
restricted to human cells, because phospho-Thr-37 and phospho-Thr-46
are also observed in the fastest migrating phosphorylated 4E-BP1
isoforms from Rat1a cells (data not shown). Thus, phosphorylation of
Thr-37 and Thr-46 appears to be an early event in a sequential process
of 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. Phosphorylated Thr-37 and Thr-46 are
detected in isoforms that bind eIF4E as well as in isoforms that do not
bind eIF4E (see, e.g., von Manteuffel et al. 1996
). These data also
show that phosphorylation of Thr-37 and Thr-46 does not cause a shift
in electrophoretic mobility upon 4E-BP1 hyperphosphorylation.
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To confirm that phospho-Thr-37 and -Thr-46 are present in all phosphorylated isoforms and that their phosphorylation status is only marginally affected by serum addition, phosphospecific antibodies to Thr-37 and Thr-46 were developed. The sequences surrounding Thr-37 and Thr-46 are almost identical (Fig. 2D), thus the phosphospecific antibody that was generated against a peptide containing phosphorylated Thr-37 (anti-phospho-Thr-37) does not discriminate between phosphorylated Thr-37 and phosphorylated Thr-46 (data not shown). To confirm the specificity of the phosphospecific antibody, hemagglutinin-tagged wild-type 4E-BP1 and a 4E-BP1 mutant in which Thr-37 and Thr-46 were mutated to alanines were transfected into 293T cells. The phosphospecific antibody detected the wild-type 4E-BP1 protein, but failed to detect the Thr-37-Ala/Thr-46-Ala mutant, although both proteins were expressed to a similar level (Fig. 8A, cf. lanes 1 and 2 with lanes 3 and 4). Also, the phosphospecific antibody recognizes the phosphorylated peptide containing Thr-37, but not the unphosphorylated peptide (data not shown), indicating that the phosphate group is an essential part of the antibody recognition motif.
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Following serum stimulation of 293 cells, duplicate blots were
generated, and probed either with a polyclonal anti-4E-BP1 antiserum or
with the phosphospecific antibody. The electrophoretic mobility of a
significant portion of 4E-BP1 is retarded following serum stimulation
(Fig. 8B, bottom panel). The phosphospecific antibody to
Thr-37/Thr-46 recognizes all 4E-BP1 isoforms separated by
SDS-PAGE (Fig. 8B, top). Using a secondary antibody coupled to
125I, the amount of Thr-37/Thr-46 in all
isoforms was quantified. The intensity of the signal obtained for
phosphorylated Thr-37 and Thr-46 at the time of peak phosphorylation
(time = 30 min; normalized for total expression) is ~1.7-fold
greater than the signal obtained from lysates of serum-starved cells.
In other experiments, this increase was between 1.3- and 1.8-fold (data not shown). Thus, as observed for the in vivo 32P-labeling,
phosphorylation of Thr-37 and Thr-46 is only marginally responsive to
serum stimulation. These data are also consistent with reports
demonstrating that FRAP activity is only marginally enhanced in
response to insulin stimulation (Scott et al. 1998
).
Thr-37 and Thr-46 phosphorylation is sensitive to rapamycin and LY294002 under starvation conditions
The response of Thr-37 and Thr-46 phosphorylation to inhibitors of
PI3 kinase or FRAP/mTOR was also examined. Rapamycin,
LY294002, or wortmannin treatment of 293 cells prior to serum
stimulation prevents the serum-induced hyperphosphorylation of 4E-BP1
(von Manteuffel et al. 1996
). On two-dimensional phosphopeptide maps, treatment with rapamycin and wortmannin causes the disappearance of a
subset of phosphopeptides, whereas others are relatively rapamycin and
wortmannin resistant (von Manteuffel et al. 1997
; Gingras et al. 1998
).
Interestingly, the most rapamycin-, LY294002-, and wortmannin-resistant
phosphopeptides are those containing phosphorylated Thr-37 and Thr-46
(see von Manteuffel et al. 1997
; Gingras et al. 1998
). This result is
puzzling, as FRAP/mTOR itself is rapamycin sensitive and
is also inhibited, at least in vitro, by wortmannin and LY294002 (Brunn
et al. 1996
). To address this apparent discrepancy, starved 293 cells
were incubated with rapamycin, and half of the cells were serum
stimulated in the presence of rapamycin, while the other half was not
serum-stimulated. Thr-37 and Thr-46 phosphorylation decreased
drastically and rapidly following rapamycin treatment in the absence of
subsequent serum stimulation (Fig. 9, top, cf. lane 1 with lanes
2-5). However, when the cells were stimulated with
serum subsequent to rapamycin treatment, this effect was much less
pronounced (top panel, lanes 6-10). The expression level of 4E-BP1
protein was not affected by rapamycin treatment (Fig. 9, bottom).
Pretreatment with the PI3 kinase inhibitor LY294002 produced the same
effect as rapamycin (data not shown). The extent of dephosphorylation
was calculated to be ~sixfold in the absence of subsequent
stimulation and 1.5-2-fold in the presence of serum. Thus, consistent
with Thr-37 and Thr-46 being phosphorylated by FRAP/mTOR,
their phosphorylation is sensitive to rapamycin and LY294002. This
sensitivity is reduced, however, by ~threefold in the presence of
serum. This difference will be addressed in the Discussion.
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Thr-37 and Thr-46 phosphorylation is a priming step required for subsequent phosphorylation of the serum-sensitive sites
In view of the results described above, the biological significance of Thr-37 and Thr-46 phosphorylation remained elusive. To address this issue, constructs encoding hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged wild-type or point mutants of 4E-BP1 (Thr-37-Ala, Thr-46-Ala, Thr-37-Ala/Thr-46-Ala, and Thr-37-Glu/Thr-46-Glu) were transfected into 293T cells, and the pattern of phosphorylation was examined (Peptide maps prepared from 293T cells are identical to those prepared from 293 cells; data not shown). One set of transfected cells was used for 32P-labeling and another served for quantitation of protein by Western blotting. HA-4E-BP1 from 32P-labeled samples was immunoprecipitated using a monoclonal anti-HA antibody, and proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE. Incorporation of 32P was monitored (a representative autoradiograph is shown in Fig. 10A) and normalized to expression levels (a representative Western blot is shown in Fig. 10B). All of the mutants are capable of binding to eIF4E, as eIF4E was coimmunoprecipitated to approximately the same extent in all lanes (Fig. 10A). Coprecipitation of eIF4E with the HA-tagged proteins was confirmed by Western blotting (not shown), consistent with the results obtained with bacterially expressed 4E-BP1 mutants. Unexpectedly, mutation of either Thr-37 or Thr-46 to alanine caused a 10- to 20-fold decrease in 32P incorporation into HA-4E-BP1 (Fig. 10C, cf. lanes 2 and 3 with lane 1). Mutation of both Thr-37 and Thr-46 to alanine almost abolished 4E-BP1 phosphorylation (cf. lane 4 and lane 1), whereas replacement of the two threonines by glutamic acids had a slightly less severe effect (lane 5). The dramatic effect observed for the mutants is much greater than would be expected by abolishing Thr-37 or Thr-46 phosphorylation alone, as these sites account for ~30% each of the total phosphorylation on 4E-BP1 (data not shown). The remaining phosphoamino acids represent ~40% of the total 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. Thus, mutation of the Thr-37 and/or Thr-46 appears to prevent phosphorylation of the other sites.
|
To test the hypothesis that Thr-37 and Thr-46 mutation prevents the phosphorylation of other sites, phosphopeptide maps were generated from the mutant and wild-type proteins. Because the mutant proteins were phosphorylated to a much lower extent than the wild-type protein (Fig. 10), an equivalent quantity of radioactivity was loaded on each plate. Thus, ~10-20 times less material was employed for the wild-type map than for those of the various mutants (Fig. 11, upper left). The characteristic pattern of 4E-BP1 phosphorylation was observed for the wild-type HA-tagged protein (Fig. 11A). The map generated from the Thr-37-Ala mutant shows a similar pattern, with the exception of the disappearance of peptides containing Thr-37 (Fig. 11B; the other peptides migrating in this area result from partial chymotryptic cleavage of the peptide containing Thr-37 and Thr-46, and thus contain phospho-Thr-46). Mutation of Thr-46 has a more pronounced effect on phosphorylation of the other sites. With the exception of two phosphopeptides whose intensity does not change, phosphorylation on all other sites is dramatically reduced as compared to the wild-type protein. It is noteworthy that Thr-37 phosphorylation is also reduced severalfold (Fig. 11C) in the Thr-46-Ala mutant. Thus, Thr-46 appears to play a key role in modulating the phosphorylation of the other sites, including Thr-37. The map generated from the double mutant Thr-37-Ala/Thr-46-Ala showed, as expected, the disappearance of the phosphopeptides containing Thr-37 and Thr-46, but also an extensive decrease in phosphorylation of the remaining sites (Fig. 11D). Strikingly, however, replacement of the Thr-37 and Thr-46 residues by glutamic acids partially restored phosphorylation on the remaining sites, although the signals from Thr-37 and Thr-46 phosphorylation were absent (Fig. 11E). We therefore conclude that mutating threonines 37 and 46 to glutamic acid partially mimics phosphorylated Thr-37 and Thr-46. It should be emphasized, however, that the phosphorylation of the serum-sensitive sites is not restored to wild-type levels in the Thr-37-Glu/Thr-46-Glu mutant (in Fig. 11, an equal number of counts was loaded; thus, ~10 times less material from the wild-type sample was used). These results demonstrate that phosphorylation on Thr-37 and Thr-46 is a prerequisite for the subsequent phosphorylation of the serum-stimulated sites on 4E-BP1, as illustrated in the model in Figure 11F.
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| |
Discussion |
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|
|
|---|
In this report we describe that Thr-37 and Thr-46 are phosphorylated
by FRAP/mTOR in a 4E-BP1/eIF4E complex and
that this phosphorylation does not result in the disruption of the
complex. Thr-37 and Thr-46 are phosphorylated to a high stoichiometry
under serum-starvation conditions, and their phosphorylation state does not significantly increase following serum stimulation. 32P
incorporation into 4E-BP1 in vivo is drastically reduced when either
Thr-37 or Thr-46 is mutated to alanine. Phosphopeptide mapping revealed
that mutation of Thr-37 or Thr-46, which are located amino-terminal to
the eIF4E-binding site, affects phosphorylation of all 4E-BP1 sites,
including the serum-inducible residues. This effect is relieved to some
extent by the mutation of Thr-37 and Thr-46 to glutamic acid, which
partially mimics the phosphorylated threonines (Fig. 11E). Taken
together, these data indicate that phosphorylation of Thr-37 and Thr-46
in vivo is a prerequisite for phosphorylation of serum sensitive 4E-BP1
sites. Several phosphorylation sites were previously reported to be
serum sensitive; these include Thr-37, Thr-46, Ser-65, Thr-70, Ser-83
(all lying in the consensus S/T-P, Fadden et al. 1997
),
and Ser-112 (a site preceded by acidic residues, Heesom et al. 1998
).
In 293 cells, as in Rat1a cells, however, we have observed that the
most serum-sensitive sites are Ser-65 and Thr-70 (A.-C. Gingras, B. Raught, and S.P. Gygi, unpubl.). It remains possible that in different
cell types the sensitivity of the various phosphorylation sites to
extracellular stimuli differs.
Based on our results, we propose a two-step model for 4E-BP1 phosphorylation (Fig. 12). FRAP/mTOR (or a tightly associated kinase) first phosphorylates Thr-37 and Thr-46 on 4E-BP1 complexed with eIF4E. This phosphorylation event appears to be relatively independent of extracellular stimuli. The second step, which is activated by extracellular stimuli, is the phosphorylation of the sites located carboxy-terminal to the eIF4E-binding site, including Ser-65 and Thr-70 (A.-C. Gingras, B. Raught, and S.P. Gygi, unpubl.). The second phosphorylation step results in release from eIF4E and stimulation of translation.
|
Phosphorylation of proteins on multiple residues often occurs in a
sequential manner. In some instances, the recognition site of a kinase
contains a phosphorylated residue. This is the case for glycogen
synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3), which phosphorylates serines or threonines
lying in the consensus SXXXPS, where PS is a
phosphoserine (Fiol et al. 1990
). Other kinases, including casein
kinase I, also exhibit a preference for phosphorylated amino acids in
the vicinity of their target site (Flotow and Roach 1991
). Priming
phosphorylation is, however, not restricted to the kinase recognition
site. For example, phosphorylation may induce a conformational change
in the substrate to render a site more easily accessible to a kinase or
create a docking site for another protein, similar to the
SH2/phosphotyrosine interaction. In this regard, 14-3-3 proteins, which recognize phosphoserines, serve as chaperones,
inhibitors, or adaptors to modulate the function of their binding
partners (Muslin et al. 1996
; Yaffe et al. 1997
).
Many kinases are able to phosphorylate 4E-BP1 in vitro, including
several different MAP kinases (ERK2, JNK, p38), protein kinase C, and
casein kinase II (for review, see Lawrence et al. 1997
; see also A.-C.
Gingras, unpubl.). Other PIK family members, such as ATM and ATR, can
also phosphorylate 4E-BP1 (Banin et al. 1998
; Sarkaria et al. 1998
).
4E-BP1 is mostly unstructured in solution (Fletcher and Wagner 1998
;
Fletcher et al. 1998
). Thus, it is not surprising that it is a good
kinase substrate. Upon binding to eIF4E, however, a localized structure
is induced in the 4E-BP1/eIF4E contact region (Fletcher
and Wagner 1998
; Marcotrigiano et al. 1999
). This induced fit appears
to mask some phosphorylation sites, as ERK2 is unable to phosphorylate
4E-BP1 in a 4E-BP1/eIF4E complex. As previously
mentioned, a 4E-BP1/eIF4E complex is most likely the true
physiological substrate. Therefore, using a complex of
4E-BP1/eIF4E in in vitro kinase assays is more likely to
identify an in vivo kinase. Contrary to ERK2, FRAP/mTOR
phosphorylates 4E-BP1 to the same extent, and on the same sites,
regardless of whether 4E-BP1 is free in solution or bound to eIF4E.
The cocrystal structure of eIF4E complexed with a 4E-BP1 peptide (amino
acids 51-67; amino acids 65-67 were not visible in the density map)
was recently determined (Marcotrigiano et al. 1999
). 4E-BP1 binds
to a phylogenetically conserved region on the convex surface of
eIF4E. Similar results were obtained by nuclear magnetic resonance
(NMR), using both the full-length protein as well as a fragment
of 4E-BP1. Although chemical shifts induced by the peptide and the
full-length 4E-BP1 were largely overlapping, the full-length 4E-BP1
induced shifts in additional eIF4E residues (Matsuo et al. 1997
). This
effect appears to be due to the amino-terminal extension of full-length
4E-BP1, which may include the Thr-46 phosphorylation site. Acidic
residues flank the region on eIF4E in contact with the 4E-BP1 peptide
[Glu-140 and Asp-143 are predicted to be close to 4E-BP1 Thr-46 (J. Marcotrigiano, pers. comm.); Glu-70 is predicted to be in the vicinity
of Ser-65; (J. Marcotrigiano, A.-C. Gingras, N. Sonenberg, and S.K.
Burley, in prep.)]. Thus, it is conceivable that the mechanism leading
to 4E-BP1 release from eIF4E involves electrostatic repulsion between
the negatively charged phosphates on 4E-BP1 and the acidic residues on
eIF4E (Marcotrigiano et al. 1997
). In this regard, phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 at Thr-37 and Thr-46 could theoretically decrease the affinity of 4E-BP1 for eIF4E, although this was not detected in the
m7GDP-agarose-binding experiments (which are only
qualitative; a better stoichiometry of 4E-BP1 phosphorylation by
FRAP/mTOR is required to perform quantitative
measurements of affinity). Alternatively, it is possible that
phosphorylation of Thr-37 and Thr-46 alters the conformation of the
4E-BP1/eIF4E complex to allow access to the other
phosphorylation sites on 4E-BP1. A third possibility is that
phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 by FRAP/mTOR creates a docking site for a different kinase or for an adaptor molecule that recruits a kinase.
The two sites phosphorylated by FRAP/mTOR in vitro are
the least rapamycin sensitive in vivo. Also, under conditions of serum starvation, Thr-37 and Thr-46 are phosphorylated to a high
stoichiometry, relative to the other sites. Furthermore, in cells
treated with rapamycin and subsequently stimulated with serum,
phosphorylation at these sites is only slightly affected (von
Manteuffel et al. 1997
; Gingras et al. 1998
, this paper). Only when
starved cells were treated with rapamycin was a rapid reduction in the
phosphorylation of Thr-37 and Thr-46 observed. Several hypotheses,
which are not mutually exclusive, could explain this observation: (1)
FRAP is inhibited by rapamycin, even in the presence of serum, but
another rapamycin-insensitive/serum-sensitive kinase (for
example a MAP kinase) is responsible for phosphorylating 4E-BP1 under
these conditions; (2) Some residual FRAP kinase activity is retained in
the presence of rapamycin but is inhibited in the absence of serum; (3)
A phosphatase active in the absence of serum, but inactive in the
presence of serum, is responsible for the effect. In the latter case,
if the phosphatase is rapidly inactivated following serum stimulation,
then even a low FRAP/mTOR kinase activity could be
sufficient to induce 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. However, when cells are
serum deprived, the phosphatase activity may predominate. In the
absence of rapamycin, FRAP/mTOR is active and this is
sufficient to phosphorylate Thr-37 and Thr-46. When rapamycin is added
in the absence of serum, however, the balance may change: The
phosphatase could remain active, and the activity of
FRAP/mTOR is inhibited, so a net decrease in the
phosphorylation of Thr-37 and Thr-46 is observed.
Thr-37 and Thr-46 phosphorylation is only moderately increased (1.3- to
1.7-fold) following serum stimulation. This modest serum sensitivity is
comparable to that reported for FRAP/mTOR activation by
insulin (Scott and Lawrence 1998
; Scott et al. 1998
). There is no
evidence at present that Thr-37 and Thr-46 phosphorylation occurs
downstream of Akt, as opposed to the phosphorylation of the
serum-sensitive sites (Gingras et al. 1998
). The induction of
phosphorylation by serum on the sites carboxy-terminal to the eIF4E-binding motif is far more pronounced (see Fig. 6), although an
exact quantification was not possible in this study. The most prominent
serum-induced sites have been mapped to Ser-65 and Thr-70 (A.-C.
Gingras, B. Raught, and S.P. Gygi, unpubl.). Because the serum-responsive sites on 4E-BP1 are also the most rapamycin sensitive, it is highly likely that FRAP/mTOR is involved in their
phosphorylation, although probably not directly. It remains possible
that the rapamycin-induced dephosphorylation of Thr-37 and Thr-46
prevents the subsequent phosphorylation of the serum-sensitive sites
following serum stimulation. This is, however, unlikely because
phosphorylation on Thr37 and Thr46 is restored with rapid kinetics to
almost maximal levels following addition of serum, whereas the
serum-sensitive sites remain dephosphorylated. It is also important to
mention that the relatively high level of phosphorylated Thr-37 and
Thr-46 in the rapamycin-treated, serum-stimulated cells (Fig. 9) is not sufficient to induce phosphorylation on the serum-sensitive sites. Thus, FRAP/mTOR likely impacts on the phosphorylation of
the serum-sensitive sites either by stimulating their phosphorylation
following serum stimulation or by inducing their dephosphorylation in
the presence of rapamycin. In this regard, an attractive hypothesis as
to the function of FRAP/mTOR is that it serves as a
gatekeeper, somewhat similar to the mechanisms controlling the cell
cycle at the restriction point. FRAP/mTOR could alter the
phosphorylation of the serum-sensitive sites of 4E-BP1 through the
modulation of the activity of a kinase or a phosphatase.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a nutrient-induced,
rapamycin-sensitive association between the phosphatases PP2A or Sit4
(the yeast homolog of protein phosphatase 6) and a protein named TAP42 was reported. This association was postulated to modulate the activity
or substrate specificity of the phosphatases, or to target them to
specific substrates. Because of the rapamycin-sensitive nature of this
interaction, it was postulated that the phosphatases and TAP42 were
downstream components in the TOR signaling pathway. In mammals, a
homolog of TAP42,
4, associates with mammalian PP2A, as well as
with protein phosphatases 4 and 6 (Chen et al. 1998
). However,
regulation of the association and activity of these proteins by
FRAP/mTOR remains controversial. A recent report indicates that PP2A can partially dephosphorylate a
FRAP/mTOR-phosphorylated 4E-BP1 substrate in vitro and
that the dephosphorylation can be prevented by preincubation of TAP42
with PP2A (Nanahoshi et al. 1998
). Thus, it is possible that
phosphatases play an active role in FRAP/mTOR signaling to 4E-BP1.
Our data are consistent with FRAP/mTOR being a
physiological 4E-BP1 kinase, as was suggested previously (Brunn et al.
1997a
,b
; Burnett et al. 1998
). However, there are discrepancies between our results and the data reported previously. Brunn et al. (1997a)
found that FRAP/mTOR phosphorylates five sites (Thr-37,
Thr-46, Ser-65, Thr-70, and Ser-83) on 4E-BP1. Using the same antibody used by Brunn et al. (as well as baculovirus-expressed
FRAP/mTOR), we obtained significant and reproducible
phosphorylation only on Thr-37 and Thr-46. We also detected other
phosphopeptides in some of our kinase assays, but phosphorylation of
these phosphopeptides was not reproducible. These phosphopeptides were
labeled only to a very low stoichiometry as compared to Thr-37 and
Thr-46, and, as mentioned previously, washing the
FRAP/mTOR immunoprecipitate with a stringent buffer
decreased their phosphorylation even further. We believe that the
differences between our results and those of Brunn et al. are probably
due to the washing conditions of the immunoprecipitate and times of
incubation (see Materials and Methods). It is possible that a kinase
that is tightly associated with FRAP/mTOR is responsible
for the phosphorylation reported for the other residues on 4E-BP1. Our
data are largely in agreement with those of Burnett et al. (1998)
,
which defined Thr-37 and Thr-46 as the two sites phosphorylated by
FRAP/mTOR on 4E-BP1. However, Burnett et al. (1998)
reported that, in vitro, phosphorylation of 4E-BP1 at Thr-37 and Thr-46
by FRAP/mTOR decreases binding to eIF4E. We did not
observe such a decrease, as we clearly detected Thr-37 and Thr-46 in
the fractions bound to eIF4E. However, no quantitative measurement of
the eIF4E/4E-BP1 interaction was performed, so it remains
possible that the strength of this interaction is decreased by
phosphorylation on Thr-37 and Thr-46. Burnett et al. (1998)
also
reported that mutants of Thr-37 and Thr-46 expressed in 293 cells bind
constitutively to eIF4E. We obtained the same result (A.-C.
Gingras, unpubl.), but explain it by the fact that Thr-37 and Thr-46
are necessary for the phosphorylation of the serum-inducible
phosphorylation sites, which lead to 4E-BP1 dissociation from eIF4E.
It is of the utmost importance to determine which kinases phosphorylate the serum-sensitive sites of 4E-BP1. It is highly likely that Ser-65 and Thr-70, the most serum-sensitive sites, are phosphorylated by a proline-directed kinase. However, because of the lack of sensitivity to the MEK inhibitor PD98059, it is unlikely that ERKs are involved in mediating the phosphorylation on the serum-sensitive sites. Other MAP kinase family members (such as JNK and p38), which can phosphorylate 4E-BP1 in vitro, are not activated by the same stimuli that cause 4E-BP1 phosphorylation. Other proline-directed kinases, such as the cyclin-dependent kinases, are not likely to be involved in phosphorylating 4E-BP1 in vivo, because they are mostly nuclear, whereas 4E-BP1 is present mainly in the cytoplasm. One approach to identify these kinases, based on our results, is to use a 4E-BP1/eIF4E complex prephosphorylated at Thr-37 and Thr-46 as a substrate in a biochemical purification scheme.
| |
Materials and methods |
|---|
|
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Plasmids and antibodies
The human 4E-BP1 coding sequence cloned into the
cytomegalovirus-based vector pACTAG-2 was used as a template for PCR
mutagenesis, which was used to mutate Thr-37 and Thr-46 to either Ala
or Glu. To generate double mutants Thr-37-Ala/Thr-46-Ala and
Thr-37-Glu/Thr-46-Glu, either Thr-46-Ala or
Thr-46-Glu cloned into pACTAG-2 was used as template to mutate Thr-37.
Similarly, the deletion of amino acids 34-50 and the deletion in the
eIF4E-binding site (amino acids 54-63) were generated by PCR
mutagenesis. The products were inserted in-frame into pACTAG-2 and
sequenced in their entirety. Alternatively, the mutated sequences were
inserted in-frame in the vector pGEX-6p1 (Pharmacia) for protein
expression in bacteria. GST-2T-4E-BP1 wild-type was described
previously (Pause et al. 1994
). It contains almost the entire coding
region of human 4E-BP1 (lacking the first 6 amino acids) fused in-frame
in the vector pGEX-2T (Pharmacia; contains a thrombin cleavage site).
Murine 4E-BP1 wild type was cloned in-frame into pQE-30 vector
(Qiagen), which contains an amino-terminal 6-histidine tag (His). PCR
mutagenesis was utilized to mutate Thr-36 (corresponding to human
Thr-37) or Thr-45 (corresponding to human Thr-46) to alanines. The
constructs were sequenced in their entirety.
The rabbit polyclonal antisera 11208 and 11209 against human 4E-BP1
have been described previously (Gingras et al. 1996
, 1998
). Antiserum
11208 was used for Western blotting analysis and 11209 for
immunoprecipitation. The antibody to FRAP/mTOR was
described previously (Brunn et al. 1997b
). The anti-HA mouse monoclonal antibody HA.11 was purchased from BAbCO. The phosphospecific antibodies directed against Thr-37 and Thr-46 sites in 4E-BP1 were produced by
immunizing New Zealand white rabbits with the following synthetic peptides coupled to keyhole limpet hemocyanin: Thr-37(P),
PGDYSTT*PGGTLFC, and Thr-46(P), GTLFSTT*PGGTRIIC. Enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay (ELISA), using the phosphopeptide and corresponding
nonphosphopeptide, was used to identify the best-responding rabbits.
IgG was purified using protein-A-Sepharose. Antibodies reactive with
the nonphosphopeptide were removed by adsorption to a nonphosphopeptide
affinity column. Antibodies that flowed through this column were next
passed over a column of immobilized phosphopeptide; after washing,
antibodies were eluted at low pH and dialyzed. The resulting antibodies
were characterized by ELISA against the phosphopeptide and
nonphosphopeptide to determine the extent of phosphospecificity and by
Western blots against whole-cell extracts and purified 4E-BP1 proteins.
The antibody directed against phospho-Thr-37, however, cross-reacts with phospho-Thr-46, because of the high sequence identity surrounding the two sites. Similarly, the anti-phospho-Thr-46 antibody cross-reacts with phosphorylated Thr-37.
Protein expression and purification
An amino-terminal deletant (N
27) of eIF4E, which behaves
essentially as the wild-type protein, was bacterially expressed and
purified by m7GDP chromatography (Marcotrigiano et al. 1997
).
Glutathione S-transferase (GST)-fused 4E-BP1 proteins were
expressed and purified from DH10
Escherichia coli
essentially according to the manufacturer's (Pharmacia) instructions.
Specifically, bacteria were grown to an OD of 0.8 and induced for 2 hr
at 37°C with 0.5 mM IPTG. Bacteria were pelleted, resuspended in PBS containing 1 mM PMSF, and lysed by
sonication. After centrifugation (Sorvall SS34 for 1 hr at 15,000 rpm),
the cleared lysate was incubated for 15 min at 20°C with
glutathione-Sepharose beads (1 ml beads per liter of starting
culture). Beads were pelleted and rinsed three times with PBS
containing 1 mM PMSF and 1% Triton X-100. The elution was
performed in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.5) containing 10 mM reduced glutathione. Proteins were dialyzed against 20 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 7.4), 74 mM KCl, and 1 mM DTT, and quantified by SDS-PAGE and Coomassie staining, as
compared to a BSA standard. Alternatively, the construct
pGEX-2T-4E-BP1 wild type was expressed and bound to the glutathione
beads as above and digested with thrombin on the beads, according to
the manufacturer's instructions. The cleaved 4E-BP1 protein was then
purified by reverse-phase HPLC on a C4 column, as described (J. Marcotrigiano, A.-C. Gingras, N. Sonenberg, and S.K. Burley, in prep.).
Histidine-tagged 4E-BP1 proteins were expressed and purified from
M15pREP4 cells according to the manufacturer's (Qiagen) instructions,
eluted with imidazole, and dialyzed against 20 mM HEPES-KOH
(pH 7.4), 74 mM KCl, and 1 mM DTT. Epitope-tagged
FRAP was purified from two-liter baculovirus infections using Sf9 host
cells (Invitrogen) grown in 10-liter fermentors for infection.
Infection conditions for large-scale cultures ranged from 24-48 hr.
The baculovirus construct, lysis conditions, and chromatography methods
were described previously (Brown et al. 1995
).
Cell culture and transient transfections
Human embryonic kidney 293 cells (ATCC CRL 1573) and human
embryonic kidney 293T cells (overexpressing the SV40 large T antigen; ATCC CRL 11268) were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (DMEM) containing 10% FCS. For transient transfection of 293T cells,
1 × 106 cells were plated onto a 100-mm dish 24 hr prior
to transfection of 15 µg of pACTAG-2-4E-BP1 DNA, using a modified
calcium phosphate technique (Chen and Okayama 1988
). Cells were either
harvested or labeled 48 hr post-transfection.
Extract preparation and Western blotting
Cells were rinsed twice with cold buffer A (20 mM
Tris-HCl at pH 7.5, 100 mM KCl, 20 mM
-glycerolphosphate, 1 mM DTT, 0.25 mM
Na3VO4, 10 mM NaF, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM EGTA, 10 nM okadaic acid, 1 mM PMSF)
and scraped into a minimal volume of the same buffer. Lysis was
performed by three freeze-thaw cycles. Cell debris was pelleted by
centrifugation, and the protein concentration in the supernatant was
measured using the Bio-Rad assay. For analysis of endogenous 4E-BP1, 75 µg of total cell extract was incubated at 100°C for 7 min to
enrich for 4E-BP1, which is heat stable (Hu et al. 1994
; Pause et al.
1994
). Samples were then incubated on ice for 5 min, and precipitated
material was removed by centrifugation (microcentrifuge, 13,000 rpm for
5 min). Laemmli sample buffer was added to the supernatant, which was
then subjected to SDS-15% PAGE. For analysis of transfected
HA-4E-BP1, cells were lysed by three freeze-thaw cycles, and 50 µg of protein was analyzed by SDS-15% PAGE. For qualitative
analysis, Western blotting and chemiluminescence detection were
performed as described, using either the anti-4E-BP1 11208 antiserum
(1:1500) or the phosphospecific anti-Thr-37/Thr-46
antibody (1:1000). For quantitative analysis of the endogenous
proteins, membranes were first incubated with the anti-4E-BP1 11208 antiserum (1:1500) or the phosphospecific anti-Thr-37/Thr-46 antibody (1:1000), followed by
incubation with [125I]-coupled protein A. For the
quantitation of overexpressed HA-tagged 4E-BP1, the anti-HA (HA.11)
monoclonal antibody (0.5 µg/ml) was utilized.
Metabolic labeling and immunoprecipitation
32P-Labeling was performed essentially as described
(Gingras et al. 1998
). In small scale experiments, 100- or 150-mm
dishes of 293 cells or 293T cells were 32P-labeled and
processed under the same conditions described in Gingras et al. (1998)
,
but using nitrocellulose membranes instead of PVDF membranes for the
transfer. For large-scale experiments designed to identify the
phosphorylation sites, ten 150-mm plates of confluent 293 cells
(~2 × 108 cells) were starved for 30 hr and incubated
for 3.5 hr in phosphate-free DMEM (GIBCO) containing 1 mCi/ml of [32P]orthophosphate (DuPont NEN;
3000 mCi/mmole; total volume of 7.5 ml). Dialyzed FCS
(15%; GIBCO) was then added for 40 min, and the cells were rinsed and
lysed as described (Gingras et al. 1998
). In parallel,
200 × 150-mm plates of confluent 293 cells (~4 × 109 cells) were starved for 33 hr and
stimulated for 40 min with 15% FCS (GIBCO). Cells were rinsed and
extracts were prepared in the same manner as for the
32P-labeled extracts. The extract (at this point, the cold
and hot extracts were processed separately) was precleared by
incubation with protein A beads (50 µl of packed beads per
108 cells) with end-over-end rotation at 4°C for 2 hr. The
supernatant was transferred to a fresh tube, together with 25 µl of
11209 antisera bound to 25 µl of packed protein A-Sepharose beads
per 108 cells, and incubated end-over-end for 4 hr at 4°C.
Beads were spun and washed three times (with 100 times the bead volume)
in lysis buffer, two times in RIPA buffer, and two times in LiCl solution (200 mM LiCl, 1 mM DTT).
Immunoprecipitates from the 32P-labeled and cold samples were
eluted in Laemmli sample buffer and the elutions were combined.
Immunoprecipitated material was subjected to SDS-15% PAGE and
transferred to 0.2-µm pore size nitrocellulose (Schleicher & Schuell), which were dried and autoradiographed. Radioactive bands
corresponding to 4E-BP1 were excised and Cerenkov counted.
Phosphopeptide maps and phosphoaminoacid analysis
Tryptic/chymotryptic digestion of 4E-BP1 immobilized
on the nitrocellulose membranes was performed essentially as described (van der Geer et al. 1994
; Gingras et al. 1998
). For the large-scale experiment, the sample was divided into three tubes for digestion and
mapping. The digest was performed using a 200:1 mixture of N-tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl
ketone-treated trypsin and chymotrypsin (1 µg per sample,
Worthington) for 10 hr, followed by the addition of 0.5 µg of
enzyme mix three times for 1 hr each. The sample was then lyophilized
(Speed-vac, Savant), resuspended in 500 µl of water, lyophilized
again, resuspended in 250 µl of water, lyophilized a third time,
resuspended in 250 µl pH 1.9 buffer [2.5% (vol/vol)
formic acid, 7.8% (vol/vol) glacial acetic acid], and
lyophilized a fourth time. For two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping,
the first dimension (electrophoresis) was performed in pH 1.9 buffer
using an HTLE 7000 apparatus (CBS Scientific); the second dimension was
performed in phosphochromatography buffer [37.5% (vol/vol) n-butanol, 25% (vol/vol) pyridine, 7.5% (vol/vol) glacial
acetic acid]. Plastic-backed cellulose-coated TLC plates (Kodak;
20 × 20 cm) were employed. The plates were dried and subjected to autoradiography.
To determine which phosphoamino acid is phosphorylated in the spots of
interest, the cellulose was scraped off. Peptides were eluted from the
cellulose with pH 1.9 buffer, using a spin filter (Bio101). The
material was lyophilized, resuspended in 100 µl 6N HCl
and incubated at 110°C for 60 min in a screw-cap tube. The sample
was lyophilized and rinsed several times with water (debris was removed
by centrifugation before the last lyophilization). Two-dimensional
phosphoamino acid analysis mapping was performed essentially as
described (van der Geer et al. 1994