Smooth muscle archvillin is an ERK scaffolding protein

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Abstract

ERK influences a number of pathways in all cells, but how ERK activities are segregated between different pathways has not been entirely clear. Using immunoprecipitation and pulldown experiments with domain-specific recombinant fragments, we show that smooth muscle archvillin (SmAV) binds ERK and members of the ERK signaling cascade in a domain-specific, stimulus-dependent, and pathway-specific manner. MEK binds specifically to the first 445 residues of SmAV. B-Raf, an upstream regulator of MEK, constitutively interacts with residues 1-445 and 446-1250. Both ERK and 14-3-3 bind to both fragments, but in a stimulus-specific manner. Phosphorylated ERK is associated only with residues 1-445. An ERK phosphorylation site was determined by mass spectrometry to reside at Ser132. A phospho-antibody raised to this site shows that the site is phosphorylated during α-agonist-mediated ERK activation in smooth muscle tissue. Phosphorylation of SmAV by ERK decreases the association of phospho-ERK with SmAV. These results, combined with previous observations, indicate that SmAV serves as a new ERK scaffolding protein and provide a mechanism for regulation of ERK binding, activation, and release from the signaling complex. © 2009 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Gangopadhyay, S. S., Kengni, E., Appel, S., Gallant, C., Kim, H. R., Leavis, P., … Morgan, K. G. (2009). Smooth muscle archvillin is an ERK scaffolding protein. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 284(26), 17607–17615. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.002386

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