Accelerated Notch-Dependent Degradation of E47 Proteins in Aged B Cell Precursors Is Associated with Increased ERK MAPK Activation

  • King A
  • Van der Put E
  • Blomberg B
  • et al.
40Citations
Citations of this article
19Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

The transcriptional regulator E47, encoded by the E2A gene, is crucial to B lymphopoiesis. In BALB/c senescent mice (∼2 years old), the incidence of E47-expressing pro-B cells in vivo and E47 protein steady state levels in B cell precursors in vitro were reduced. Poor expression of E47 protein was a consequence of accelerated proteasome-mediated turnover and was associated with heightened ubiquitin modification of E2A-encoded proteins in aged B cell precursors. Both MAPK and Notch activity have been previously associated with E2A-encoded protein stability in lymphocytes. Aged B cell precursors exhibited heightened levels of MAPK activity reflected in increased levels of phospho-ERK proteins. Phosphorylation of E2A-encoded proteins was also increased in aged B cell precursors and pharmacologic inhibition of MEK-1 resulted in a partial restoration of their E47 protein. Both Notch proteins and their Delta-like ligands were detected comparably in young and aged B cell precursors. Either inhibition of Notch activation via gamma-secretase or Ab blockade of Notch-Delta-like ligand interactions partially restored E47 expression in aged B cell precursors. We hypothesize that increased MAPK activity promotes phosphorylation of E2A-encoded protein in aged B cell precursors. Subsequently, E2A-encoded proteins undergo ubiquitination and accelerated degradation in a Notch-dependent process. The dysregulation of E2A-encoded protein expression may contribute to the reductions seen in early B lymphopoiesis during murine senescence.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

King, A. M., Van der Put, E., Blomberg, B. B., & Riley, R. L. (2007). Accelerated Notch-Dependent Degradation of E47 Proteins in Aged B Cell Precursors Is Associated with Increased ERK MAPK Activation. The Journal of Immunology, 178(6), 3521–3529. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.178.6.3521

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free