Abstract
Members of the Wnt family of signal transducers regulate cellular differentiation/reorganization and cellular proliferation. However, few pro- proliferative targets of Wnt have been identified. We now show that cyclin D1, a critical mediator of cell cycle progression, is a downstream target of Wnt-dependent signaling. NIH-3T3 cell lines engineered to overexpress Wnt1 displayed reduced glycogen synthase kinase-3β activity. Wnt1-dependent glycogen synthase kinase-3β inhibition corresponded with decreased cyclin D1 proteolysis and, thus, hyperaccumulation of active cyclin D1·CDK4 (cyclin- dependent kinase 4) kinase. However, in the absence of serum-derived growth factors, Wnt-1 was not sufficient to drive cyclin D1 accumulation or S-phase entry. In contrast, cells engineered to co-express Wnt1 and activated MEK1 accumulated high levels of cyclin D1 and entered the DNA synthetic phase in the absence of serum-derived growth factors, a characteristic of neoplastic transformation. The ability of a dominant-negative cyclin D1 mutant, D1- T156A, to inhibit Wnt1/MEK1-dependent S-phase entry suggests that cyclin D1 is a critical downstream target for Wnt1- and MEK1-dependent cellular proliferation.
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CITATION STYLE
Rimerman, R. A., Gellert-Randleman, A., & Diehl, J. A. (2000). Wnt1 and MEK1 cooperate to promote cyclin D1 accumulation and cellular transformation. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 275(19), 14736–14742. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M910241199
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