Collective Inhibition of pRB Family Proteins by Phosphorylation in Cells with p16INK4a Loss or Cyclin E Overexpression

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Abstract

The activity of the retinoblastoma protein pRB is regulated by phosphorylation that is mediated by G1 cyclin-associated cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). Since the pRB-related pocket proteins p107 and p130 share general structures and biological functions with pRB, their activity is also considered to be regulated by phosphorylation. In this work, we generated phosphorylation-resistant p107 and p130 molecules by replacing potential cyclin-CDK phosphorylation sites with non-phosphorylatable alanine residues. These phosphorylation-resistant mutants retained the ability to bind E2F and cyclin. Upon introduction into p16INK4a-deficient U2-OS osteosarcoma cells, in which cyclin D-CDK4/6 is dysregulated, the phosphorylation-resistant mutants, but not wild-type p107 or p130, were capable of inhibiting cell proliferation. Furthermore, when ectopically expressed in pRB-deficient SAOS-2 osteosarcoma cells, the wild-type as well as the phosphorylation-resistant pRB family proteins were capable of inducing large flat cells. The flat cell-inducing activity of the wild-type proteins, but not that of the phosphorylation-resistant mutants, was abolished by coexpressing cyclin E. Our results indicate that the elevated cyclin D- or cyclin E-associated kinase leads to systemic inactivation of the pRB family proteins and suggest that dysregulation of the pRB kinase provokes an aberrant cell cycle in a broader range of cell types than those induced by genetic inactivation of the RB gene.

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Ashizawa, S., Nishizawa, H., Yamada, M., Higashi, H., Kondo, T., Ozawa, H., … Hatakeyama, M. (2001). Collective Inhibition of pRB Family Proteins by Phosphorylation in Cells with p16INK4a Loss or Cyclin E Overexpression. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 276(14), 11362–11370. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M007992200

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