The RNA-binding protein KSRP promotes decay of β-catenin mRNA and is inactivated by PI3K-AKT signaling

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Abstract

β-catenin plays an essential role in several biological events including cell fate determination, cell proliferation, and transformation. Here we report that β-catenin is encoded by a labile transcript whose half-life is prolonged by Wnt and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-AKT signaling. AKT phosphorylates the mRNA decay-promoting factor KSRP at a unique serine residue, induces its association with the multifunctional protein 14-3-3, and prevents KSRP interaction with the exoribonucleolytic complex exosome. This impairs KSRP's ability to promote rapid mRNA decay. Our results uncover an unanticipated level of control of β-catenin expression pointing to KSRP as a required factor to ensure rapid degradation of β-catenin in unstimulated cells. We propose KSRP phosphorylation as a link between phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-AKT signaling and β-catenin accumulation. © 2007 Gherzi et al.

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Gherzi, R., Trabucchi, M., Ponassi, M., Ruggiero, T., Corte, G., Moroni, C., … Briata, P. (2007). The RNA-binding protein KSRP promotes decay of β-catenin mRNA and is inactivated by PI3K-AKT signaling. PLoS Biology, 5(1), 0082–0095. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050005

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