Erk1/2-dependent phosphorylation of Gα-interacting protein stimulates its GTPase accelerating activity and autophagy in human colon cancer cells

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Abstract

Gα-interacting protein (GAIP) is a regulator of G protein signaling (RGS) that accelerates the rate of GTP hydrolysis by the α-subunit of the trimeric Gi3 protein. Both proteins are part of a signaling pathway that controls lysosomal-autophagic catabolism in human colon cancer HT-29 cells. Here we show that GAIP is phosphorylated by an extracellular signal-regulated (Erkl/2) MAP kinase-dependent pathway sensitive to amino acids, MEK1/2 (PD098059), and protein kinase C (GF109203X) inhibitors. An in vitro phosphorylation assay demonstrates that Erk2-dependent phosphorylation of GAIP stimulates its GTPase-activating protein activity toward the Gαi3 protein (k = 0.187 ± 0.001 s-1, EC50 = 1.12 ± 0.10 μM) when compared with unphosphorylated recombinant GAIP (k = 0.145 ± 0.003 s-1, EC50 = 3.16 ± 0.12 μM) or to GAIP phosphorylated by other Ser/Thr protein kinases (protein kinase C, casein kinase II). This stimulation and the phosphorylation of GAIP by Erk2 were abrogated when serine at position 151 in the RGS domain was substituted by an alanine residue using site-directed mutagenesis. Furthermore, the lysosomal-autophagic pathway was not stimulated in S151A-GAIP mutant-expressing cells when compared with wild-type GAIP-expressing cells. These results demonstrate that the GTPase-activating protein activity of GAIP is stimulated by Erk2 phosphorylation. They also suggested that Erkl/2 and GAIP are engaged in the signaling control of a major catabolic pathway in intestinal derived cells.

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Ogier-Denis, E., Pattingre, S., El Benna, J., & Codogno, P. (2000). Erk1/2-dependent phosphorylation of Gα-interacting protein stimulates its GTPase accelerating activity and autophagy in human colon cancer cells. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 275(50), 39090–39095. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M006198200

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