PERSONAL DE APOYO
REPETTO Maria Victoria
artículos
Título:
CDK and MAPK Synergistically Regulate Signaling Dynamics via a Shared Multi-site Phosphorylation Region on the Scaffold Protein Ste5
Autor/es:
REPETTO, MARÍA VICTORIA; WINTERS, MATTHEW J.; BUSH, ALAN; REITER, WOLFGANG; HOLLENSTEIN, DAVID MARIA; AMMERER, GUSTAV; PRYCIAK, PETER M.; COLMAN-LERNER, ALEJANDRO
Revista:
MOLECULAR CELL
Editorial:
CELL PRESS
Referencias:
Año: 2018 vol. 69 p. 938 - 952
ISSN:
1097-2765
Resumen:
We report an unanticipated system of joint regulation by cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) and mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), involving collaborative multi-site phosphorylation of a single substrate. In budding yeast, the protein Ste5 controls signaling through a G1 arrest pathway. Upon cell-cycle entry, CDK inhibits Ste5 via multiple phosphorylation sites, disrupting its membrane association. Using quantitative time-lapse microscopy, we examined Ste5 membrane recruitment dynamics at different cell-cycle stages. Surprisingly, in S phase, where Ste5 recruitment should be blocked, we observed an initial recruitment followed by a steep drop-off. This delayed inhibition revealed a requirement for both CDK activity and negative feedback from the pathway MAPK Fus3. Mutagenesis, mass spectrometry, and electrophoretic analyses suggest that the CDK and MAPK modify shared sites, which are most extensively phosphorylated when both kinases are active and able to bind their docking sites on Ste5. Such collaborative phosphorylation can broaden regulatory inputs and diversify output dynamics of signaling pathways. CDKs and MAPKs phosphorylate similar sites yet generally have distinct functions and substrates. Repetto et al. uncover a case where these kinases collaborate to regulate a substrate in a signal transduction pathway by phosphorylating a shared set of sites.