GSK-3 phosphorylates δ-catenin and negatively regulates its stability via ubiquitination/proteosome-mediated proteolysis

Minsoo Oh, Hangun Kim, Ilhwan Yang, Ja Hye Park, Wei Tao Cong, Moon Chang Baek, Sonja Bareiss, Hyunkyoung Ki, Qun Lu, Jinhyung No, Inho Kwon, Jung Kap Choi, Kwonseop Kim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

41 Scopus citations

Abstract

δ-Catenin was first identified because of its interaction with presenilin-1, and its aberrant expression has been reported in various human tumors and in patients with Cri-du-Chat syndrome, a form of mental retardation. However, the mechanism whereby δ-catenin is regulated in cells has not been fully elucidated. We investigated the possibility that glycogen-synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) phosphorylates δ-catenin and thus affects its stability. Initially, we found that the level of δ-catenin was greater and the half-life of δ-catenin was longer in GSK-3β-/- fibroblasts than those in GSK-3β+/+ fibroblasts. Furthermore, four different approaches designed to specifically inhibit GSK-3 activity, i.e. GSK-3-specific chemical inhibitors, Wnt-3a conditioned media, small interfering RNAs, and GSK-3α and -3β kinase dead constructs, consistently showed that the levels of endogenous δ-catenin in CWR22Rv-1 prostate carcinoma cells and primary cortical neurons were increased by inhibiting GSK-3 activity. In addition, it was found that both GSK-3α and -3β interact with and phosphorylateδ-catenin. The phosphorylation of ΔC207-δ-catenin (lacking 207 C-terminal residues) and T1078A δ-catenin by GSK-3 was noticeably reduced compared with that of wild type δ-catenin, and the data from liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analyses suggest that the Thr1078 residue of δ-catenin is one of the GSK-3 phosphorylation sites. Treatment with MG132 or ALLN, specific inhibitors of proteosome-dependent proteolysis, increased δ-catenin levels and caused an accumulation of ubiquitinated δ-catenin. It was also found that GSK-3 triggers the ubiquitination of δ-catenin. These results suggest that GSK-3 interacts with and phosphorylates δ-catenin and thereby negatively affects its stability by enabling its ubiquitination/proteosome-mediated proteolysis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)28579-28589
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume284
Issue number42
DOIs
StatePublished - 16 Oct 2009

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