4.6 Article

The Stability and Transactivation Potential of the Mammalian MafA Transcription Factor Are Regulated by Serinei 65 Phosphorylation.

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 284, Issue 2, Pages 759-765

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M806314200

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [P01 DK42502]
  2. Molecular Endocrinology Training Program Postdoctoral Training [5T32 DK07563-20]
  3. Diabetes and Endocrinology [5T32 DK007061-34, R01 DK58096, F32 DK070406, R01 DK067581, DK70787]
  4. American Heart Association
  5. Molecular Biology Core Laboratory
  6. Vanderbilt University Diabetes Research and Training Center [P60DK20593]

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The level of the MafA transcription factor is regulated by a variety of effectors of beta cell function, including glucose, fatty acids, and insulin. Here, we show that phosphorylation at Ser(65) of mammalian MafA influences both protein stability and transactivation potential. Replacement of Ser65 with Glu to mimic phosphorylation produced a protein that was as unstable as the wild type, whereas Asp or Ala mutation blocked degradation. Analysis of MafA chimeric and deletion constructs suggests that protein phosphorylation at Ser65 alone represents the initial degradation signal, with ubiquitinylation occurring within the C terminus (amino acids 234-359). Although only wild type MafA and S65E were polyubiquitinylated, both S65D and S65E potently stimulated transactivation compared with S65A. Phosphorylation at Ser(14) also enhanced activation, although it had no impact on protein turnover. The mobility of MafA S65A was profoundly affected upon SDS-PAGE, with the S65E and S65D mutants influenced less due to their ability to serve as substrates for glycogen synthase kinase 3, which acts at neighboring N-terminal residues after Ser65 phosphorylation. Our observations not only illustrate the sensitivity of the cellular transcriptional and degradation machinery to phosphomimetic mutants at Ser65, but also demonstrate the singular importance of phosphorylation at this amino acid in regulating MafA activity.

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