4.6 Article

Decreased phosphorylation facilitates the degradation of the endogenous protective molecule c-Ski in vascular smooth muscle cells

Journal

CELLULAR SIGNALLING
Volume 87, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cellsig.2021.110116

Keywords

Cellular Sloan-Kettering Institute (c-Ski); Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs); Degradation; Autophagy; Serine383 (S383) phosphorylation

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81670407]
  2. Nursery Training Program of Army Medical University [4103010506]
  3. Talents Support Project of Army Medical University [410301060131]

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The study found that the c-Ski protein in vascular smooth muscle cells decreases during the progression of atherosclerosis, weakening its protective effect. By studying the phosphorylation site S383 of the c-Ski protein, it was discovered that this site is crucial for the stability and function of c-Ski, affecting its inhibitory effect on autophagy-related genes.
The dysfunction of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) is critical for atherosclerosis (AS) progression. Autophagy is indispensable during phenotypic switching and proliferation of VSMCs, contribute to AS development. Cellular Sloan-Kettering Institute (c-Ski), the repressor of TGF-8 signaling, is involved in diverse physiological and pathological processes. We previously defined c-Ski also as an endogenous protective molecule against AS via inhibiting abnormal proliferation and autophagy of VSMCs. However, the endogenous level of c-Ski in VSMCs is markedly decreased during the progression of AS, so that the protective effect is drastically weakened. Elucidating the molecular mechanisms is key to the understanding of AS development and treatment. We determined that oxidized low-density lipoprotein (ox-LDL) and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) directly induced the degradation of c-Ski protein, closely associated with reducing its phosphorylation. Serine383 (S383) was identified as the crucial phosphorylation site for stabilizing protein expression and nuclear location of c-Ski, which was responsible for its transcriptional suppression of autophagy-related genes. Decreased S383 phosphorylation facilitated nuclear export and degradation of c-Ski, thereby lessened its inhibitory effect on induction of autophagy genes. These findings provide a novel view of c-Ski modification and function modulation under some vascular injury factors, which point to a new potential therapeutic strategy by targeting c-Ski.

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