4.6 Article

Genetic code expansion and live cell imaging reveal that Thr-308 phosphorylation is irreplaceable and sufficient for Akt1 activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 293, Issue 27, Pages 10744-10756

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.002357

Keywords

Akt; protein kinase B (PKB); protein phosphorylation; cell biology; cell signaling; enzyme; aminoacyl tRNA synthetase; transfer RNA (tRNA); genetic code expansion; phosphomimetics; phosphoseryl-tRNA synthetase (SepRS); tRNASep; activation loop; hydrophobic motif

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN 04282-2014]
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation [229917]
  3. Ontario Research Fund [229917]
  4. Canada Research Chairs [950-229917]
  5. Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute Innovation [704324]
  6. Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation
  7. National Institutes of Health [R03 CA178524, R35 GM122523, R01 GM43154]
  8. Ontario Graduate Scholarship
  9. Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship

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The proto-oncogene Akt/protein kinase B (PKB) is a pivotal signal transducer for growth and survival. Growth factor stimulation leads to Akt phosphorylation at two regulatory sites (Thr-308 and Ser-473), acutely activating Akt signaling. Delineating the exact role of each regulatory site is, however, technically challenging and has remained elusive. Here, we used genetic code expansion to produce site-specifically phosphorylated Akt1 to dissect the contribution of each regulatory site to Akt1 activity. We achieved recombinant production of full-length Akt1 containing site-specific pThr and pSer residues for the first time. Our analysis of Akt1 site-specifically phosphorylated at either or both sites revealed that phosphorylation at both sites increases the apparent catalytic rate 1500-fold relative to unphosphorylated Akt1, an increase attributable primarily to phosphorylation at Thr-308. Live imaging of COS-7 cells confirmed that phosphorylation of Thr-308, but not Ser-473, is required for cellular activation of Akt. We found in vitro and in the cell that pThr-308 function cannot be mimicked with acidic residues, nor could unphosphorylated Thr-308 be mimicked by an Ala mutation. An Akt1 variant with pSer-308 achieved only partial enzymatic and cellular signaling activity, revealing a critical interaction between the -methyl group of pThr-308 and Cys-310 in the Akt1 active site. Thus, pThr-308 is necessary and sufficient to stimulate Akt signaling in cells, and the common use of phosphomimetics is not appropriate for studying the biology of Akt signaling. Our data also indicate that pThr-308 should be regarded as the primary diagnostic marker of Akt activity.

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