4.8 Article

Protein phosphatase 2A and its B56 regulatory subunit inhibit Wnt signaling in Xenopus

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 15, Pages 4122-4131

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/emboj/20.15.4122

Keywords

B56; dephosphorylation; PP2A; Wnt; Xenopus

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R01 CA080809, T32CA09602, R01CA80809, T32 CA009602] Funding Source: Medline

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Wnt signaling increases beta -catenin abundance and transcription of Wnt-responsive genes. Our previous work suggested that the B56 regulatory subunit of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) inhibits Wnt signaling. Okadaic acid (a phosphatase inhibitor) increases, while B56 expression reduces, beta -catenin abundance; B56 also reduces transcription of Wnt-responsive genes. Okadaic acid is a tumor promoter, and the structural A subunit of PP2A is mutated in multiple cancers. Taken together, the evidence suggests that PP2A is a tumor suppressor. However, other studies suggest that PP2A activates Wnt signaling. We now show that the B56, A and catalytic C subunits of PP2A each have ventralizing activity in Xenopus embryos. B56 was epistatically positioned downstream of GSK3 beta and axin but upstream of beta -catenin, and axin co-immunoprecipitated B56, A and C subunits, suggesting that PP2A:B56 is in the beta -catenin degradation complex. PP2A appears to be essential for beta -catenin degradation, since beta -catenin degradation was reconstituted in phosphatase-depleted Xenopus egg extracts by PP2A, but not PP1. These results support the hypothesis that PP2A:B56 directly inhibits Wnt signaling and plays a role in development and carcinogenesis.

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