4.5 Article

Insulin induced phosphorylation of prohibitin at tyrosine114 recruits Shp1

Journal

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-MOLECULAR CELL RESEARCH
Volume 1793, Issue 8, Pages 1372-1378

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2009.05.008

Keywords

Prohibitn; Insulin; Tyrosine phosphorylation; Phosphotyrosine binding; Protein-protein interaction

Funding

  1. Health Sciences Centre Foundation and Manitoba Health Research Council (MHRC)

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Prohibitin (PHB or PHB1) is an evolutionarily conserved ubiquitously expressed multifunctional protein and is present in various cellular compartments. Phosphorylation of PHB has been suggested as one of the potential mechanisms in the regulation of its various functions however exact sites of phosphorylation remain to be determined. To better understand the functional relevance of phosphorylation of PHB, we have explored the potential sites of phosphorylation using combination of approaches including phosphoamino specific immunoblotting, proteolysis, two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, phosphoamino acid analysis and site-directed mutagenesis techniques and report that tyrosine 114 (Tyr(114)) in PHB is phosphorylated in response to insulin stimulation. In addition, using active insulin receptor (IR) and synthetic biotinylated PHB peptide (PHB107-121) we have shown that IR also phosphorylates Tyr(114) in an in vitro kinase assay. Phosphorylation of PHB at Tyr(114) was confirmed by immunoblotting using antiphosphoTyr(114) specific antibody. Furthermore, we demonstrate that SH2 domain containing tyrosine phosphatase-1 (Shp1) co-immunoprecipitate with PHB antiserum after insulin induced phosphorylation of PHB. Biotinylated-PHB107-121 peptide phosphorylated at Tyr(114) was also able to pull down Shp1 in pull down assays. Non-phosphorylated PHB107-121 peptide, corresponding PHB2(121-135) pepticle and Tyr114Phe mutant-PHB fail to pull down Shp1. In summary, we have identified Tyr(114) in PHB as an important site of phosphorylation and phosphorylation at this residue creates a binding site for Shp1 both in vivo and in vitro. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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