4.6 Article

Protein phosphatase type 2A, PP2A, is involved in degradation of gp130

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 269, Issue 1-2, Pages 183-187

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11010-005-3089-x

Keywords

PP2A; PP1; IL-6; gp130; okadaic acid; proteasome

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The interleukin-6 (IL-6) stimulates growth in cells such as multiple myeloma and B-cell plasmacytomas/hybridomas, while it inhibits growth in several myeloid leukemia cells. The IL-6 receptor has subunit called gp130. It was reported that Ser-782 of gp130 is phosphorylated by unidentified kinase(s) in cell extracts, and level of gp130 (S782A) transiently expressed on the cell surface of COS-7 is 6-times higher than that of the wild type. These results motivated us to analyze whether the phosphorylation of gp130 at Ser-782 is involved in its degradation or not. In this study, we demonstrated here that treatment of HepG2 cells with okadaic acid (OA), a potent inhibitor for PP2A, promotes phosphorylation of gp130 at Ser-782 and degradation of gp130. MG115, a proteasome inhibitor, suppressed this degradation. These effects of OA could not be replaced with tautomycetin (TC), an inhibitor for PP1. Purified PP2A dephosphorylated phospho-Ser-782 of gp130 in vitro. IL-6-induced activation of Stat3 was suppressed by preincubation of the cells with OA, suggesting that the IL-6 signaling pathway was blocked by OA through degradation of gp130. Taken together, present results strongly suggest that degradation of gp130 is regulated through a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation mechanism in which PP2A is crucially involved and that gp130 is a potential therapeutic target in cancers.

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