Receptor tyrosine kinase activation of RhoA is mediated by AKT phosphorylation of DLC1.
Authors | |
Keywords | |
Abstract | We report several receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) ligands increase RhoA-guanosine triphosphate (GTP) in untransformed and transformed cell lines and determine this phenomenon depends on the RTKs activating the AKT serine/threonine kinase. The increased RhoA-GTP results from AKT phosphorylating three serines (S298, S329, and S567) in the DLC1 tumor suppressor, a Rho GTPase-activating protein (RhoGAP) associated with focal adhesions. Phosphorylation of the serines, located N-terminal to the DLC1 RhoGAP domain, induces strong binding of that N-terminal region to the RhoGAP domain, converting DLC1 from an open, active dimer to a closed, inactive monomer. That binding, which interferes with the interaction of RhoA-GTP with the RhoGAP domain, reduces the hydrolysis of RhoA-GTP, the binding of other DLC1 ligands, and the colocalization of DLC1 with focal adhesions and attenuates tumor suppressor activity. DLC1 is a critical AKT target in DLC1-positive cancer because AKT inhibition has potent antitumor activity in the DLC1-positive transgenic cancer model and in a DLC1-positive cancer cell line but not in an isogenic DLC1-negative cell line. |
Year of Publication | 2017
|
Journal | J Cell Biol
|
Volume | 216
|
Issue | 12
|
Pages | 4255-4270
|
Date Published | 2017 12 04
|
ISSN | 1540-8140
|
DOI | 10.1083/jcb.201703105
|
PubMed ID | 29114068
|
PubMed Central ID | PMC5716279
|
Links |