1. Academic Validation
  2. Transforming growth factor-{beta}-inducible phosphorylation of Smad3

Transforming growth factor-{beta}-inducible phosphorylation of Smad3

  • J Biol Chem. 2009 Apr 10;284(15):9663-73. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M809281200.
Guannan Wang 1 Isao Matsuura Dongming He Fang Liu
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine.
Abstract

Smad proteins transduce the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) signal at the cell surface into gene regulation in the nucleus. Upon TGF-beta treatment, the highly homologous SMAD2 and SMAD3 are phosphorylated by the TGF-beta Receptor at the SSXS motif in the C-terminal tail. Here we show that in addition to the C-tail, three (S/T)-P sites in the SMAD3 linker region, Ser(208), Ser(204), and Thr(179) are phosphorylated in response to TGF-beta. The linker phosphorylation peaks at 1 h after TGF-beta treatment, behind the peak of the C-tail phosphorylation. We provide evidence suggesting that the C-tail phosphorylation by the TGF-beta Receptor is necessary for the TGF-beta-induced linker phosphorylation. Although the TGF-beta Receptor is necessary for the linker phosphorylation, the receptor itself does not phosphorylate these sites. We further show that ERK is not responsible for TGF-beta-dependent phosphorylation of these three sites. We show that GSK3 accounts for TGF-beta-inducible Ser(204) phosphorylation. Flavopiridol, a pan-CDK inhibitor, abolishes TGF-beta-induced phosphorylation of Thr(179) and Ser(208), suggesting that the CDK family is responsible for phosphorylation of Thr(179) and Ser(208) in response to TGF-beta. Mutation of the linker phosphorylation sites to nonphosphorylatable residues increases the ability of SMAD3 to activate a TGF-beta/Smad-target gene as well as the growth-inhibitory function of SMAD3. Thus, these observations suggest that TGF-beta-induced phosphorylation of SMAD3 linker sites inhibits its antiproliferative activity.

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