MST1 (mammalian Sterile20-like 1) and MST2 are closely related Class II GC (protein Ser/Thr) kinases that initiate apoptosis when transiently overexpressed in mammalian cells. In the present study, we show that recombinant MST1/2 undergo a robust autoactivation in vitro, mediated by an intramolecular autophosphorylation of a single site [MST1(Thr183)/MST2(Thr180)] on the activation loop of an MST dimer. Endogenous full-length MST1 is activated by a variety of stressful stimuli, accompanied by the secondary appearance of a 36 kDa Thr183-phosphorylated, caspase-cleaved catalytic fragment. Recombinant MST1 exhibits only 2–5% activation during transient expression; endogenous MST1 in the cycling HeLa or KB cells has a similar low fractional activation, but 2 h incubation with okadaic acid (1 μM) results in 100% activation. Endogenous MST1 immunoprecipitated from KB cells is specifically associated with substoichiometric amounts of the growth inhibitory polypeptides RASSF1A and NORE1A (novel Ras effector 1A; a Ras-GTP-binding protein). Co-expression of RASSF1A, RASSF1C, NORE1A and NORE1B with MST1 markedly suppresses MST1(Thr183) phosphorylation in vivo and abolishes the ability of MST1 to undergo Mg-ATP-mediated autoactivation in vitro; direct addition of purified NORE1A in vitro also inhibits MST1 activation. In contrast, co-transfection of MST1 with NORE1A modified by the addition of a C-terminal CAAX motif results in a substantial increase in MST1(Thr183) phosphorylation, as does fusion of a myristoylation motif directly on to the MST1 N-terminus. Moreover, MST1 polypeptides, bound via wild-type NORE1A to Ras(G12V) (where G12V stands for Gly12→Val), exhibit higher Thr183 phosphorylation compared with MST1 bound to NORE1A alone. Nevertheless, serum stimulation of KB cells does not detectably increase the activation state of endogenous MST1 or MST2 despite promoting the recruitment of the endogenous NORE1–MST1 complex to endogenous Ras. We propose that the NORE1/RASSF1 polypeptides, in addition to their role in maintaining the low activity of MST1 in vivo, direct MST1 to sites of activation and perhaps co-localization with endogenous substrates.
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July 2004
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Research Article|
July 06 2004
Regulation of the MST1 kinase by autophosphorylation, by the growth inhibitory proteins, RASSF1 and NORE1, and by Ras
Maria PRASKOVA;
Maria PRASKOVA
1Diabetes Unit and Medical Services and Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, U.S.A.
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Andrei KHOKLATCHEV;
Andrei KHOKLATCHEV
1
1Diabetes Unit and Medical Services and Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, U.S.A.
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Sara ORTIZ-VEGA;
Sara ORTIZ-VEGA
1Diabetes Unit and Medical Services and Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, U.S.A.
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Joseph AVRUCH
Joseph AVRUCH
2
2To whom correspondence should be addressed (e-mail avruch@molbio.mgh.harvard.edu).
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Biochem J (2004) 381 (2): 453–462.
Article history
Received:
January 05 2004
Revision Received:
April 21 2004
Accepted:
April 27 2004
Accepted Manuscript online:
April 27 2004
Citation
Maria PRASKOVA, Andrei KHOKLATCHEV, Sara ORTIZ-VEGA, Joseph AVRUCH; Regulation of the MST1 kinase by autophosphorylation, by the growth inhibitory proteins, RASSF1 and NORE1, and by Ras. Biochem J 15 July 2004; 381 (2): 453–462. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/BJ20040025
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