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| Artículo de revista
Transactivation activity and nucleocytoplasmic transport of β-catenin are independently regulated by its C-terminal end
Fecha
2015Registro en:
Gene 573 (2015) 115–122
0378-1119
DOI: 10.1016/j.gene.2015.07.039
Autor
Maturana, J.
Niechi, I.
Silva, E.
Huerta, H.
Cataldo, R.
Härtel, Steffen
Barros, L.
Galindo Díaz, Mario
Tapia Pineda, Julio
Institución
Resumen
The key protein in the canonicalWnt pathway is β-catenin, which is phosphorylated both in absence and presence
ofWnt signals by different kinases. Upon activation in the cytoplasm, β-catenin can enter into the nucleus to
transactivate target gene expression, many of which are cancer-related genes. The mechanism governing β-
catenin's nucleocytoplasmic transport has been recently unvealed, although phosphorylation at its C-terminal
end and its functional consequences are not completely understood. Serine 646 of β-catenin is a putative CK2
phosphorylation site and lies in a region which has been proposed to be important for its nucleocytoplasmic
transport and transactivation activity. This residue was mutated to aspartic acid mimicking CK2-
phosphorylation and its effects on β-catenin activity as well as localization were explored. β-Catenin S6464D
did not show significant differences in both transcriptional activity and nuclear localization compared to the
wild-type form, but displayed a characteristic granular nuclear pattern. Three-dimensional models of nuclei
were constructed which showed differences in number and volume of granules, being those from β-catenin
S646D more and smaller than the wild-type form. FRAP microscopy was used to compare nuclear export of
both proteins which showed a slightly higher but not significant retention of β-catenin S646D. Altogether,
these results show that C-terminal phosphorylation of β-catenin seems to be related with its nucleocytoplasmic
transport but not transactivation activity