An atypical MAPK regulates translocation of a GATA transcription factor in response to chemoattractant stimulation

Author:

Hadwiger Jeffrey A.1ORCID,Cai Huaqing2ORCID,Aranda Ramee G.1,Fatima Saher1

Affiliation:

1. Oklahoma State University 1 Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics , , Stillwater, OK 74078-3020 , USA

2. National Laboratory of Biomacromolecules, Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences 2 , Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101 , China

Abstract

ABSTRACT The Dictyostelium atypical mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) Erk2 is required for chemotactic responses to cAMP as amoeba undergo multicellular development. In this study, Erk2 was found to be essential for the cAMP-stimulated translocation of the GATA transcription factor GtaC as indicated by the distribution of a GFP–GtaC reporter. Erk2 was also found to be essential for the translocation of GtaC in response to external folate, a foraging signal that directs the chemotaxis of amoeba to bacteria. Erk1, the only other Dictyostelium MAPK, was not required for the GtaC translocation to either chemoattractant, indicating that GFP–GtaC is a kinase translocation reporter specific for atypical MAPKs. The translocation of GFP–GtaC in response to folate was absent in mutants lacking the folate receptor Far1 or the coupled G-protein subunit Gα4. Loss of GtaC function resulted in enhanced chemotactic movement to folate, suggesting that GtaC suppresses responses to folate. The alteration of four Erk2-preferred phosphorylation sites in GtaC impacted the translocation of GFP–GtaC in response to folate and the GFP–GtaC-mediated rescue of aggregation and development of gtaC− cells. The ability of different chemoattractants to stimulate Erk2-regulated GtaC translocation suggests that atypical MAPK-mediated regulation of transcription factors can contribute to different cell fates.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Science Foundation of China

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Cell Biology

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