Single and Combined Silencing of ERK1 and ERK2 Reveals Their Positive Contribution to Growth Signaling Depending on Their Expression Levels
-
Published:2008-01
Issue:1
Volume:28
Page:511-527
-
ISSN:0270-7306
-
Container-title:Molecular and Cellular Biology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Mol Cell Biol
Author:
Lefloch Renaud1, Pouysségur Jacques1, Lenormand Philippe1
Affiliation:
1. Institute of Signaling Developmental Biology and Cancer, CNRS UMR 6543, Université de Nice Sophia Antipolis, Centre A. Lacassagne, 33 Avenue de Valombrose, 06189 Nice, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The proteins ERK1 and ERK2 are highly similar, are ubiquitously expressed, and share activators and substrates; however,
erk2
gene invalidation is lethal in mice, while
erk1
inactivation is not. We ablated ERK1 and/or ERK2 by RNA interference and explored their relative roles in cell proliferation and immediate-early gene (IEG) expression. Reducing expression of either ERK1 or ERK2 lowered IEG induction by serum; however, silencing of only ERK2 slowed down cell proliferation. When both isoforms were silenced simultaneously, compensating activation of the residual pool of ERK1/2 masked a more deleterious effect on cell proliferation. It was only when ERK2 activation was clamped at a limiting level that we demonstrated the positive contribution of ERK1 to cell proliferation. We then established that ERK isoforms are activated indiscriminately and that their expression ratio correlated exactly with their activation ratio. Furthermore, we determined for the first time that ERK1 and ERK2 kinase activities are indistinguishable in vitro and that
erk
gene dosage is essential for survival of mice. We propose that the expression levels of ERK1 and ERK2 drive their apparent biological differences. Indeed, ERK1 is dispensable in some vertebrates, since it is absent from chicken and frog genomes despite being present in all mammals and fishes sequenced so far.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Reference56 articles.
1. Adachi, M., M. Fukuda, and E. Nishida. 2000. Nuclear export of MAP kinase (ERK) involves a MAP kinase kinase (MEK)-dependent active transport mechanism. J. Cell Biol.148:849-856. (Erratum, 149:754, 2000.) 2. Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase 1c (ERK1c), a Novel 42-Kilodalton ERK, Demonstrates Unique Modes of Regulation, Localization, and Function 3. Agrawal, A., S. Dillon, T. L. Denning, and B. Pulendran. 2006. ERK1−/− mice exhibit Th1 cell polarization and increased susceptibility to experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. J. Immunol.176:5788-5796. 4. Aury, J. M., O. Jaillon, L. Duret, B. Noel, C. Jubin, B. M. Porcel, B. Segurens, V. Daubin, V. Anthouard, N. Aiach, O. Arnaiz, A. Billaut, J. Beisson, I. Blanc, K. Bouhouche, F. Camara, S. Duharcourt, R. Guigo, D. Gogendeau, M. Katinka, A. M. Keller, R. Kissmehl, C. Klotz, F. Koll, A. Le Mouel, G. Lepere, S. Malinsky, M. Nowacki, J. K. Nowak, H. Plattner, J. Poulain, F. Ruiz, V. Serrano, M. Zagulski, P. Dessen, M. Betermier, J. Weissenbach, C. Scarpelli, V. Schachter, L. Sperling, E. Meyer, J. Cohen, and P. Wincker. 2006. Global trends of whole-genome duplications revealed by the ciliate Paramecium tetraurelia. Nature444:171-178. 5. Berra, E., E. Benizri, A. Ginouves, V. Volmat, D. Roux, and J. Pouyssegur. 2003. HIF prolyl-hydroxylase 2 is the key oxygen sensor setting low steady-state levels of HIF-1alpha in normoxia. EMBO J.22:4082-4090.
Cited by
165 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|