SSeCKS, a Major Protein Kinase C Substrate with Tumor Suppressor Activity, Regulates G 1 →S Progression by Controlling the Expression and Cellular Compartmentalization of Cyclin D

Author:

Lin Xueying1,Nelson Peter2,Gelman Irwin H.23

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Microbiology 1 and

2. Medicine 2 and

3. Ruttenberg Cancer Center, 3 Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029-6574

Abstract

ABSTRACT SSeCKS, first isolated as a G 1 →S inhibitor that is downregulated in src - and ras -transformed cells, is a major cytoskeleton-associated PKC substrate with tumor suppressor and kinase-scaffolding activities. Previous attempts at constitutive expression resulted in cell variants with truncated ectopic SSeCKS products. Here, we show that tetracycline-regulated SSeCKS expression in NIH 3T3 cells induces G 1 arrest marked by extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2-dependent decreases in cyclin D1 expression and pRb phosphorylation. Unexpectedly, the forced reexpression of cyclin D1 failed to rescue SSeCKS-induced G 1 arrest. Confocal microscopy analysis revealed cytoplasmic colocalization of cyclin D1 with SSeCKS. Because the SSeCKS gene encodes two potential cyclin-binding motifs (CY) flanking major in vivo protein kinase C (PKC) phosphorylation sites (Ser 507/515 ), we addressed whether SSeCKS encodes a phosphorylation-dependent cyclin scaffolding function. Bacterially expressed SSeCKS-CY bound cyclins D1 and E, whereas K→S mutations within either CY motif ablated binding. Activation of PKC in vivo caused a rapid translocation of cyclin D1 to the nucleus. Cell permeable, penetratin-linked peptides encoding wild-type SSeCKS-CY, but not K→S or phospho-Ser 507/515 variants, released cyclin D1 from its cytoplasmic sequestration and induced higher saturation density in cyclin D1-overexpressor cells or rat embryo fibroblasts. Our data suggest that SSeCKS controls G 1 →S progression by regulating the expression and localization of cyclin D1. These data suggest that downregulation of SSeCKS in tumor cells removes gating checkpoints for saturation density, an effect that may promote contact independence.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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