CDK8 and CDK19: positive regulators of signal-induced transcription and negative regulators of Mediator complex proteins

Author:

Chen Mengqian12,Li Jing1,Zhang Li1,Wang Lili1,Cheng Chen1,Ji Hao1,Altilia Serena1,Ding Xiaokai1,Cai Guoshuai3,Altomare Diego1,Shtutman Michael1,Byrum Stephanie D4,Mackintosh Samuel G4,Feoktistov Alexey5,Soshnikova Nataliya5ORCID,Mogila Vladislav A5,Tatarskiy Victor5,Erokhin Maksim5,Chetverina Darya5ORCID,Prawira Angga6,Ni Yi6,Urban Stephan6,McInnes Campbell1,Broude Eugenia V1,Roninson Igor B1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Drug Discovery and Biomedical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of South Carolina , Columbia , SC  29208, USA

2. Senex Biotechnology , Inc. Columbia , SC  29208, USA

3. Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina , Columbia , SC  29208, USA

4. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences , Little Rock , AR  72205, USA

5. Institute of Gene Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences , 119334  Moscow , Russian Federation

6. Department of Infectious Diseases, University Hospital of Heidelberg , Heidelberg,  Germany

Abstract

Abstract We have conducted a detailed transcriptomic, proteomic and phosphoproteomic analysis of CDK8 and its paralog CDK19, alternative enzymatic components of the kinase module associated with transcriptional Mediator complex and implicated in development and diseases. This analysis was performed using genetic modifications of CDK8 and CDK19, selective CDK8/19 small molecule kinase inhibitors and a potent CDK8/19 PROTAC degrader. CDK8/19 inhibition in cells exposed to serum or to agonists of NFκB or protein kinase C (PKC) reduced the induction of signal-responsive genes, indicating a pleiotropic role of Mediator kinases in signal-induced transcriptional reprogramming. CDK8/19 inhibition under basal conditions initially downregulated a small group of genes, most of which were inducible by serum or PKC stimulation. Prolonged CDK8/19 inhibition or mutagenesis upregulated a larger gene set, along with a post-transcriptional increase in the proteins comprising the core Mediator complex and its kinase module. Regulation of both RNA and protein expression required CDK8/19 kinase activities but both enzymes protected their binding partner cyclin C from proteolytic degradation in a kinase-independent manner. Analysis of isogenic cell populations expressing CDK8, CDK19 or their kinase-inactive mutants revealed that CDK8 and CDK19 have the same qualitative effects on protein phosphorylation and gene expression at the RNA and protein levels, whereas differential effects of CDK8 versus CDK19 knockouts were attributable to quantitative differences in their expression and activity rather than different functions.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Russian Science Foundation

German Center for Infectious Research

German Research Foundation

University of South Carolina

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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