Mapping the signaling network of BIN2 kinase using TurboID-mediated biotin labeling and phosphoproteomics

Author:

Kim Tae-Wuk123ORCID,Park Chan Ho1ORCID,Hsu Chuan-Chih14ORCID,Kim Yeong-Woo2ORCID,Ko Yeong-Woo2ORCID,Zhang Zhenzhen1ORCID,Zhu Jia-Ying1ORCID,Hsiao Yu-Chun1ORCID,Branon Tess567ORCID,Kaasik Krista8ORCID,Saldivar Evan16ORCID,Li Kevin1ORCID,Pasha Asher9ORCID,Provart Nicholas J9ORCID,Burlingame Alma L8ORCID,Xu Shou-Ling1ORCID,Ting Alice Y5610ORCID,Wang Zhi-Yong1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution for Science , Stanford, California 94305 , USA

2. Department of Life Science, Hanyang University , Seoul 04763 , South Korea

3. Research Institute for Convergence of Basic Science, Hanyang University , Seoul 04763 , South Korea

4. Institute of Plant and Microbial Biology, Academia Sinica , Taipei 11529 , Taiwan

5. Departments of Genetics, Biology, and Chemistry, Stanford University , Stanford, California 94305 , USA

6. Department of Biology, Stanford University , Stanford, California 94305 , USA

7. Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139 , USA

8. Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of California , San Francisco, California 94158 , USA

9. Department of Cell & Systems Biology/Centre for the Analysis of Genome Evolution and Function, University of Toronto , Toronto, Ontario M5S 3B2 , Canada

10. Chan Zuckerberg Biohub , San Francisco, California , USA

Abstract

Abstract Elucidating enzyme–substrate relationships in posttranslational modification (PTM) networks is crucial for understanding signal transduction pathways but is technically difficult because enzyme–substrate interactions tend to be transient. Here, we demonstrate that TurboID-based proximity labeling (TbPL) effectively and specifically captures the substrates of kinases and phosphatases. TbPL-mass spectrometry (TbPL-MS) identified over 400 proximal proteins of Arabidopsis thaliana BRASSINOSTEROID-INSENSITIVE2 (BIN2), a member of the GLYCOGEN SYNTHASE KINASE 3 (GSK3) family that integrates signaling pathways controlling diverse developmental and acclimation processes. A large portion of the BIN2-proximal proteins showed BIN2-dependent phosphorylation in vivo or in vitro, suggesting that these are BIN2 substrates. Protein–protein interaction network analysis showed that the BIN2-proximal proteins include interactors of BIN2 substrates, revealing a high level of interactions among the BIN2-proximal proteins. Our proteomic analysis establishes the BIN2 signaling network and uncovers BIN2 functions in regulating key cellular processes such as transcription, RNA processing, translation initiation, vesicle trafficking, and cytoskeleton organization. We further discovered significant overlap between the GSK3 phosphorylome and the O-GlcNAcylome, suggesting an evolutionarily ancient relationship between GSK3 and the nutrient-sensing O-glycosylation pathway. Our work presents a powerful method for mapping PTM networks, a large dataset of GSK3 kinase substrates, and important insights into the signaling network that controls key cellular functions underlying plant growth and acclimation.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

National Institutes of Health

Basic Science Research Program

National Research Foundation of Korea

Ministry of Science, ICT, and Future Planning

Medical Research Foundation

Dow Graduate Research and Lester Wolfe Fellowships

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

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