The Scaffold Protein c-Jun NH2-Terminal Kinase-associated Leucine Zipper Protein Regulates Cell Migration through Interaction with the G Protein G 13
Author(s) -
Gantulga Davaakhuu,
Baljinnyam Tuvshintugs,
Yushiro Endo,
Takahisa Takino,
Hiroshi Sato,
Seishi Murakami,
Katsuji Yoshioka
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
the journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.28
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1756-2651
pISSN - 0021-924X
DOI - 10.1093/jb/mvn123
Subject(s) - small hairpin rna , scaffold protein , microbiology and biotechnology , cell migration , leucine zipper , hela , mapk/erk pathway , protein kinase a , kinase , c jun , biology , cell growth , signal transduction , cell , chemistry , biochemistry , transcription factor , rna , gene
Scaffold proteins for MAP kinase (MAPK) signalling modules play an important role in the specific and efficient signal transduction of the relevant MAPK cascades. Here, we investigated the function of the scaffolding protein c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK)-associated leucine zipper protein (JLP) by depleting it in cultured cells using a short hairpin RNA (shRNA) against human JLP. HeLa and DLD-1 cells stably expressing the shRNA showed a defect in cell migration. The re-expression of full-length shRNA-resistant mouse JLP rescued the impaired cell migration of the JLP-depleted HeLa cells; whereas, a C-terminal deletion mutant of mouse JLP, which failed to bind the G protein G(alpha13), showed little or no effect on the cell migration defect. Furthermore, although a constitutively active G(alpha13) enhanced the migration of control HeLa cells, the G(alpha13)-induced cell migration was significantly suppressed in the JLP-depleted HeLa cells. Taken together, these results suggest that JLP regulates cell migration through an interaction with G(alpha13).
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