Literature DB >> 17166179

In vitro embryonic developmental phosphorylation of the cellular nucleic acid binding protein by cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and its relevance for biochemical activities.

Verónica A Lombardo1, Pablo Armas, Andrea M J Weiner, Nora B Calcaterra.   

Abstract

The zinc-finger cellular nucleic acid binding protein (CNBP) is a strikingly conserved single-stranded nucleic acid binding protein essential for normal forebrain formation during mouse and chick embryogenesis. CNBP cDNAs from a number of vertebrates have been cloned and analysed. CNBP is mainly conformed by seven retroviral Cys-Cys-His-Cys zinc-knuckles and a glycine/arginine rich region box. CNBP amino acid sequences show a putative Pro-Glu-Ser-Thr site of proteolysis and several putative phosphorylation sites. In this study, we analysed CNBP phosphorylation by embryonic kinases and its consequences on CNBP biochemical activities. We report that CNBP is differentially phosphorylated by Danio rerio embryonic extracts. In vitro CNBP phosphorylation is basal and constant at early embryonic developmental stages, it begins to increase after mid-blastula transition stage reaching the highest level at 48 hours postfertilization stage, and decreases thereafter to basal levels at 5 days postfertilization. The cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) was identified as responsible for phosphorylation on the unique CNBP conserved putative phosphorylation site. Site-directed mutagenesis replacing the PKA phospho-acceptor amino acid residue impairs CNBP phosphorylation, suggesting that phosphorylation may not only exist in D. rerio but also in other vertebrates. CNBP phosphorylation does not change single-stranded nucleic acid binding capability. Instead, it promotes in vitro the annealing of complementary oligonucleotides representing the CT element (CCCTCCCC) from the human cellular myelocytomatosis oncogene (c-myc) promoter, an element responsible for c-myc enhancer transcription. Our results suggest that phosphorylation might be a conserved post-translational modification that allows CNBP to perform a fine tune expression regulation of a group of target genes, including c-myc, during vertebrate embryogenesis.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17166179     DOI: 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2006.05596.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  FEBS J        ISSN: 1742-464X            Impact factor:   5.542


  1 in total

1.  CNBP acts as a key transcriptional regulator of sustained expression of interleukin-6.

Authors:  Eunhye Lee; Taeyun A Lee; Ji Hyun Kim; Areum Park; Eun A Ra; Sujin Kang; Hyun Jin Choi; Junhee L Choi; Hyunbin D Huh; Ji Eun Lee; Sungwook Lee; Boyoun Park
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2017-04-07       Impact factor: 16.971

  1 in total

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