| Literature DB >> 24670654 |
Pengda Liu1, Michael Begley2, Wojciech Michowski3, Hiroyuki Inuzuka1, Miriam Ginzberg4, Daming Gao1, Peiling Tsou2, Wenjian Gan1, Antonella Papa5, Byeong Mo Kim6, Lixin Wan1, Amrik Singh7, Bo Zhai4, Min Yuan8, Zhiwei Wang9, Steven P Gygi4, Tae Ho Lee6, Kun-Ping Lu8, Alex Toker1, Pier Paolo Pandolfi5, John M Asara8, Marc W Kirschner10, Piotr Sicinski3, Lewis Cantley11, Wenyi Wei1.
Abstract
Akt, also known as protein kinase B, plays key roles in cell proliferation, survival and metabolism. Akt hyperactivation contributes to many pathophysiological conditions, including human cancers, and is closely associated with poor prognosis and chemo- or radiotherapeutic resistance. Phosphorylation of Akt at S473 (ref. 5) and T308 (ref. 6) activates Akt. However, it remains unclear whether further mechanisms account for full Akt activation, and whether Akt hyperactivation is linked to misregulated cell cycle progression, another cancer hallmark. Here we report that Akt activity fluctuates across the cell cycle, mirroring cyclin A expression. Mechanistically, phosphorylation of S477 and T479 at the Akt extreme carboxy terminus by cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (Cdk2)/cyclin A or mTORC2, under distinct physiological conditions, promotes Akt activation through facilitating, or functionally compensating for, S473 phosphorylation. Furthermore, deletion of the cyclin A2 allele in the mouse olfactory bulb leads to reduced S477/T479 phosphorylation and elevated cellular apoptosis. Notably, cyclin A2-deletion-induced cellular apoptosis in mouse embryonic stem cells is partly rescued by S477D/T479E-Akt1, supporting a physiological role for cyclin A2 in governing Akt activation. Together, the results of our study show Akt S477/T479 phosphorylation to be an essential layer of the Akt activation mechanism to regulate its physiological functions, thereby providing a new mechanistic link between aberrant cell cycle progression and Akt hyperactivation in cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24670654 PMCID: PMC4076493 DOI: 10.1038/nature13079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962