| Literature DB >> 31058089 |
Markus Hartl1, Rainer Schneider1.
Abstract
The neuronal proteins GAP43 (neuromodulin), MARCKS, and BASP1 are highly expressed in the growth cones of nerve cells where they are involved in signal transmission and cytoskeleton organization. Although their primary structures are unrelated, these signaling proteins share several structural properties like fatty acid modification, and the presence of cationic effector domains. GAP43, MARCKS, and BASP1 bind to cell membrane phospholipids, a process reversibly regulated by protein kinase C-phosphorylation or by binding to the calcium sensor calmodulin (CaM). GAP43, MARCKS, and BASP1 are also expressed in non-neuronal cells, where they may have important functions to manage cytoskeleton architecture, and in case of MARCKS and BASP1 to act as cofactors in transcriptional regulation. During neoplastic cell transformation, the proteins reveal differential expression in normal vs. tumor cells, and display intrinsic tumor promoting or tumor suppressive activities. Whereas GAP43 and MARCKS are oncogenic, tumor suppressive functions have been ascribed to BASP1 and in part to MARCKS depending on the cell type. Like MARCKS, the myristoylated BASP1 protein is localized both in the cytoplasm and in the cell nucleus. Nuclear BASP1 participates in gene regulation converting the Wilms tumor transcription factor WT1 from an oncoprotein into a tumor suppressor. The BASP1 gene is downregulated in many human tumor cell lines particularly in those derived from leukemias, which display elevated levels of WT1 and of the major cancer driver MYC. BASP1 specifically inhibits MYC-induced cell transformation in cultured cells. The tumor suppressive functions of BASP1 and MARCKS could be exploited to expand the spectrum of future innovative therapeutic approaches to inhibit growth and viability of susceptible human tumors.Entities:
Keywords: BASP1; GAP43; MARCKS; MYC; Wilms tumor suppressor protein 1 (WT1); calmodulin (CaM)
Year: 2019 PMID: 31058089 PMCID: PMC6478813 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2019.00289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Structures of the human GAP43, MARCKS, MARCKSL1, and BASP1 proteins. Accession numbers: P17677 (GAP43), NP_002347 (MARCKS), NP_075385 (MARCKSL1), NP_001258535 (BASP1). A larger 274-amino acid isoform of human GAP43 exists (accession no. NP_001123536) (A) Proteins are depicted as gray bars with the indicated motifs, domains and phosphorylation sites. GAP43 is palmitoylated, and MARCKS, MARCKSL1, BASP1, are myristoylated at the N-termini. (B) Primary structures of the basic effector domains. Serine residues phosphorylated by protein kinase C (PKC) are in red. Conserved residues in the IQ domain of GAP43 or in the myristoylation motif of BASP1 are in bold.
Figure 2Cellular signaling pathways of the GMC proteins GAP43, MARCKS, and BASP1. The scheme summarizes the known key signaling pathways where these proteins are involved. PKC, protein kinase C; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; PIP2, phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate; PIP3, phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-bisphosphate; GRB2, growth factor receptor bound protein 2; SOS, Ras/Rac guanine nucleotide exchange factor; ROCK, Rho associated coiled-coil containing protein kinase; RTK, receptor tyrosine kinase; IRS1, insulin receptor substrate 1; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinase; PDK1, PIP3-dependent protein kinase; mTOR, mechanistic target of rapamycin kinase; MEK (MAPKK), mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase; ERK (MAPK), extracellular signal-regulated kinase; HDAC, histone deacetylase; WT1, Wilms tumor suppressor 1; PHB, prohibitin 1; CDK, cyclin-dependent protein kinase; CCN, cyclin; CDC73, cell division cycle 73; SKP2, S-phase kinase-associated protein 2. RTKs and PKC are inhibited by Regorafenib or Enzastaurin, respectively.
Figure 3Crystal structures of the GAP43, MARCKS, and BASP1 effector domains (ED) bound to the calmodulin (CaM) protein in the absence (GAP43) or in the presence (MARCKS, BASP1) of calcium ions (Ca2+). The images were created from the protein data bank (PDB) entries 4E53 (27), 1IWQ (44), 1L7Z (6), respectively, and adapted.
Figure 4Established protein-protein interactions (gray) and transcriptional regulation connections (orange) within the BASP1/CaM/MYC network. The MYC/MAX heterodimer binds to canonical motifs (E-boxes) present in the promoter regions of numerous MYC target genes. WT1 stimulates whereas WT1/BASP1 represses MYC transcription. MYC/MAX on the other hand represses BASP1 transcription thereby preventing its own repression by WT1/BASP1.
Figure 5Expression of GAP43, MARCKS, MARCKSL1, and BASP1 in selected human cancer cell lines classified according to the original cancer type (93) (adapted from version 18). RNA expression levels determined by RNA-Seq are given in transcripts per kilobase million (TPM). GAP43 and the MARCKS genes are highly expressed in brain tumor cell lines, whereas BASP1 is suppressed in most cancer cell lines apart from the cervical tumor cell lines HeLa and SiHa. The following cell lines were assessed: brain (AF22, SH-SY5Y, U138-MG, U-251MG, U-87MG), skin (A-431, HaCaT, SK-MEL-30, WM-115), myeloid (HAP1, HEL, HL-60, HMC-1, K-562, NB-4, THP-1, U-937), lymphoid (Daudi, HDLM-2, Karpas-707, MOLT-4, REH, RPMI-8226, U266/70, U-266/84, U-698), lung (A549, HBEC3-KT, SCLC-21H), abdominal (CACO-2, CAPAN-2, Hep G2); breast, female reproductive system (AN3-CA, EFO-21, HeLa, hTERT-HME1, MCF7, SiHa, SK-BR-3, T-47d), renal, urinary, male reproductive system (HEK 293, NTERA-2, PC-3, RPTEC TERT1, RT4), sarcoma (ASC diff, ASC TERT1, LHCN-M2, RH-30, U-2 OS, U-2197), fibroblast (BJ, BJ hTERT+, BJ hTERT+ SV40 Large T+, BJ hTERT+ SV40 Large T+ RasG12V, fHDF/TERT166, HBF TERT88), endothelial (hTEC/SVTERT24-B, HUVEC TERT2, TIME), miscellaneous (BEWO, HHSteC, HSkMC, hTCEpi).