| Literature DB >> 32266261 |
Xiangming Hu1, Lin-Feng Chen2,3.
Abstract
Pin1 is a peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase that specifically binds to a phosphorylated serine or threonine residue preceding a proline (pSer/Thr-Pro) motif and catalyzes the cis-trans isomerization of proline imidic peptide bond, resulting in conformational change of its substrates. Pin1 regulates many biological processes and is also involved in the development of human diseases, like cancer and neurological diseases. Many Pin1 substrates are transcription factors and transcription regulators, including RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) and factors associated with transcription initiation, elongation, termination and post-transcription mRNA decay. By changing the stability, subcellular localization, protein-protein or protein-DNA/RNA interactions of these transcription related proteins, Pin1 modulates the transcription of many genes related to cell proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis and immune response. Here, we will discuss how Pin regulates the properties of these transcription relevant factors for effective gene expression and how Pin1-mediated transcription contributes to the diverse pathophysiological functions of Pin1.Entities:
Keywords: Pin1; RNA polymerase II; conformational change; isomerization; phosphorylation; transcription; transcription factor
Year: 2020 PMID: 32266261 PMCID: PMC7100383 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.00179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
List of Pin1 substrates in transcription regulation.
| Substrates | Motif | Regulation by Pin1 | Cellular consequence of Pin1 interaction | Evidence of isomerization | References |
| RelA | T254 | Increased nuclear accumulation and stability | Cell survival, proliferation and inflammation | Yes | |
| β-catenin | S246 | Increased nuclear accumulation and stability | Cancer cell proliferation, osteogenesis | Yes | |
| Fox04 | N/A | Deubiquitylation and decreased nuclear accumulation | Cell cycle and cancer cell proliferation | Yes | |
| NFAT | N/A | Decreased nuclear accumulation | T cell activation | N/A | |
| p53 | S33, S46, T81, S315 | Increased stability and transactivation | DNA damage response, cancer cell cycle arrest and apoptosis | Yes | |
| p63 | T538 | Increased or decreased stability | Cancer and limb development | N/A | |
| p73 | S412, T442, T482 | Increased stability and transactivation | Apoptosis | Yes | |
| c-Jun | S63, S73 | Increased stability | Ras and JNK signaling | Yes | |
| Naong | S52, S65, S71, T287 | Increased stability | Stem cell pluripotency | Yes | |
| Oct4 | S12 | Increased stability | Stem cell pluripotency | Yes | |
| FoxMl | S331, S704 | Increase stability | Drug resistance | N/A | |
| Osterix | S76, S80 | Increase stability and transactivation | Osteogenic differentiation | Yes | |
| ATF1 | T184 | Increase stability and transactivation | NPC tumorigenesis | N/A | |
| TR3 | S95, S140, S431 | Increase stability and transactivation | Mitogenesis | Yes | |
| Runx2 | T408, T449, S472, S510 | Increase sub-nuclear area accumulation and stability | Skeletal development, Osteoblast differentiation. | Yes | |
| Runx3 | T209, T212, T231, S214 | Degradation, suppresses transactivation | Breast cancer cell proliferation | Yes | |
| Smad3 | T179, S204, S208, S213 | Decreased stability | Cell migration and invasion | Yes | |
| IRF3 | S339 | Decreased stability | Antiviral responses | Yes | |
| RAR | S77 | Decreased stability | Cancer cell proliferation | Yes | |
| MEF2C | S98, S110 | Decreased stability | Muscle terminal differentiation | Yes | |
| Fox03 | N/A | Decreased stability | Drug resistance | No | |
| c-Myc | T58, S62 | Decreased stability, increased DNA binding | Cancer cell proliferation | Yes | |
| ERα | S118, S294 | Increased dimerization, stability and transactivation activity | Cancer cell proliferation | Yes | |
| HIFIα | S641, S643 | Increase stability and transactivation | Angiogenesis | Yes | |
| SP1 | T739 | Increased stability, decreased DNA binding | Cell cycle progression | Yes | |
| c-Fos | T232, T325, T331 | Increased interaction with other transcription factors | Mitogen response | Yes | |
| GR | S203, S211 | Increased transactivation | Inflammatory response | Yes | |
| PPARγ | S273 | Increased stability and transactivation | Adipogenesis | N/A | |
| Nur77 | S152 | Increased DNA binding and transactivation | Vascular disease and metabolism | No | |
| Stat3 | S272 | Increased DNA binding and transactivation | EMT and type 2 diabetes | No | |
| SRC-3 | multiple sites | Increased interaction with p300 and degradation | Brease cancer cell proliferation | Yes | |
| Notch1 | S2122, T2133, S2137 | Enhanced Notch1 cleavage and transcriptional activity | Notch signaling | Yes | |
| SMRT | S1241, S1445, S1469 | Decreased stability | Cancer cell proliferation and response to tamoxifen | Yes | |
| CRTC2 | S136 | Decreased nuclear accumulation | Glucose metabolism | N/A | |
| PRDM16 | N/A | Decreased stability | Thermogenesis | N/A | |
| Rpbl | S2, S5 of CTD | Altered phosphorylation of CTD | Transcription | Yes | |
| Histone HI | multiple sites | Increased dephosphorylation and binding to chromatin | Transcription | Yes | |
| Spt5 | multiple sites | Increased binding to transcription regulators | Transcription | N/A | |
| Brd4 | T204 | Increased stability and transcriptional activity | Transcription and cancer | Yes | |
| SLBP | T171 | Increased dephosphorylation | Cell cycle | Yes | |
| AUF1 | S83 | Decreased AUF1-mRNA interactions | Eosinophil survival, T cell activation, allergic inflammation | Yes | |
| KSRP | S181 | Increased dephosphorylation and mRNA interaction | Hyperparathyroidism | N/A | |
| HuR | N/A | mRNA binding affinity | Transcription | N/A |
FIGURE 1Pin1 regulates the activation of transcription factors via distinct mechanisms: ① affects nucleocytoplasmic shuttling; ② affects protein stability by ubiquitination; ③ affects DNA-binding affinity; ④ affects protein interaction; ⑤ regulates phosphorylation or dephosphorylation.
FIGURE 2Pin1 regulates gene expression network. During transcription initiation, Pin1 promotes dephosphorylation of Histone H1 and Ser5 in the CTD of RNA polymerase II, to inhibit the recruitment of TRP (transcription regulatory proteins) and pre-initiation complex, and promoter clearance, processes that are required to transcription initiation. During transcription elongation, on one hand, Pin1 binds to phosphorylated Spt5 and might facilitate conversion of DSIF from a negative elongation factor into a positive elongation factor. On the other hand, Pin1 enhances Brd4’s stability and its interacting with CDK9 to phosphorylate Ser2 in the CTD of RNA polymerase II, and thus increases transcription elongation. In transcription termination, Pin1 binds to phosphorylated Ser2 in the CTD of RNAPII and facilitates coordinate recruitment of TTF (transcription termination factors). After the synthesis of mRNA, Pin1 binds to AUBPs (AU-binding proteins) to accelerate or slow mRNA decay.