| Literature DB >> 35650644 |
Linbin Zhou1, Danny Siu-Chun Ng1, Jason C Yam1,2, Li Jia Chen1,2, Clement C Tham1,2, Chi Pui Pang1,2, Wai Kit Chu3,4,5.
Abstract
The retinoblastoma protein (pRb) functions as a cell cycle regulator controlling G1 to S phase transition and plays critical roles in tumour suppression. It is frequently inactivated in various tumours. The functions of pRb are tightly regulated, where post-translational modifications (PTMs) play crucial roles, including phosphorylation, ubiquitination, SUMOylation, acetylation and methylation. Most PTMs on pRb are reversible and can be detected in non-cancerous cells, playing an important role in cell cycle regulation, cell survival and differentiation. Conversely, altered PTMs on pRb can give rise to anomalies in cell proliferation and tumourigenesis. In this review, we first summarize recent findings pertinent to how individual PTMs impinge on pRb functions. As many of these PTMs on pRb were published as individual articles, we also provide insights on the coordination, either collaborations and/or competitions, of the same or different types of PTMs on pRb. Having a better understanding of how pRb is post-translationally modulated should pave the way for developing novel and specific therapeutic strategies to treat various human diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Acetylation; Methylation; Phosphorylation; Retinoblastoma; SUMOylation; Ubiquitination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35650644 PMCID: PMC9161509 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-022-00818-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 12.771
Fig. 1Retinoblastoma protein (pRb) structural domains and protein interactions. A Structured domains in pRb are colored, including the N-terminal domain (pRbN), the pocket domain A and B, and the pRb C-terminus core region (pRbCcore). In contrast, several intrinsically regions contain two large loops in pRbN (pRbNL) and the pocket domain (pRbPL), an interdomain linker (pRbIDL) and part of the N-terminal region of the pRbC (pRbCN). N and C indicate the N- and C-terminals of the protein. Numbers indicate the amino acid positions. B Model of the unphosphorylated form of pRb and its interaction with E2F and LXCXE motif containing proteins. E2FTD represents the E2F transactivation domain. E2FMB–DPMB represents the marked box domains of E2F and its heterodimer partner DP. C Models demonstrating the impacts of various phosphorylation events on pRb structural alteration and on its association with E2F and LXCXE motif containing proteins. Only part of the pRb protein regions is shown for illustration. (i) T821/T826 phosphorylation promotes binding of pRbCN to the pocket domain and inhibits pRb binding to LXCXE motif containing proteins as well as binding to E2FMB–DPMB. (ii) S608/S612 phosphorylation partially impedes E2FTD interaction via promoting association of pRbPL with the pocket domain. (iii) T356/T373 phosphorylation partially blocks E2FTD binding to pRb and pRb interacting with LXCXE motif containing proteins by inducing pRbN docking on the pocket domain. (iv) S788/S795 and S807/S811 phosphorylation facilitates intramolecular association between the pRbC and the pocket domain to obstruct the sites for E2FTD and E2FMB–DPMB binding
E3 ubiquitin ligases that target pRb for ubiquitination
| E3 ligase | Adaptor(s) | Functional outputs | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| TRIM71 | None | Facilitate breast tumor progression | [ |
| RNF123 | None | Enhance G1/S phase transition | [ |
| NRBE3 | None | Accelerate G1/S phase transition and cell proliferation | [ |
| MDM2 | None | Facilitate cell cycle progression | [ |
| MDMX | Restore pRb functions in cell cycle regulation [ Enhance G1/S phase transition [ | [ | |
| NIR | Elevate G1/S phase transition and cell proliferation [ | [ | |
| SCFSKP2 | EBNA3C | Attenuating pRb-induced G1 arrest | [ |
| hUTP14a | None | Upregulate expression of E2F1 regulated genes and enhance proliferation of cancer cells | [ |
| Cullin 2 | HPV16 E7 | Stimulate cell proliferation | [ |
| E6AP | NS5B | Stimulate cell proliferation | [ |
Ubiquitination sites of pRb detected by MS
| Cell lines/tissues | Conditions | Ubiquitination sites detected by MS | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| MMTV-Tg (LINK-A) mouse mammary gland tumour | Untreated | K803 | [ |
| HEK293T cells; MV4–11 cells | Unperturbed (for HEK293T cells); proteasome inhibitor MG132 treatment (for MV4–11 cells) | K810 | [ |
| Jurkat E6-1 cells | Unperturbed | K63, K65, K265, K279, K289, K319, K329, K359, K420, K640, K791, K810, K814, K844, K847, K870, K896, K900 | [ |
| U2OS cells | UV treated | K842 | [ |
| HEK293T cells | UV treated | K97, K823, K842, K846, K856, K879 | [ |
| Hep2 and Jurkat cells | Treatment with proteasome inhibitors bortezomid and b-AP15 | K63, K65, K94, K136, K143, K265, K279, K289, K327, K341, K420, K427, K432, K537, K640, K791, K810, K814, K824, K847, K870, K896, K900 (in Jurkat cells) K63, K65, K94, K136, K143, K265, K279, K289, K327, K341, K420, K427, K537, K640, K810, K847, K860, K870, K896, K900 (in Hep2 cells) | [ |
| HCT116 cells | Combined treatment with bortezomid and cycloheximide | K143 | [ |
Summary of phosphorylation events in pRb with reported functional outcomes
| Functional outcomes | Phosphorylated sites | Kinases | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Impede pRb interaction with LXCXE motif containing proteins | T821/T826 | CDK2 and CDK4 | [ |
| Hinder pRb–E2FTD binding and/or pRb–E2FMB–DPMB binding | S608/S612 and T356/T373 | Unknown | [ |
| S788/S795 and S807/S811 | [ | ||
| Promote G0 exit and G1 entry | S807/S811 | p38γ MAPK | [ |
| CDK3 | [ | ||
| Abrogate pRb growth suppression activity and promote cell cycle progression | S780 | CDK4 | [ |
| S795 | CDK4 | [ | |
| S567 | CDK2 | [ | |
| S807/S811 | CDK5 | [ | |
| S780, S795 and S807/S811 | CDK4 | [ | |
| S608 | Raf-1 | [ | |
| S807/S811, S780 and T821/T826 | p38γ MAPK | [ | |
| S780, S807/S811 and T821 | UL97 | [ | |
| Delay S phase progression | S612 | BGLF4 kinase | [ |
| Transit G2/M phase or exit cell cycle | S804 | AMPK | [ |
| Increase E2F transcriptional activities and trigger cell death | S795 | CDK4/6 | [ |
| S780, S795 and S807/S811 | CDK5 | [ | |
| S780 | p38 MAPK | [ | |
| S567 | p38 MAPK | [ | |
| T821 | SAPK/JNK | [ | |
| Promote cell survival | S249/T252 | p38α MAPK | [ |
| Y805 | Abl | [ | |
| S612 | Chk1/2 | [ | |
| S807 | Unknown | [ | |
| Hinder pRb and HDAC5 interaction | S249/T252 and T821 | CDK4/6 and CDK2 | [ |
| Promote cancer immunity | S249/T252 | CDK4/6 | [ |
| Enhance chromatin decondensation | S838/T841 | p38 MAPK | [ |
| Promote pRb–E2F1 binding to negatively modulate endoreduplication and avoid polyploidy formation | S780 | Aurora B kinase | [ |
| Suppress tumourigenesis | T821 | CDK4/6 | [ |
pRb methylation and relevant functional outcomes
| Site | Methyltransferases/effector proteins | Functional outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| K810 | Set7/9 | Suppress E2F1 transcriptional activity and arrest cell cycle progression | [ |
| SMYD2 | Enhance E2F1 transcriptional activity and accelerate cell cycle progression | [ | |
| 53BP1 | Facilitate pRb to integrate cell cycle control and DNA damage response | [ | |
| PHF20L1 | Negatively regulate E2F-responsive genes for pRb-mediated G1/S checkpoint control | [ | |
| K873 | Set7/9 | Repress E2F1-responsive gene expression, arrest cell cycle progression and promote cell differentiation | [ |
| K860 | SMYD2 | Facilitate pRb binding with L3MBTL1 | [ |
| R787 | PRMT4 | Disrupt pRb binding with E2F1, enhance E2F1 transcriptional activation and promote cell cycle progression | [ |
Fig. 2Summary of posttranslational modification sites on pRb. Sites of phosphorylation, SUMOylation, methylation and acetylation on pRb with reported functional outputs are shown, while sites of ubiquitination on pRb identified by mass spectrometry without documented functional outcomes are also shown. N and C indicate the N- and C-terminals of the protein