| Literature DB >> 9837920 |
G H May1, K E Allen, W Clark, M Funk, D A Gillespie.
Abstract
Regulation of c-Jun transcriptional activity is believed to depend on a physical interaction with c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) that facilitates signal-regulated phosphorylation of multiple regulatory phosphoacceptor sites within the activation domain. Here we have investigated the structural requirements and consequences of regulatory phosphorylation for the interaction between c-Jun and JNK in vivo. We show that binding of JNK to c-Jun in vivo does not require JNK catalytic activity or the presence of the potential phosphoacceptor sites within c-Jun and that JNK retains the capacity to bind to a pseudo-phosphorylated mutant of c-Jun where these sites are replaced by phospho-mimetic aspartic acid residues. The c-Jun delta region docking site is essential for interaction with JNK in vivo but is not sufficient, because a c-Jun mutant that retains this region but that lacks the C-terminal DNA-binding domain fails to interact. Experiments using purified recombinant c-Jun and JNK proteins show that the c-Jun DNA-binding domain harbors an auxiliary interaction domain that has the potential to bind to JNK independently. Our results suggest that JNK can be tethered passively to c-Jun in situ through multiple interacting regions and, when activated, can stimulate c-Jun phosphorylation without necessarily dissociating from its substrate. Auxiliary interactions mediated by the DNA-binding domain could play a role in targeting JNK preferentially to c-Jun in specific homo- or heterodimeric complexes.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9837920 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.273.50.33429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157