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  • Title: Evidence for an important role of serine 16 and its phosphorylation in the stabilization of c-Mos.
    Author: Pham CD, Vuyyuru VB, Yang Y, Bai W, Singh B.
    Journal: Oncogene; 1999 Jul 29; 18(30):4287-94. PubMed ID: 10439036.
    Abstract:
    The c-Mos serine/threonine protein kinase is an essential component of cytostatic factor (CSF), which is required for metaphase II arrest of eggs in vertebrates. Previously, we showed that c-Mos residue Ser-16 is phosphorylated in the ts110 Mo-MuSV-encoded Gag-Mos fusion protein. Here we provide evidence that Mos is phosphorylated at Ser-16 in transfected COS-1 cells. To investigate the role of this phosphorylation, Ser-16 was substituted with alanine or glutamic acid in full-length v-Mos (an Env-Mos fusion protein that contains 31 additional amino acids at the amino terminus of c-Mos), its mouse c-Mos equivalent version (v-Mos residues 32-374, hereafter referred to as Mos), and mouse c-Mos. Constructs expressing mutant versions of Mos were transfected into COS-1 and NIH3T3 cells in a transient and stable manner, respectively. Synthesis and proteolysis of Mos were evaluated by pulse-chase analysis of 35S-methionine-labeled proteins. Our findings indicate that the S16A mutant of Mos was highly unstable. It accumulated to approximately 10% of the level of wild-type Mos or its S16E mutant. In addition, the S16A mutation but not the S16E mutation inhibited Mos interaction with a cellular protein, p35, suggesting that phosphorylation at Ser-16 may promote Mos interaction with p35. As expected from its destabilizing effect, the S16A mutation caused a dramatic decrease in the cellular transforming activity of Mos (determined by soft-agar colony-formation assay with the stably transfected NIH3T3 cells), which is known to correlate with its CSF function. Efficient ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis of c-Mos requires proline as the second residue from the amino-terminus. In contrast to Mos, neither the stability nor protein kinase activity of v-Mos (in which c-Mos residue Pro-2 becomes Pro-33) was affected by the S16A mutation. To provide further proof that, similar to c-Mos, the S16A mutant is recognized by the proteolysis system through Pro-2, we show that the effect of the S16A mutation is reversed by the Pro-2-Ala mutation. Thus, our results indicate that Ser-16 has an important role in the regulation of c-Mos and that phosphorylation at Ser-16 may inhibit proteolysis of c-Mos.
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