Abstract

The transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) signaling pathway is known to be involved in a wide range of biological events, including development, cellular differentiation, apoptosis, and oncogenesis. The TGF-beta signal is mediated by ligand binding to the type II receptor, leading to the recruitment and activation of the type I receptor, and subsequent activation of a family of intracellular signal transducing proteins called Smads. Here we report a regulatory role for casein kinase Iepsilon (CKIepsilon) in the TGF-beta signaling cascade. We find that CKIepsilon binds to all Smads and the cytoplasmic domains of the type I and type II receptors both in vitro and in vivo. The interaction of CKIepsilon with the type I and type II receptors is independent of TGF-beta stimulation, whereas the CKIepsilon/Smad interaction is transiently disrupted by ligand treatment. Additionally, CKIepsilon is able to phosphorylate the receptor-activated Smads (Smads 1-3 and 5) and the type II receptor in vitro. Transcriptional reporter assays reveal that transient overexpression of wild type CKIepsilon dramatically reduces basal reporter activity but enhances TGF-beta-stimulated transcription. Furthermore, overexpression of a kinase-dead mutant of CKIepsilon inhibits both basal and ligand-induced transcription, whereas inhibition of endogenous CKI catalytic activity with IC261 blocks only TGF-beta-stimulated reporter activity. Finally, knocking down CKIepsilon protein levels results in a significant increase in basal and TGF-beta-induced transcription. These results suggest that CKIepsilon plays a ligand-dependent, differential, and dual regulatory role within the TGF-beta signaling pathway.

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