Abstract
Syndecan-4 is a transmembrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan that acts as a coreceptor with integrins in focal adhesion formation. The central region of syndecan-4 cytoplasmic domain (4V; LGKKPIYKK) binds phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, and together they regulate protein kinase C alpha (PKC alpha) activity. Syndecan 4V peptide directly potentiates PKC alpha activity, leading to "superactivation" of the enzyme, apparently through an interaction with its catalytic domain. We now have performed yeast two-hybrid and in vitro binding assays to determine the interaction sites between 4V and PKC alpha. Full-length PKC alpha weakly interacted with 4V by yeast two-hybrid assays, but PKC alpha constructs that lack the pseudosubstrate region or constructs of the whole catalytic domain interacted more strongly. A mutated 4V sequence (4V(YF): LGKKPIFKK) did not interact with PKC alpha, indicating that tyrosine 192 in the syndecan-4 cytoplasmic domain might be critical for this interaction. Further assays identified a novel interaction site in the C terminus of the catalytic domain of PKC alpha (amino acid sequence 513-672). This encompasses the autophosphorylation sites, which are implicated in activation and stability. Yeast two-hybrid data were confirmed by in vitro binding and coimmunoprecipitation assays. The interaction of syndecan-4 with PKC alpha appears unique since PKC delta and epsilon did not interact with 4V in yeast two-hybrid assays or coimmunoprecipitate with syndecan-4. Finally, overexpression of syndecan-4 in rat embryo fibroblast cells, but not expression of the YF mutant, increased PKC alpha localization to focal adhesions. The data support a mechanism where syndecan-4 binds PKC alpha and localizes it to focal adhesions, whose assembly may be regulated by the kinase.
Highlights
Syndecans are transmembrane heparan sulfate proteoglycans that play roles in cell adhesion, growth factor binding and presentation, regulation of lipases, and bacterial and viral entry among other functions
We used yeast two-hybrid assays to confirm the specificity of interaction of 4V with the protein kinase C (PKC)␣ isoform and to identify 1) the site in the PKC␣ catalytic domain that interacts with the syndecan-4 V region, 2) the requirements for syndecan-4 cytoplasmic domain self-association, and 3) a specific residue within syndecan-4 that is needed for the interaction
Despite the fact that most activators of PKCs bind to the regulatory domain (Fig. 1B), no interaction was detected between syndecan-4 baits and PKC␣ regulatory domain (Fig. 1C)
Summary
5Ј-AATTCCGCATGAAGAAGGATGAAGGCGACTACGACTTGGGCAAGAAACCCATCTACAAAAAAC-3Ј 5Ј-TCGAGTTTTTTGTAGATGGGTTTCTTGCCCAAGTCGTAGTCGCCTTCATCCTTCTTCATGCGG-3Ј 5Ј-AATTCTTGGGCAAGAAACCCATCTACAAAAAATAG-3Ј 5Ј-TCGACTATTTTTTGTAGATGGGTTTCTTGCCCAAG-3Ј 5Ј-AGGCAGTGAATTCTTGGGCA-3Ј 5Ј-TAGAACTCGAGGGTGGGTCATTTTTTG-3Ј 5Ј-AATTCTTGGGCAAGAAACCCATCTTCAAAAAATAG-3Ј 5Ј-TCGACTATTTTTTGAAGATGGGTTTCTTGCCCAAG-3Ј. To understand the molecular basis for the pathway of PKC␣ activation, identification of the interaction sites in the kinase and in syndecan-4 cytoplasmic domain is essential. We used yeast two-hybrid assays to confirm the specificity of interaction of 4V with the PKC␣ isoform and to identify 1) the site in the PKC␣ catalytic domain that interacts with the syndecan-4 V region, 2) the requirements for syndecan-4 cytoplasmic domain self-association, and 3) a specific residue within syndecan-4 that is needed for the interaction. We show that this interaction is biologically relevant since overexpression of syndecan-4 in REF cells results in increased association of PKC␣ with syndecan-4 and increased PKC␣ localization in focal adhesions. This is dependent on the V region of syndecan-4 and requires tyrosine 192
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