Abstract

DNA damage-mediated activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) can regulate both cell survival and cell death. We show here that ERK activation in this context is biphasic and that early and late activation events are mediated by distinct upstream signals that drive cell survival and apoptosis, respectively. We identified the nuclear kinase mitogen-sensitive kinase 1 (MSK1) as a downstream target of both early and late ERK activation. We also observed that activation of ERK→MSK1 up to 4 h after DNA damage depends on epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), as EGFR or mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase (MEK)/ERK inhibitors or short hairpin RNA-mediated MSK1 depletion enhanced cell death. This prosurvival response was partially mediated through enhanced DNA repair, as EGFR or MEK/ERK inhibitors delayed DNA damage resolution. In contrast, the second phase of ERK→MSK1 activation drove apoptosis and required protein kinase Cδ (PKCδ) but not EGFR. Genetic disruption of PKCδ reduced ERK activation in an in vivo irradiation model, as did short hairpin RNA-mediated depletion of PKCδ in vitro In both models, PKCδ inhibition preferentially suppressed late activation of ERK. We have shown previously that nuclear localization of PKCδ is necessary and sufficient for apoptosis. Here we identified a nuclear PKCδ→ERK→MSK1 signaling module that regulates apoptosis. We also show that expression of nuclear PKCδ activates ERK and MSK1, that ERK activation is required for MSK1 activation, and that both ERK and MSK1 activation are required for apoptosis. Our findings suggest that location-specific activation by distinct upstream regulators may enable distinct functional outputs from common signaling pathways.

Highlights

  • DNA damage–mediated activation of extracellular signal– regulated kinase (ERK) can regulate both cell survival and cell death

  • We observed that activation of ERK3 mitogensensitive kinase 1 (MSK1) up to 4 h after DNA damage depends on epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), as EGFR or mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase (MEK)/ ERK inhibitors or short hairpin RNA–mediated MSK1 depletion enhanced cell death

  • We show that expression of nuclear PKC␦ activates ERK and MSK1, that ERK activation is required for MSK1 activation, and that both ERK and MSK1 activation are required for apoptosis

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Summary

Results

In response to DNA damage, biphasic activation of ERK drives survival and apoptosis. ParC5 rat parotid acinar cells provide a useful model to study DNA damage–induced cell death, as their response to irradiation is similar to that observed in salivary acinar cells in vivo [3]. Similar results were seen with pretreatment using MEK inhibitors followed by IR (Fig. 1E) These data demonstrate that ERK activation in response to DNA damage can drive both survival and apoptosis and that these distinct functional outputs may be dictated by the kinetics of activation. Depletion of PKC␦ slightly decreased activation of EGFR in cells treated with etoposide (Fig. 3A), consistent with partial inhibition of the early phase of ERK activation (Fig. 3, A and B). To determine whether ERK activation is required for apoptosis induced by nuclearly targeted PKC␦, parC5 cells transduced with Ad-GFP-PKC␦NLS were treated with the MEK inhibitors PD98059 and U0126

15 MSK1 vinculin
MSKsh726 MSKsh760
Discussion
Experimental procedures
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