Abstract

NUAK1 (NUAK family SnF1-like kinase-1) and NUAK2 protein kinases are activated by the LKB1 tumour suppressor and have been implicated in regulating multiple processes such as cell survival, senescence, adhesion and polarity. In the present paper we present evidence that expression of NUAK1 is controlled by CDK (cyclin-dependent kinase), PLK (Polo kinase) and the SCFβTrCP (Skp, Cullin and F-boxβTrCP) E3 ubiquitin ligase complex. Our data indicate that CDK phosphorylates NUAK1 at Ser445, triggering binding to PLK, which subsequently phosphorylates NUAK1 at two conserved non-catalytic serine residues (Ser476 and Ser480). This induces binding of NUAK1 to βTrCP, the substrate-recognition subunit of the SCFβTrCP E3 ligase, resulting in NUAK1 becoming ubiquitylated and degraded. We also show that NUAK1 and PLK1 are reciprocally controlled in the cell cycle. In G2–M-phase, when PLK1 is most active, NUAK1 levels are low and vice versa in S-phase, when PLK1 expression is low, NUAK1 is more highly expressed. Moreover, NUAK1 inhibitors (WZ4003 or HTH-01-015) suppress proliferation by reducing the population of cells in S-phase and mitosis, an effect that can be rescued by overexpression of a NUAK1 mutant in which Ser476 and Ser480 are mutated to alanine. Finally, previous work has suggested that NUAK1 phosphorylates and inhibits PP1βMYPT1 (where PP1 is protein phosphatase 1) and that a major role for the PP1βMYPT1 complex is to inhibit PLK1 by dephosphorylating its T-loop (Thr210). We demonstrate that activation of NUAK1 leads to a striking increase in phosphorylation of PLK1 at Thr210, an effect that is suppressed by NUAK1 inhibitors. Our data link NUAK1 to important cell-cycle signalling components (CDK, PLK and SCFβTrCP) and suggest that NUAK1 plays a role in stimulating S-phase, as well as PLK1 activity via its ability to regulate the PP1βMYPT1 phosphatase.

Highlights

  • NUAK1 [NUAK family SnF1-like kinase-1; known as ARK5 (AMPK-related kinase 5)] and the closely related NUAK2 [SNARK (SNF1/AMP kinase-related kinase)] belong to the AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) family of protein kinases and are phosphorylated and activated by the liver kinase B1 (LKB1) tumour suppressor protein kinase [1,2]

  • Pre-immune IgG was used as a control. (B) Endogenous NUAK1 was immunoprecipitated from U2OS cells treated with 50 nM calyculin A for 30 min

  • Alignment was performed using T-Coffee software and visualized using Jalview. (E) Alignment of the candidate phosphodegron sequence DSGxxS between NUAK1 and the canonical βTrCP-interacting target proteins IkB, β-catenin, WEE1 G2 checkpoint kinase (Wee1), early mitotic inhibitor 1 (Emi1), claspin and Bora. (F) human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293 cells were transfected with expression plasmids for the glutathione transferase (GST)-tagged NUAK1 WT or indicated mutants and immunoprecipitations and immunoblottings were carried out as in (C). (G) HA–NUAK1 with or without calyculin A treatment and HA–NUAK1 S476A + S480A were immunoprecipitated (IP) from U2OS Flp/In cells expressing either the WT or the mutant HA–NUAK1

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Summary

Introduction

NUAK1 [NUAK family SnF1-like kinase-1; known as ARK5 (AMPK-related kinase 5)] and the closely related NUAK2 [SNARK (SNF1/AMP kinase-related kinase)] belong to the AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) family of protein kinases and are phosphorylated and activated by the LKB1 (liver kinase B1) tumour suppressor protein kinase [1,2]. LKB1 activates NUAK isoforms by phosphorylating the kinase domain T-loop residue (Thr211-NUAK1). Other work points towards roles of NUAK isoforms in regulating cell division, through its ability to stimulate proliferation [9], promote invasion of cancer cells [10,11,12] and function as a survival factor in Myc-driven tumours [13]. Despite these studies, relatively little is known about how NUAK isoforms are regulated and function. To date only a single substrate, namely the MYPT1 subunit of the PP1βMYPT1

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