Abstract

Metabotropic (slow) and ionotropic (fast) neurotransmission are integrated by intracellular signal transduction mechanisms involving protein phosphorylation/dephosphorylation to achieve experience-dependent alterations in brain circuitry. ERK is an important effector of both slow and fast forms of neurotransmission and has been implicated in normal brain function and CNS diseases. Here we characterize phosphorylation of the ERK-activating protein kinase MEK1 by Cdk5, ERK, and Cdk1 in vitro in intact mouse brain tissue and in the context of an animal behavioral paradigm of stress. Cdk5 only phosphorylates Thr-292, whereas ERK and Cdk1 phosphorylate both Thr-292 and Thr-286 MEK1. These sites interact in a kinase-specific manner and inhibit the ability of MEK1 to activate ERK. Thr-292 and Thr-286 MEK1 are phosphorylated in most mouse brain regions to stoichiometries of ~5% or less. Phosphorylation of Thr-292 MEK1 is regulated by cAMP-dependent signaling in mouse striatum in a manner consistent with negative feedback inhibition in response to ERK activation. Protein phosphatase 1 and 2A contribute to the maintenance of the basal phosphorylation state of both Thr-292 and Thr-286 MEK1 and that of ERK. Activation of the NMDA class of ionotropic glutamate receptors reduces inhibitory MEK1 phosphorylation, whereas forced swim, a paradigm of acute stress, attenuates Thr-292 MEK1 phosphorylation. Together, the data indicate that these inhibitory MEK1 sites phosphorylated by Cdk5 and ERK1 serve as mechanistic points of convergence for the regulation of ERK signaling by both slow and fast neurotransmission.

Highlights

  • ERK/MAPK signaling is important in brain function

  • In other reactions conducted under saturating conditions, phosphorylation stoichiometry routinely reached 0.8 mol/mol, demonstrating MEK1 to be an efficient substrate for Cdk5 in vitro

  • We report the site-specific phosphorylation of MEK1 by Cdk5, ERK1, and Cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1)

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Summary

Introduction

Results: MEK1 is inhibited by phosphorylation at Thr-292/286 by Cdk, ERK, and Cdk. Results: MEK1 is inhibited by phosphorylation at Thr-292/286 by Cdk, ERK, and Cdk1 These mechanisms are regulated by striatal glutamate and dopamine neurotransmission and acute stress in vivo. We characterize phosphorylation of the ERK-activating protein kinase MEK1 by Cdk, ERK, and Cdk in vitro in intact mouse brain tissue and in the context of an animal behavioral paradigm of stress. Phosphorylation of Thr-292 MEK1 is regulated by cAMP-dependent signaling in mouse striatum in a manner consistent with negative feedback inhibition in response to ERK activation. The data indicate that these inhibitory MEK1 sites phosphorylated by Cdk and ERK1 serve as mechanistic points of convergence for the regulation of ERK signaling by both slow and fast neurotransmission

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