Abstract

The canonical pathway for protein kinase D1 (PKD1) activation by growth factor receptors involves diacylglycerol binding to the C1 domain and protein kinase C-dependent phosphorylation at the activation loop. PKD1 then autophosphorylates at Ser(916), a modification frequently used as a surrogate marker of PKD1 activity. PKD1 also is cleaved by caspase-3 at a site in the C1-PH interdomain during apoptosis; the functional consequences of this cleavage event remain uncertain. This study shows that PKD1-Δ1-321 (an N-terminal deletion mutant lacking the C1 domain and flanking sequence that models the catalytic fragment that accumulates during apoptosis) and PKD1-CD (the isolated catalytic domain) display high basal Ser(916) autocatalytic activity and robust activity toward CREBtide (a peptide substrate) but little to no activation loop autophosphorylation and no associated activity toward protein substrates, such as cAMP-response element binding protein and cardiac troponin I. In contrast, PKD1-ΔPH (a PH domain deletion mutant) is recovered as a constitutively active enzyme, with high basal autocatalytic activity and high basal activity toward peptide and protein substrates. These results indicate that individual regions in the regulatory domain act in a distinct manner to control PKD1 activity. Finally, cell-based studies show that PKD1-Δ1-321 does not substitute for WT-PKD1 as an in vivo activator of cAMP-response element binding protein and ERK phosphorylation. Proteolytic events that remove the C1 domain (but not the autoinhibitory PH domain) limit maximal PKD1 activity toward physiologically relevant protein substrates and lead to a defect in PKD1-dependent cellular responses.

Highlights

  • protein kinase D1 (PKD1) catalytic fragments accumulate during apoptosis; their cellular actions remain uncertain

  • This study shows that PKD1-⌬1–321 and PKD1CD display high basal Ser916 autocatalytic activity and robust activity toward CREBtide but little to no activation loop autophosphorylation and no associated activity toward protein substrates, such as cAMP-response element binding protein and cardiac troponin I

  • We previously demonstrated that a PKD1 mutant harboring an S744A/S748A substitution retains in vitro lipid-dependent Ser916 autocatalytic activity, but no lipid cofactor-dependent CREB kinase activity, and that PKD1-S744A/S748A phosphorylates CREB when assays are performed with dextran sulfate

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Summary

Background

PKD1 catalytic fragments accumulate during apoptosis; their cellular actions remain uncertain. This study shows that PKD1-⌬1–321 (an N-terminal deletion mutant lacking the C1 domain and flanking sequence that models the catalytic fragment that accumulates during apoptosis) and PKD1CD (the isolated catalytic domain) display high basal Ser916 autocatalytic activity and robust activity toward CREBtide (a peptide substrate) but little to no activation loop autophosphorylation and no associated activity toward protein substrates, such as cAMP-response element binding protein and cardiac troponin I. Häussermann et al (9) performed a more comprehensive analysis and showed that the increased basal activity of the C-terminal cleavage product is inconsequential when compared with the high PS/PMA-dependent activity displayed by the full-length PKD1 enzyme; these results suggest that proteolysis limits maximal PKD1 activity Of note, these previous studies measured PKD1 activity using assays that tracked autophosphorylation or phosphorylation of a peptide substrate; recent studies indicate that these approaches may be misleading because they do not necessarily provide valid surrogate readouts of PKD1 activity toward heterologous protein substrates (2). This study uses cell-based and in vitro approaches (including assays that track phosphorylation of physiologically relevant substrates, such as cAMP-response element binding protein (CREB) and cardiac troponin I (cTnI)) to resolve uncertainties regarding the activity of PKD1 catalytic fragments

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