Abstract

Phosphorylation can both positively and negatively regulate activity of the Raf kinases. Akt has been shown to phosphorylate and inhibit C-Raf activity. We have recently reported that Akt negatively regulates B-Raf kinase activation by phosphorylating multiple residues within its amino-terminal regulatory domain. Here we investigated the regulation of B-Raf by serum and glucocorticoid-inducible kinase, SGK, which shares close sequence identity with the catalytic domain of Akt but lacks the pleckstrin homology domain. We observed that SGK inhibits B-Raf activity. A comparison of substrate specificity between SGK and Akt indicates that SGK is a potent negative regulator of B-Raf. In contrast to Akt, SGK negatively regulates B-Raf kinase activity by phosphorylating only a single Akt consensus site, Ser(364). Under similar experimental conditions, SGK displays a measurably stronger inhibitory effect on B-Raf kinase activity than Akt, whereas Akt exhibits a more inhibitory effect on the forkhead transcription factor, FKHR. The selective substrate specificity is correlated with an enhanced association between Akt or SGK and their preferred substrates, FKHR and B-Raf, respectively. These results indicate that B-Raf kinase activity is negatively regulated by Akt and SGK, suggesting that the cross-talk between the B-Raf and other signaling pathways can be mediated by both Akt and SGK.

Highlights

  • Phosphorylation can both positively and negatively regulate activity of the Raf kinases

  • HAB-Raf was transfected in HEK293 cells with serum- and glucocorticoid-inducible kinase (SGK)-S422D, which is a constitutively active SGK mutant containing the activation phosphorylation site Ser422 substituted by an aspartic residue [42]

  • The kinase-inactive mutant hemagglutinin antigen (HA)-SGKK127M was tested and showed no effect on RasV12-induced B-Raf activation (Fig. 1, lane 6). These results demonstrated that kinase activity of SGK is essential for it’s ability to inhibit B-Raf activity

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Summary

Introduction

Phosphorylation can both positively and negatively regulate activity of the Raf kinases. We have recently reported that Akt negatively regulates B-Raf kinase activation by phosphorylating multiple residues within its amino-terminal regulatory domain.

Results
Conclusion
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