Abstract

Wnt/β-catenin signalling controls development and adult tissue homeostasis and causes cancer when inappropriately activated. In unstimulated cells, an Axin1-centred multi-protein complex phosphorylates the transcriptional co-activator β-catenin, marking it for degradation. Wnt signalling antagonizes β-catenin proteolysis, leading to its accumulation and target gene expression. How Wnt stimulation alters the size distribution, composition and activity of endogenous Axin1 complexes remains poorly understood. Here, we employed two-dimensional blue native/SDS-PAGE to analyse endogenous Axin1 and β-catenin complexes during Wnt signalling. We show that the size range of Axin1 complexes is conserved between species and remains largely unaffected by Wnt stimulation. We detect a striking Wnt-dependent, cytosolic accumulation of both non-phosphorylated and phosphorylated β-catenin within a 450 kDa Axin1-based complex and in a distinct, Axin1-free complex of 200 kDa. These results argue that during Wnt stimulation, phosphorylated β-catenin is released from the Axin1 complex but fails to undergo immediate degradation. Importantly, in APC-mutant cancer cells, the distribution of Axin1 and β-catenin complexes strongly resembles that of Wnt-stimulated cells. Our findings argue that Wnt signals and APC mutations interfere with the turnover of phosphorylated β-catenin. Furthermore, our results suggest that the accumulation of small-sized β-catenin complexes may serve as an indicator of Wnt pathway activity in primary cancer cells.

Highlights

  • Wnt/b-catenin signalling orchestrates stem cell maintenance, proliferation and cell-fate decisions during embryonic development and in adult tissue homeostasis

  • Endogenous Axin1-based multi-protein complexes accommodate a limited number of binding partners

  • Protein complexes were analysed using a combination of blue native PAGE (BN-PAGE) and SDS-PAGE in a twodimensional manner (BN/SDS-PAGE)

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Summary

Introduction

Wnt/b-catenin signalling orchestrates stem cell maintenance, proliferation and cell-fate decisions during embryonic development and in adult tissue homeostasis. Central to the Wnt/b-catenin signalling cascade is the proteolytic regulation of b-catenin, which performs a dual role in cell adhesion and transcriptional activation. In the absence of Wnt ligands, the level of the unbound, cytosolic pool of b-catenin is kept very low through the activity of a multi-protein complex dedicated to degrade b-catenin [2,3]. Formation of this b-catenin destruction complex is coordinated by the scaffold protein Axin, which recruits the kinases CK1 and GSK3b and the tumour-suppressor protein APC [3,4,5,6,7,8]. The complex binds and phosphorylates cytosolic b-catenin at its flexible N-terminus, after which the protein is degraded by the ubiquitin–proteasome system [2,3,7]

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