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Mutations in Protein-Binding Hot-Spots on the Hub Protein Smad3 Differentially Affect Its Protein Interactions and Smad3-Regulated Gene Expression

BACKGROUND: Hub proteins are connected through binding interactions to many other proteins. Smad3, a mediator of signal transduction induced by transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β), serves as a hub protein for over 50 protein-protein interactions. Different cellular responses mediated by Smad3 ar...

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Autores principales: Schiro, Michelle M., Stauber, Sara E., Peterson, Tami L., Krueger, Chateen, Darnell, Steven J., Satyshur, Kenneth A., Drinkwater, Norman R., Newton, Michael A., Hoffmann, F. Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3176292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21949838
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025021
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author Schiro, Michelle M.
Stauber, Sara E.
Peterson, Tami L.
Krueger, Chateen
Darnell, Steven J.
Satyshur, Kenneth A.
Drinkwater, Norman R.
Newton, Michael A.
Hoffmann, F. Michael
author_facet Schiro, Michelle M.
Stauber, Sara E.
Peterson, Tami L.
Krueger, Chateen
Darnell, Steven J.
Satyshur, Kenneth A.
Drinkwater, Norman R.
Newton, Michael A.
Hoffmann, F. Michael
author_sort Schiro, Michelle M.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Hub proteins are connected through binding interactions to many other proteins. Smad3, a mediator of signal transduction induced by transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β), serves as a hub protein for over 50 protein-protein interactions. Different cellular responses mediated by Smad3 are the product of cell-type and context dependent Smad3-nucleated protein complexes acting in concert. Our hypothesis is that perturbation of this spectrum of protein complexes by mutation of single protein-binding hot-spots on Smad3 will have distinct consequences on Smad3-mediated responses. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We mutated 28 amino acids on the surface of the Smad3 MH2 domain and identified 22 Smad3 variants with reduced binding to subsets of 17 Smad3-binding proteins including Smad4, SARA, Ski, Smurf2 and SIP1. Mutations defective in binding to Smad4, e.g., D408H, or defective in nucleocytoplasmic shuttling, e.g., W406A, were compromised in modulating the expression levels of a Smad3-dependent reporter gene or six endogenous Smad3-responsive genes: Mmp9, IL11, Tnfaip6, Fermt1, Olfm2 and Wnt11. However, the Smad3 mutants Y226A, Y297A, W326A, K341A, and E267A had distinct differences on TGF-β signaling. For example, K341A and Y226A both reduced the Smad3-mediated activation of the reporter gene by ∼50% but K341A only reduced the TGF-β inducibilty of Olfm2 in contrast to Y226A which reduced the TGF-β inducibility of all six endogenous genes as severely as the W406A mutation. E267A had increased protein binding but reduced TGF-β inducibility because it caused higher basal levels of expression. Y297A had increased TGF-β inducibility because it caused lower Smad3-induced basal levels of gene expression. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Mutations in protein binding hot-spots on Smad3 reduced the binding to different subsets of interacting proteins and caused a range of quantitative changes in the expression of genes induced by Smad3. This approach should be useful for unraveling which Smad3 protein complexes are critical for specific biological responses.
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spelling pubmed-31762922011-09-26 Mutations in Protein-Binding Hot-Spots on the Hub Protein Smad3 Differentially Affect Its Protein Interactions and Smad3-Regulated Gene Expression Schiro, Michelle M. Stauber, Sara E. Peterson, Tami L. Krueger, Chateen Darnell, Steven J. Satyshur, Kenneth A. Drinkwater, Norman R. Newton, Michael A. Hoffmann, F. Michael PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Hub proteins are connected through binding interactions to many other proteins. Smad3, a mediator of signal transduction induced by transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β), serves as a hub protein for over 50 protein-protein interactions. Different cellular responses mediated by Smad3 are the product of cell-type and context dependent Smad3-nucleated protein complexes acting in concert. Our hypothesis is that perturbation of this spectrum of protein complexes by mutation of single protein-binding hot-spots on Smad3 will have distinct consequences on Smad3-mediated responses. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We mutated 28 amino acids on the surface of the Smad3 MH2 domain and identified 22 Smad3 variants with reduced binding to subsets of 17 Smad3-binding proteins including Smad4, SARA, Ski, Smurf2 and SIP1. Mutations defective in binding to Smad4, e.g., D408H, or defective in nucleocytoplasmic shuttling, e.g., W406A, were compromised in modulating the expression levels of a Smad3-dependent reporter gene or six endogenous Smad3-responsive genes: Mmp9, IL11, Tnfaip6, Fermt1, Olfm2 and Wnt11. However, the Smad3 mutants Y226A, Y297A, W326A, K341A, and E267A had distinct differences on TGF-β signaling. For example, K341A and Y226A both reduced the Smad3-mediated activation of the reporter gene by ∼50% but K341A only reduced the TGF-β inducibilty of Olfm2 in contrast to Y226A which reduced the TGF-β inducibility of all six endogenous genes as severely as the W406A mutation. E267A had increased protein binding but reduced TGF-β inducibility because it caused higher basal levels of expression. Y297A had increased TGF-β inducibility because it caused lower Smad3-induced basal levels of gene expression. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Mutations in protein binding hot-spots on Smad3 reduced the binding to different subsets of interacting proteins and caused a range of quantitative changes in the expression of genes induced by Smad3. This approach should be useful for unraveling which Smad3 protein complexes are critical for specific biological responses. Public Library of Science 2011-09-19 /pmc/articles/PMC3176292/ /pubmed/21949838 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025021 Text en Schiro et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Schiro, Michelle M.
Stauber, Sara E.
Peterson, Tami L.
Krueger, Chateen
Darnell, Steven J.
Satyshur, Kenneth A.
Drinkwater, Norman R.
Newton, Michael A.
Hoffmann, F. Michael
Mutations in Protein-Binding Hot-Spots on the Hub Protein Smad3 Differentially Affect Its Protein Interactions and Smad3-Regulated Gene Expression
title Mutations in Protein-Binding Hot-Spots on the Hub Protein Smad3 Differentially Affect Its Protein Interactions and Smad3-Regulated Gene Expression
title_full Mutations in Protein-Binding Hot-Spots on the Hub Protein Smad3 Differentially Affect Its Protein Interactions and Smad3-Regulated Gene Expression
title_fullStr Mutations in Protein-Binding Hot-Spots on the Hub Protein Smad3 Differentially Affect Its Protein Interactions and Smad3-Regulated Gene Expression
title_full_unstemmed Mutations in Protein-Binding Hot-Spots on the Hub Protein Smad3 Differentially Affect Its Protein Interactions and Smad3-Regulated Gene Expression
title_short Mutations in Protein-Binding Hot-Spots on the Hub Protein Smad3 Differentially Affect Its Protein Interactions and Smad3-Regulated Gene Expression
title_sort mutations in protein-binding hot-spots on the hub protein smad3 differentially affect its protein interactions and smad3-regulated gene expression
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3176292/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21949838
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0025021
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