Abstract
Murine protein serine-threonine kinase 38 (MPK38), an AMP‐activated protein kinase (AMPK)-related kinase, has been implicated in the induction of apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1)-, transforming growth factor-β (TGF‐β)-, and p53-mediated activity involved in metabolic homeostasis. Here, zinc finger protein ZPR9 was found to be an activator of MPK38. The association of MPK38 and ZPR9 was mediated by cysteine residues present in each of these two proteins, Cys269 and Cys286 of MPK38 and Cys305 and Cys308 of ZPR9. MPK38 phosphorylated ZPR9 at Thr252. Wild‐type ZPR9, but not the ZPR9 mutant T252A, enhanced ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 function by stabilizing MPK38. The requirement of ZPR9 Thr252 phosphorylation was validated using CRISPR/Cas9-mediated ZPR9 (T252A) knockin cell lines. The knockdown of endogenous ZPR9 showed an opposite trend, resulting in the inhibition of MPK38‐dependent ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 function. This effect was also demonstrated in mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cells that were haploinsufficient (+/−) for ZPR9, NIH 3T3 cells with inducible knockdown of ZPR9, and CRISPR/Cas9-mediated ZPR9 knockout cells. Furthermore, high-fat diet (HFD)-fed mice displayed reduced MPK38 kinase activity and ZPR9 expression compared to that in mice on control chow, suggesting that ZPR9 acts as a physiological activator of MPK38 that may participate in obesity.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Emerging evidence has implicated ASK1/TGF‐β/Smad3 signaling in the pathogenesis of obesity-associated metabolic diseases. For instance, ASK1 signaling has been shown to associate with TGF‐β signaling and to contribute to the improvement of glucose and lipid metabolism in genetically and diet-induced obese mice1. TGF‐β signaling has been shown to be involved in numerous metabolic processes, including systemic glucose and lipid metabolism, pancreatic β-cell function, adipocyte differentiation, adipocytokine secretion and inflammation2. In addition, evidence of interplay between p53 and mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling, glucose and lipid metabolism, or mitochondrial maintenance suggested that p53 also plays a crucial role in the regulation of cellular metabolic homeostasis3.
MPK38, otherwise known as maternal embryonic leucine zipper kinase (MELK), was an AMPK‐related serine-threonine kinase that was highly conserved across different species. It regulated a variety of cellular processes, including the cell cycle, cell proliferation, spliceosome assembly, carcinogenesis, stem cell self‐renewal, apoptosis, and numerous signal transduction pathways4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13. MPK38 was activated by different stimuli, including H2O2, tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), thapsigargin, ionomycin, TGF-β1, 5-fluorouracil (5FU), and doxorubicin (Dox), that trigger ASK1, TGF-β, and p53 signaling pathways5,14,15,16. The intracellular signaling proteins ASK1, Smads, and p53 were recently found to interact with MPK38 in vivo, indicating a critical role for MPK38 in redox-sensitive ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling pathways17,18,19. Activated MPK38 phosphorylated ASK1 and increased ASK1 activity5. Upon activation, MPK38 also stimulated redox-sensitive TGF-β- and p53-mediated signaling through direct interaction with and phosphorylation of Smads and p53, respectively15,16. One possible regulatory mechanism for MPK38 activity involves thioredoxin (Trx), which was recently reported to negatively regulate MPK38-induced ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 function in a phosphorylation-dependent manner20. However, the regulation of MPK38 activity is poorly understood.
The zinc finger protein ZPR9 was initially identified as a physiological substrate of MPK3821. It was mainly localized in the cytoplasm, but its interacting partner MPK38 redirected the subcellular localization of ZPR9 from the cytoplasm to the nucleus through direct protein interaction21. ZPR9 was also able to stimulate B-myb transcriptional activity via physical interaction with B-myb22. ZPR9 was recently shown to enhance H2O2-induced apoptosis via a redox-dependent interaction with ASK1, suggesting that ZPR9 is a positive regulator of redox-sensitive ASK1 signaling14. However, the physiological role of ZPR9 is still unclear.
In the present study, we demonstrate that ZPR9 stimulates MPK38 activity and function via a redox-dependent interaction, resulting in the stabilization of MPK38. We also show that ZPR9 phosphorylation at Thr252 by MPK38 plays a central role in the positive regulation of MPK38-mediated activation of ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling by ZPR9.
Results
ZPR9 promotes MPK38 kinase activity via a redox-dependent interaction and phosphorylation
We recently demonstrated that ASK1 is stimulated by MPK38 through direct interaction with and phosphorylation by MPK382. Additionally, ASK1 activity was positively regulated by a redox‐dependent interaction with ZPR914, a substrate of MPK3821. Based on these findings, we reasoned that ZPR9 may directly or indirectly regulate MPK38 activity. An alignment analysis with the MPK38/AMPK consensus sequence Hyd‐(X,Basic)XX(S/T)XXX‐Hyd (Hyd = hydrophobic residue, Basic = basic residue)23 suggested three putative MPK38 phosphorylation sites (Thr252, Ser261, and Thr435) on ZPR9. The ZPR9 T252A mutant, but not the S261A or T435A mutant, completely abolished MPK38‐mediated phosphorylation of ZPR9 (Fig. 1A), indicating that Thr252 is the MPK38 phosphorylation site on ZPR9. MPK38-mediated phosphorylation of ZPR9 at Thr252 in vivo was validated in ZPR9 (T252A) knockin 3T3-L1 cell lines generated by the CRISPR/Cas9 system. MPK38 kinase reactions including OTSSP167, a MPK38-specific inhibitor24, showed clearly that both endogenous and recombinant MPK38 proteins directly phosphorylate ZPR9 at Thr252 (Fig. 1B). In addition, a stoichiometric analysis of ZPR9 phosphorylation by MPK38 supported that MPK38 phosphorylates only one residue (Thr252) in ZPR9 (Fig. 1C). We then measured the kinase activity of MPK38 in the presence or absence of ZPR9 using in vitro kinase assays with recombinant MPK38 proteins (Fig. 2A). The coexpression of ZPR9 markedly increased the kinase activity of MPK38, indicating that ZPR9 positively regulates MPK38 activity. To investigate whether the ability of ZPR9 to stimulate MPK38 kinase activity requires both direct interaction with and phosphorylation by MPK38, we also screened the ZPR9 T252A mutant in in vitro kinase assays. The coexpression of the T252A mutant had no effect on MPK38 kinase activity compared to that of the control, which contained wild‐type MPK38 recombinant protein alone. Consistently, the kinase activity of MPK38 was considerably decreased in ZPR9 knockout and (T252A) knockin 3T3-L1 cells compared to control wild-type 3T3-L1 cells (Fig. 2B and Supplementary Fig. S1). The treatment of wild-type 3T3-L1 cells with OTSSP167 also displayed no MK38 kinase activity. These results support again a central role for ZPR9 phosphorylation at Thr252 by MPK38 in the ZPR9-mediated stimulation of MPK38 kinase activity. On the contrary, the phosphomimetic mutation T252D displayed high levels of MPK38 kinase activity similar to that of the wild-type ZPR9 (Fig. 2C), providing additional validation of the requirement of ZPR9 phosphorylation at Thr252 in the stimulation of MPK38 kinase activity. Together, these results suggest a critical role for both a redox-dependent interaction with and phosphorylation by MPK38 in the ZPR9-mediated stimulation of MPK38 kinase activity.
ASK1/TGF-β/p53 signals increase the redox-dependent ZPR9–MPK38 interaction
Given that ZPR9 interacts with ASK1 in a redox-dependent manner14, we analyzed the possibility of a redox-dependent interaction between ZPR9 and MPK38. To this end, an in vivo binding assay was performed using lysates from HEK293 cells treated with the oxidant or reductants to measure the level of endogenous ZPR9–MPK38 complex formation. Dithiothreitol (DTT) or β‐mercaptoethanol (β‐ME) treatment markedly decreased ZPR9-MPK38 complex formation compared to that in the untreated control, whereas H2O2 had no effect (Fig. 3A). We next performed an in vivo binding assay to identify the specific cysteine residues of MPK38 for ZPR9 binding using seven cysteine‐to‐serine amino acid substitution MPK38 mutants (C169S, C204S, C269S, C286S, C339S, C377S, and C269S/C286S). As a result, ZPR9 interacted weakly with two MPK38 mutants, C269S and C286S, and no binding was detected in the presence of the C269S/C286S double mutant (Fig. 3B, upper panels, and Supplementary Fig. S2), indicating that both Cys269 and Cys286 of MPK38 are responsible for ZPR9 binding. To identify the specific cysteine residues of ZPR9 for MPK38 binding, similar experiments were performed using seven cysteine‐to‐serine amino acid substitution ZPR9 mutants (C221S, C254S, C257S, C305S, C308S, C331S, and C305S/C308S). MPK38 interacted weakly with the two ZPR9 mutants, C305S and C308S, and no complex formation was detected in the presence of the C305S/C308S double mutant (Fig. 3B, lower panels), indicating that both Cys305 and Cys308 of ZPR9 are required for MPK38 binding. In addition, an isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) experiment using recombinant wild-type MPK38 and ZPR9 proteins exhibited a 1: 2 stoichiometry in the binding of ZPR9 to each MPK38 monomer (Fig. 3C). These results clearly suggest that a redox-dependent interaction between ZPR9 and MPK38 occurs in cells.
Previous studies revealed that the binding of MPK38 to its binding partners, such as ASK1 and Smads, is modulated in response to various oxidative stress agents and signals, including H2O2, TNF‐α, endoplasmic reticulum stress induced by thapsigargin, calcium overload induced by ionomycin, TGF‐β1, 5FU, and Dox, that activate ASK1, TGF-β, and p53 signaling pathways5,15. To examine whether these signals also influence the interaction of ZPR9 with MPK38, we investigated the endogenous complex formation between ZPR9 and MPK38 in HEK293 cells exposed to these signals. All ASK1/TGF-β/p53 signals enhanced complex formation between endogenous ZPR9 and MPK38 compared to that in untreated control cells (Fig. 4). These results suggest a positive role of ZPR9 in the regulation of redox‐sensitive ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling pathways induced by MPK38.
ZPR9 enhances c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK)‐mediated transcription and H2O2-mediated apoptosis induced by MPK38
Given that MPK38 stimulates ASK1-mediated activator protein 1 (AP‐1) transcriptional activity5, we assessed whether ZPR9 affects ASK1-mediated transactivation induced by MPK38 using an AP-1-luciferase reporter. Wild‐type ZPR9 increased MPK38‐induced AP‐1 transcriptional activity in a dose-dependent manner, whereas the ZPR9 T252A mutant had no effect (Fig. 5A, upper panel). Consistently, knockdown of endogenous ZPR9 using two different ZPR9-specific small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) significantly decreased MPK38‐induced AP‐1 transcriptional activity in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 5A, lower panel). These transcriptional responses were also verified by immunoblot analysis of the endogenous ASK1/AP-1 targets, including connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) and Bcl-2 interacting mediator (Bim) (Fig. 5B). These results indicate that ZPR9 positively regulates MPK38‐induced AP‐1 transactivation in a MPK38 phosphorylation-dependent manner.
We further conducted a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-based apoptosis assay to examine the effects of ZPR9 on H2O2-mediated cell death induced by MPK38 in HEK293 cells. ZPR9 resulted in a significant increase in H2O2‐mediated cell death in a dose-dependent manner, whereas the ZPR9 T252A mutant had no effect (Fig. 5C, upper panel). This result was also confirmed in a ZPR9-knockdown system induced by ZPR9-specific siRNAs (Fig. 5C, lower panel). We then assessed the role of ZPR9 in MPK38‐dependent ASK1 signaling using NIH 3T3 cells harboring an inducible ZPR9 short hairpin RNA (shRNA). Knockdown of endogenous ZPR9 markedly decreased the phosphorylation levels of ASK1 downstream targets and the kinase activity of MPK38 compared to parental NIH 3T3 cells and control cells expressing a scrambled shRNA (Fig. 5D and Supplementary Fig. S3). Together, these results suggest a positive role of ZPR9 in MPK38‐dependent ASK1 signaling, probably through an upregulation of MPK38 kinase activity.
ZPR9 enhances TGF‐β-mediated transcription and apoptosis induced by MPK38
Because MPK38 activated TGF‐β signaling through direct interaction with and phosphorylation of Smads15, we also investigated the effects of ZPR9 on MPK38‐induced TGF‐β transcriptional activity using a p3TP-luciferase reporter in Hep3B cells transfected with MPK38 and increasing concentrations of expression plasmids for wild‐type and mutant (T252A) ZPR9. Wild‐type ZPR9 significantly increased MPK38‐induced TGF‐β transcriptional activity in a dose-dependent manner, whereas the ZPR9 T252A mutant had no effect (Fig. 6A, upper panel). Consistently, MPK38‐induced TGF‐β transcriptional activity decreased dose-dependently in ZPR9-knockdown Hep3B cells compared to that in Hep3B cells expressing MPK38 alone or control cells expressing a scrambled siRNA (Fig. 6A, lower panel). The transcriptional responses were also confirmed in similar experiments by immunoblot analysis of endogenous TGF‐β targets, including plasminogen activator inhibitor‐1 (PAI‐1), cyclin‐dependent kinase inhibitor p21Cip1, and Smad7 (Fig. 6B). These data indicate that ZPR9 also plays a major role in stimulating MPK38-induced TGF‐β transcriptional activity.
We next examined whether ZPR9 can influence TGF‐β-dependent cell death induced by MPK38. The coexpression of wild‐type ZPR9 resulted in a dose‐dependent increase in apoptosis in HaCaT cells compared to that in control cells expressing MPK38 alone in the presence of TGF‐β1, whereas the T252A mutant had no effect (Fig. 6C, upper panel). Consistent with this, knockdown of endogenous ZPR9 by ZPR9‐specific siRNAs dose‐dependently decreased TGF‐β-dependent apoptosis induced by MPK38 (Fig. 6C, lower panel). A similar finding was also noted in the inducible ZPR9 shRNA cell line, as determined by immunoblot analysis of TGF‐β targets25, including PAI‐1, p21Cip1, Smad7, cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4), and cyclin D1 (Fig. 6D, upper panels, and Supplementary Fig. S3). Concurrently, a downregulation of MPK38 kinase activity was also observed after the knockdown of endogenous ZPR9 (Fig. 6D, lower panels). These results indicate that ZPR9 stimulates MPK38‐induced TGF‐β activity and function in a MPK38 phosphorylation-dependent manner by upregulating MPK38 kinase activity.
ZPR9 enhances p53-mediated transcription and apoptosis induced by MPK38
Because MPK38 interacted with p53 and stimulated p53 signaling16, we determined whether ZPR9 has an effect on MPK38‐induced p53 activity. To do this, p53-induced transcription was measured by a luciferase reporter assay in the presence of wild-type and mutant (T252A) ZPR9. Expression of wild‐type ZPR9 significantly increased MPK38‐dependent p53 transcriptional activity in a dose-dependent manner, whereas the T252A mutant had no effect (Fig. 7A, upper panel). This result was also confirmed by knockdown experiments using ZPR9‐specific siRNAs (Fig. 7A, lower panel). The transcriptional responses were also verified by immunoblot analysis of endogenous p53 targets, including p53, p21Cip1, and mouse double minute 2 homolog (Mdm2), under the same conditions (Fig. 7B). These results indicate that ZPR9 stimulates MPK38‐induced p53 transactivation in a MPK38 phosphorylation-dependent manner. We next examined whether ZPR9 has a similar effect on MPK38-dependent p53-mediated apoptosis using the GFP-based apoptosis assay. As expected, coexpression of wild‐type ZPR9 resulted in a dose‐dependent increase in apoptosis compared to control cells expressing MPK38 alone in the presence of p53, whereas the T252A mutant had no effect (Fig. 7C, upper panel). Consistently, knockdown of endogenous ZPR9 by ZPR9‐specific siRNAs dose‐dependently decreased the p53-mediated apoptosis induced by MPK38 (Fig. 7C, lower panel). Similar results were also obtained in the inducible ZPR9 shRNA cell line, in which knockdown of endogenous ZPR9 markedly decreased the expression level of p53 targets, including p53, p21Cip1, Mdm2, and Bax, and the kinase activity of MPK38 compared to either parental NIH 3T3 cells or control cells expressing a scrambled shRNA (Fig. 7D and Supplementary Fig. S3). Together, these data indicate that ZPR9 interacts with MPK38 and also contributes to the stimulation of MPK38-dependent p53 activity and function through upregulation of MPK38 kinase activity.
ZPR9 increases the stability of MPK38 and the complex formation between MPK38 and ASK1, Smad3, and p53
To address how ZPR9 stimulates MPK38-dependent ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling, we first performed immunoblot analysis using lysates from HEK293 cells transfected with expression vectors for wild-type and mutant (T252A) ZPR9 to examine the effects of ZPR9 on the stability of MPK38. Wild‐type ZPR9 increased the stability of MPK38 compared to that in control cells expressing the empty vector, whereas the T252A mutant had no effect (Fig. 8A, upper panels), indicating that ZPR9 phosphorylation at Thr252 plays a critical role in MPK38 stabilization. On the contrary, treatment of the HEK293 cells expressing the T252A mutant with both cycloheximide and MG132, a proteasomal inhibitor, led to an increased stability of MPK38 compared to that in control cells expressing the T252A mutant in the absence of MG132 (Fig. 8A, upper panels). These results confirm the role of the proteasome pathway in the degradation of MPK38 in cells. Consistent with this finding, ZPR9 decreased both exogenously and endogenously the ubiquitination of MPK38 in a MPK38 phosphorylation-dependent manner (Fig. 8A, lower panels). We also determined whether ZPR9 can regulate MPK38 degradation through Mdm2 in vitro and in vivo using in vivo binding assays because MPK38 interacts with Mdm220. Compared to control cells coexpressing MPK38 and Mdm2 in the absence of ZPR9, coexpression of wild‐type ZPR9 markedly decreased MPK38-Mdm2 complex formation, whereas the T252A mutant had no effect (Fig. 8B, left panels). Consistently, a significant decrease in complex formation between endogenous MPK38 and Mdm2 was also observed in the presence of wild-type ZPR9, but not the T252A mutant (Fig. 8B, right panels). These results indicate that ZPR9 stabilizes MPK38 in a MPK38 phosphorylation-dependent manner by inhibiting Mdm2‐mediated MPK38 ubiquitination. To further understand the mechanism whereby ZPR9 promotes the stability of MPK38, we also investigated the effects of ZPR9 on MPK38-Trx complex formation because Trx functioned as a destabilizer of MPK3820. Coexpression of wild‐type ZPR9 significantly decreased both exogenous and endogenous MPK38-Trx complex formation in a MPK38 phosphorylation-dependent manner, whereas the T252A mutant had no effect (Fig. 8C).
Given that Trx decreases MPK38 complex formation with ASK1, Smad3, and p53 to inhibit MPK38-dependent ASK1, TGF-β, and p53 signaling20, we finally examined whether ZPR9, similar to Trx, can influence the physical interaction between MPK38 and ASK1, Smad3, and p53. Compared to control HEK293 cells in the absence of ZPR9, the expression of wild-type ZPR9 resulted in a significant increase in both exogenous and endogenous complex formation between MPK38 and ASK1, Smad3, and p53, whereas the T252A mutant had no effect on the binding of these key signaling proteins (Fig. 8D), suggesting an important role for complex formation between MPK38 and ASK1, Smad3, and p53 in the ZPR9-mediated stimulation of MPK38-dependent ASK1, TGF-β, and p53 signaling. Taken together, these data indicate that ZPR9 positively regulates MPK38-dependent ASK1, TGF-β, and p53 function by stabilizing MPK38, leading to the increased complex formation between MPK38 and ASK1, Smad3, and p53.
ZPR9 improves obesity-associated metabolic disturbances in mice by upregulating MPK38 kinase activity
To verify the physiological role of ZPR9 in the stimulation of MPK38-dependent ASK1, TGF-β, and p53 signaling pathways in mice, we first performed immunoblot analysis using MEF cells that were intact (+/+) or haploinsufficient (+/−) for ZPR9. As expected, the redox-sensitive activation of ASK1/TGF-β/p53 signaling in MEFZPR9+/− cells was much lower than that in MEFZPR9+/+ cells (Fig. 9A, upper panels), indicating a critical role for ZPR9 in the activation of ASK1/TGF-β/p53 downstream signaling in vivo. MPK38 kinase activity in MEFZPR9+/− cells was also much lower than that in MEFZPR9+/+ cells (Fig. 9A, lower panels). Similar results were also obtained for the activation levels of redox-sensitive ASK1/TGF-β/p53 signaling in CRISPR/Cas9 ZPR9 KO HEK293 cells (Fig. 9B). Consistently, the rescue of ZPR9 expression by transfection with the KO gene ZPR9 in ZPR9 KO cells (KO + ZPR9) markedly increased the activation levels of ASK1/TGF-β/p53 signaling, as well as the kinase activity of MPK38, compared to those in control ZPR9 KO cells (Fig. 9B). Indeed, the ZPR9 KO cells were validated by no phosphorylation of ZPR9 by MPK38 due to the absence of endogenous ZPR9 (Supplementary Fig. S4). We also confirmed the requirement of MPK38-mediated ZPR9 phosphorylation at Thr252 in the ZPR9-mediated stimulation of ASK1, TGF-β, and p53 signaling pathways using CRISPR/Cas9 ZPR9 knockin (T252A) 3T3-L1 cells (Fig. 9C). These results indicate that ZPR9 functions as a physiological activator of MPK38, thereby stimulating redox-sensitive ASK1-, TGF-β-, and p53-mediated function in a MPK38 phosphorylation-dependent manner.
Because of the reduction in the activation of redox-dependent ASK1/TGF-β signaling and ZPR9 expression in both genetic and diet-induced obese mice compared to control wild-type and chow mice1, we next assessed whether ZPR9 can improve obesity-associated metabolic disturbances in diet-induced obese mice by stimulating MPK38 activity (Fig. 10). Indeed, MPK38 kinase activity was downregulated in HFD-fed mice, as determined by results of in vitro kinase assays and immunoblot analysis, in both hepatocytes and adipocytes compared to that in control mice on a standard diet, leading to reduced activation of redox-sensitive ASK1/TGF-β/p53 signaling. These results reveal that ZPR9 contributes to the coordinated activation of MPK38-dependent ASK1/TGF-β/p53 signaling, which might ameliorate obesity and its associated metabolic conditions in mice.
Discussion
We previously showed that MPK38 interacts with ASK1, Smads, or p53 and activates the respective signaling pathways. We also showed that ZPR9 interacts with ASK1 and stimulates its activity5,14,15,16, suggesting a potential role for ZPR9 in regulating MPK38 activity and governing redox-sensitive ASK1/TGF-β/p53 signaling. In this study, we identified a redox-dependent interaction between ZPR9 and MPK38 that stimulates MPK38‐dependent ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 activity (Fig. 3). Additionally, MPK38-mediated ZPR9 phosphorylation at Thr252 played a critical role in the activation of MPK38 (Fig. 2). The C-terminal domain of MPK38 that interacted with ZPR9 was also required for Trx, a negative regulator of MPK3820. Thus, the binding of ZPR9 to the C-terminal domain of MPK38 may contribute to the removal of Trx from the MPK38-Trx complex, leading to the stimulation of MPK38-dependent activity. A redox-dependent interaction with and phosphorylation by MPK38 were responsible for ZPR9-mediated stimulation of MPK38 activity and function, as demonstrated by results of the in vitro kinase assays (Fig. 2), luciferase reporter assays (Figs 5, 6 and 7), and apoptosis assays (Figs 5, 6 and 7). In contrast to wild-type ZPR9, the T252A mutant, which lacks the MPK38 phosphorylation site (see Fig. 1A), had no effect on MPK38‐dependent ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling pathways (Figs 5, 6 and 7). We also demonstrated that MPK38‐mediated phosphorylation of ZPR9 at Thr252 plays a critical role in modulating the physical association of MPK38 with ASK15, Smad315, and p5316, which function as key signaling molecules for redox-sensitive ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling pathways. As shown in Fig. 8D, wild-type ZPR9 markedly increased complex formation between MPK38 and ASK1, Smad3, and p53, whereas the T252A mutant had no effect on the binding of MPK38 to its signaling targets, supporting again a key role for ZPR9 phosphorylation at Thr252 in the regulation of MPK38-dependent signaling pathways involving ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53.
To understand the mechanism whereby ZPR9 stimulates MPK38 activity, the effects of ZPR9 on MPK38 stability and ubiquitination were examined. Wild‐type ZPR9 increased MPK38 protein stability, whereas the T252A mutant had no effect (Fig. 8A). These results suggest that ZPR9 increases both the stability of MPK38 and the complex formation between MPK38 and its signaling targets (ASK1, Smad3, and p53) through a redox-dependent interaction with and phosphorylation by MPK38, leading to the stimulation of redox‐sensitive ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling pathways. As it was recently reported that ZPR9 functions as a positive component of a multi-protein complex linking redox-sensitive ASK1 and TGF‐β signaling pathways, which improve glucose and lipid metabolism in obese mice1, we also reasoned that the downregulation of MPK38 activity in obese mice likely occurs through the reduced expression of ZPR9. As expected, low ZPR9 expression and reduced MPK38 kinase activity were observed in both hepatocytes and adipocytes isolated from HFD-fed mice compared to those isolated from mice fed a standard chow diet (Fig. 10). These data suggest a model in which ZPR9 promotes the association of MPK38 with key signaling targets, such as ASK1, Smad3, and p53, that play pivotal roles in inducing redox-sensitive ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling pathways in stressed cells, probably through the removal of Trx, a negative regulator of MPK38, from the MPK38-Trx complex. Subsequently, the elevated activation levels of ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling contribute to the amelioration of glucose and lipid metabolism in obese mice (Fig. 8E).
However, our present results do not rule out the possibility that direct interactions between ZPR9 and key signaling molecules (ASK1, Smad3, and p53) in redox-sensitive ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling pathways also play a role in regulating their respective functions. In fact, our recent results showed that ZPR9 stimulates ASK1- and TGF‐β-mediated function via direct interactions with ASK1 and Smad3, respectively1,14. In addition, we also observed that the ability of ZPR9 to stimulate p53-mediated signaling is dependent on the redox-dependent interaction between ZPR9 and p53 (Supplementary Fig. S5A). These findings, together with data obtained in Fig. 8D, indicate that ZPR9 both directly and indirectly contributes to the stimulation of redox-sensitive ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling pathways. Furthermore, the inhibitory effect of MPK38 on PDK1 activity26 that plays an important role in cell survival signaling through direct phosphorylation of PDK1 at Thr354 prompted us to examine whether ZPR9, acting as a physiological substrate of MPK38, is also involved in the regulation of cell proliferation, in addition to cell death signaling pathways that involve ASK114, TGF‐β1, and p53 (Supplementary Fig. S5B). In fact, our previous study14 showed that ZPR9 decreases the activity of PDK1 by regulating Akt phosphorylation at Thr308 and Ser473. These results could contribute to a better understanding of the mechanism by which ZPR9 potentiates apoptotic cell death that is connected to many physiological functions, including obesity.
In conclusion, our results indicate that zinc finger protein ZPR9 positively regulates redox‐sensitive ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling pathways involved in obesity-associated metabolic functions by the stabilization of MPK38 and that this effect of ZPR9 is strictly dependent on MPK38-mediated phosphorylation. A novel function of ZPR9 as an activator of redox-sensitive ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 signaling pathways also provides a more complete picture of how cellular signaling pathways are regulated by intracellular redox state.
Methods
Cell culture, inducible ZPR9 shRNA cell line, MEF cells, antibodies, plasmids, chemicals, ZPR9 siRNAs, and animal experiments
HEK293, NIH 3T3, MCF7, Hep3B, 293 T, p53‐null HCT116, and HaCaT cells were grown in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Gibco BRL) at 37 °C in a humidified incubator containing 5% CO216. Inducible ZPR9 shRNA NIH 3T3 stable clones were screened in the presence of G418 (450 μg/ml, 14 days) until all control NIH 3T3 cells died as described previously15. MEFZPR9+/− has been described previously1. The use of anti-FLAG (M2), anti-His, anti-hemagglutinin (HA), anti-ASK1, anti-MPK38, anti-glutathione-S-transferase (GST), anti-MKK3, anti-CDK4, anti-cyclin D1, anti-PAI-1, anti-p21, anti-activating transcription factor 2 (ATF2), anti-phospho-MKK3/6(S189/207), anti-p38, anti-phospho-p38(T180/Y182), anti-phospho-Smad3(S423/S425), anti-phospho-ATF2(T71), anti-phospho-ASK1(T845), anti-p53(DO-1), anti-phospho-p53(S15), anti-Mdm2, anti-Bax, and anti-β-actin antibodies has been described previously5,16,25,27. Anti-Trx, anti-CTGF, and anti-Bim antibodies were purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc. (Santa Cruz, CA, USA). The anti-phospho-ZPR9(T252) antibody was raised in a rabbit against the synthetic phosphopeptide antigen GAIPITLCLFC, where T represents phosphothreonine (Young In Frontier, Seoul, Korea). Mouse or rabbit IgG TrueBlot (Rockland, Limerick, PA, USA) was used as secondary antibody for some experiments. Plasmids encoding MPK38, ASK1, Smad3, Mdm2, p53, p3TP-luciferase reporter, AP-1-luciferase reporter, p53-luciferase reporter, and c-fos have been described previously5,16,27,28. MG132 was purchased from BIOMOL International, L.P. (Plymouth Meeting, PA, USA), and OTSSP167 was from ChemScene (Monmouth Junction, NJ)24,29. The use of ZPR9 siRNAs (#1, 5′-GCGACGUACACCUGCAUAA-3′; #2, 5′-GCACCGUUUGCAGUAAGAA-3′) has been described previously14. Animal experiments were performed in accordance with the approved animal protocols and the guidelines established by the Ethics Review Committee of Chungbuk National University for Animal Experiments (CBNUA-966-16-02).
MPK38-mediated phosphorylation-defective and phosphomimetic ZPR9 mutants
Four serine (or threonine)-to-alanine (or aspartate) amino acid substitution ZPR9 mutants were generated by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) as described previously5,14. Wild-type ZPR9 was used as the template for amplification with either the ZPR9 forward primer (5′-GC GAATTCATGGCGACGTACACCTGCATA-3′), containing an EcoR1 site (underlined), or the reverse primer (5′-GCCTCGAGTCAGAATCTCACTTGGACCCG-3′), containing an XhoI site (underlined), in conjunction with one of the following mutant primer pairs: 5′-TTTTGTTCCCATCATGCCAGCTCGCTGATGAAG-3′ (S261A, forward) and 5′-CTTCATCAGCGAGCTGGCATGATGGGAACAAAA-3′ (S261A, reverse), 5′-GGTGCCATCCCTATCGCAGACTGCTTATTTTGT-3′ (T252A, forward) and 5′-ACAAAATAAGCAGTCTGCGATAGGGATGGCACC-3′ (T252A, reverse), 5′-GGATGGACTGGCAGCGCAGGAGCGGCTCTTATG-3′ (T435A, forward) and 5′-CATAAGAGCCGCTCTGCGCTGCCAGTCCATCC-3′ (T435A, reverse), and 5′-GGTGCCATCCCTATCGATGACTGCTTATTTTGT-3′ (T252D, forward) and 5′-ACAAAATAAGCAGTCATCGATAGGGATGGCACC-3′ (T252D, reverse). To generate pGEX4T-1-ZPR9 (S261A), (T252A), (T435A), and (T252D), the amplified PCR products were digested with EcoRI and XhoI and then ligated into the corresponding sites of the pGEX4T-1 vector.
Cysteine-to-serine substitution ZPR9 and MPK38 mutants
Two cysteine-to-serine amino acid substitution MPK38 mutants were generated by PCR using wild-type MPK38 (for the C269S mutant) or the C269S single site mutant of MPK38 (for the C269S/C286S double mutant) as the template for amplification with either the MPK38 forward (5′-CGCGGATCCATGAAAGATTATGAC-3′, EcoRI site is underlined) or reverse (5′-CGCCTCGAGCATCTTGCAGCCAGA-3′, XhoI site is underlined) primer, in conjunction with one of the following mutant primer pairs: 5′-CAAGATTACAGCAGCC CCGTGGAGTGG-3′ (C269S, forward) and 5′-CCACTCCACGGGGCTGCTGTAATCTTG-3′ (C269S, reverse) or 5′-CACCTCGATGATGATAGCGTAACAGAACTTTCT-3′ (C269S/C286S, forward) and 5′-AGAAAGTTCTGTTACGCTATCATCATCGAGGTG-3′ (C269S/C286S, reverse). To generate GST-tagged MPK38 mutants, pGEX4T-1 (C269S) and (C269S/C286S) were digested with BamHI and NotI and then ligated into the corresponding sites of pEBG. The generation of GST-tagged ZPR9 mutants (C221S, C254S, C257S, C305S, C308S, C331S, and C305S/C308S) and the other MPK38 mutant (C286S) has been described previously14,20.
In vivo binding assays and in vitro kinase assays for MPK38
In vivo binding assays were performed using HEK293 cells transiently transfected with the indicated expression vectors as described previously5,14. To measure MPK38 kinase activity, GST-tagged MPK38, purified by glutathione-Sepharose beads from cells expressing GST-MPK38, or recombinant His-tagged MPK38 was washed three times with lysis buffer and then twice with kinase buffer (50 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 1 mM DTT, and 10 mM MgCl2) before screening in an in vitro kinase assay (37 °C, 15 min) using recombinant ZPR9, Smad3, kinase-dead (KD) ASK1, and p53 as the substrates5,20. The reaction mixtures were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and analyzed by autoradiography.
Generation of ZPR9 (T252A) knockin (KI) and knockout (KO) cell lines
Genomic mutations in 3T3-L1 or HEK293 cells were generated using the CRISPR/Cas9 system as described previously30,31. In brief, single-guide (sg) RNAs were designed to target the genomic areas adjacent to the ZPR9 mutation site (target sequence, 5′-GCTGAGGAAGGCCCACCCCT-3′). Two complementary oligos (5′-CACCGGCTGAGGAAGGCCCACCCCT-3′ and 5′-AAACAGGGGTGGGCCTTCCTCAGCC-3′) containing the ZPR9 guide sequence and Bbs1 ligation adapters were synthesized by Bioneer Ltd. (Cheongwon, Korea). The annealed oligos were ligated into the Bbs1-digested pX458 vector (Addgene plasmid no. 48138) using the Quick-Ligation system (New England BioLabs, Ipswich, MA, USA). To generate the ZPR9 (T252A) KI cell line, 3T3-L1 cells were cultured in a 24-well plate at ~60% confluence and cotransfected with 1 μg of ZPR9 sg RNA plasmid and pUC19 ZPR9(T252A) using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) or WelFect-Ex™ Plus (WelGENE, Daegu, Korea). To generate the ZPR9 KO cell line, HEK293 cells were transfected with 1 μg of ZPR9 sg RNA plasmid without pUC19. Forty-eight hours after transfection, the cells were trypsinized and diluted in medium for single-cell seeding in a 96-well plate, and GFP-positive cells were screened, followed by genomic DNA extraction. Exon 2 of ZPR9 was amplified by PCR using a ZPR9-specific PCR primer pair as follows: 5′-ATTGGGAAGATATTGATTCTGATGAAGA-3′ (forward) and 5′-CCAAGTATTTAATCAGT CCCTTAATATCTG-3′ (reverse). The PCR products were A-tailed and cloned into the pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega, Madison, WI, USA). The individual ZPR9 (T252A) KI clones were then confirmed by DNA sequencing (Bioneer Ltd., Cheongwon, Korea). On the other hand, the ZPR9 KO clones were validated by immunoblotting with an anti-ZPR9 antibody.
Isothermal titration calorimetry
The ITC measurements were carried out using an Auto-iTC200 Microcalorimeter (Korea Basic Science Institute, Ochang, Korea) at 25 °C in a buffer containing 50 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), 10 mM MgCl2, and 0.01% sodium lauroyl sarcosinate. Wild-type ZPR9 (40 μM) was titrated into a calorimeter cell containing 3 μM wild-type MPK38 with 2 μL injections. The ITC data were analyzed using the MicroCal OriginTM software.
Ubiquitination and luciferase reporter assays
Ubiquitination assays were performed using p53-null HCT116 or wild-type and ZPR9 T252A KI cells transfected with or without expression plasmids encoding MPK38, wild-type and mutant ZPR9 (T252A), and HA-tagged ubiquitin as described previously26. For luciferase reporter assays, 293 T, Hep3B, or MCF7 cells were transfected using WelFect-Ex™ Plus with the AP-1-, p3TP-, or p53-luciferase reporter plasmid, along with the indicated expression vectors in the presence or absence of c-fos, TGF-β1, or p53. Luciferase activity was assessed using the dual luciferase assay kit (Promega, Madison, WI, USA) as described previously5. This experiment was performed at least three independent times.
Apoptosis assay
Apoptosis was detected using the GFP system in HEK293, HaCaT, or MCF7 cells transfected with the indicated expression vectors as described previously5. In brief, apoptosis was assessed by fluorescent microscopy of 4′,6′-diamidino-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride (DAPI)-stained nuclei of GFP-positive cells. The percentage of apoptotic cells was calculated as the number of GFP-positive cells with apoptotic nuclei divided by the total number of GFP-positive cells.
Isolation of primary hepatocytes and adipocytes
Primary hepatocytes were prepared from the livers of HFD- and standard chow diet-fed mice using the collagenase perfusion method as previously described32 with minor modifications. The mice were anesthetized, and their abdomens were surgically opened. Each liver was perfused at a flow rate of 25 ml/min for 10 min via the hepatic portal vein with pre-warmed (37 °C) Krebs-Henseleit buffer without Ca2+ and SO42− (115 mM NaCl, 25 mM NaHCO3, 5.9 mM KCl, 1.18 mM MgCl2, 1.23 mM NaH2PO4, and 6 mM glucose), followed by perfusion at a flow rate of 20 ml/min for 10 min with pre-warmed (37 °C) collagenase type II solution (20 mg of collagenase type II in 100 ml of Krebs-Henseleit buffer containing 0.1 mM CaCl2 and 3% BSA, but not SO42−). The liver was transferred into a Petri dish containing 5 ml of collagenase type II solution, cut into small pieces, and finally flushed with ice-cold Krebs-Henseleit buffer containing 1.2 mM Na2SO4 and 1.25 mM CaCl2 using a household sieve. The cell suspension was then filtered through a 70 μm pore size nylon filter strainer into a 50 ml tube. Approximately 10 ml of ice-cold DMEM was added to the filtered cell suspension, which was subsequently centrifuged at 500 rpm for 2 min at 4 °C. The supernatant was aspirated, and the remaining hepatocyte pellet was washed three times with 10 ml of ice-cold DMEM. The cell suspension was finally adjusted to a density of 17% iodixanol in Krebs-Henseleit buffer containing 1.25 mM CaCl2 and 1.2 mM Na2SO4. Hepatocytes were isolated after centrifugation at 1,400 rpm for 20 min at 4 °C.
To isolate primary adipocytes from the epididymal fat depots of HFD- and standard chow diet-fed mice, adipose tissues in HEPES buffer (pH 7.4, containing 5 mM D-glucose, 2% BSA, 135 mM NaCl, 2.2 mM CaCl2, 1.25 mM MgSO4, 0.45 mM KH2PO4, 2.17 mM Na2HPO4, and 10 mM HEPES) were digested with collagenase type I (1.25 mg of collagenase type I in 1 ml of HEPES buffer) at 37 °C for 30 min by gentle shaking. The resulting cell suspension was then filtered through a 400 μm pore size nylon mesh to remove undigested tissues. The filtered cell suspension was incubated with DMEM supplemented with 1% FBS at 37 °C for 40 min before plating.
Statistical analysis
Data are presented as the means ± standard error and are representative of at least three independent experiments. The statistical analysis was conducted using GraphPad Prism software. Multiple comparisons were performed by one-way ANOVA, followed by Tukey’s post hoc test.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Seong, H.-A. et al. Zinc finger protein ZPR9 functions as an activator of AMPK-related serine/threonine kinase MPK38/MELK involved in ASK1/TGF-β/p53 signaling pathways. Sci. Rep. 7, 42502; doi: 10.1038/srep42502 (2017).
Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
References
Seong, H.-A., Manoharan, R. & Ha, H. Coordinate activation of redox-dependent ASK1/TGF-β signaling by a multi-protein complex (MPK38, ASK1, SMADs, ZPR9, and TRX) improves glucose and lipid metabolism in mice. Antioxid Redox Signal 24, 434–452 (2016).
Tan, C. K., Chong, H. C., Tan, E. H. & Tan, N. S. Getting ‘Smad’ about obesity and diabetes. Nutr Diabetes 2, e29 (2012).
Berkers, C. R., Maddocks, O. D., Cheung, E. C., Mor, I. & Vousden, K. H. Metabolic regulation by p53 family members. Cell Metab 18, 617–633 (2013).
Ganguly, R. et al. MELK-a conserved kinase: functions, signaling, cancer, and controversy. Clin Transl Med 4, 11 (2015).
Jung, H., Seong, H.-A. & Ha, H. Murine protein serine/threonine kinase 38 activates apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 via Thr838 phosphorylation. J Biol Chem. 283, 34541–34553 (2008).
Saito, R., Tabata, Y., Muto, A., Arai, K. & Watanabe, S. Melk-like kinase plays a role in hematopoiesis in the zebra fish. Mol Cell Biol 25, 6682–6693 (2005).
Beullens, M. et al. Substrate specificity and activity regulation of protein kinase MELK. J Biol Chem 280, 40003–40011 (2005).
Gray, D. et al. Maternal embryonic leucine zipper kinase/murine protein serine-threonine kinase 38 is a promising therapeutic target for multiple cancers. Cancer Res 65, 9751–9761 (2005).
Vulsteke, V. et al. Inhibition of spliceosome assembly by the cell cycle-regulated protein kinase MELK and involvement of splicing factor NIPP1. J Biol Chem 279, 8642–8647 (2004).
Nakano, I. et al. Maternal embryonic leucine zipper kinase (MELK) regulates multipotent neural progenitor proliferation. J Cell Biol 170, 413–427 (2005).
Lin, M. L., Park, J. H., Nishidate, T., Nakamura, Y. & Katagiri, T. Involvement of maternal embryonic leucine zipper kinase (MELK) in mammary carcinogenesis through interaction with Bcl-G, a pro-apoptotic member of the Bcl-2 family. Breast Cancer Res 9, R17 (2007).
Bensimon, A., Aebersold, R. & Shiloh, Y. Beyond ATM: the protein kinase landscape of the DNA damage response. FEBS Lett 585, 1625–1639 (2011).
Cordes, S., Frank, C. A. & Garriga, G. The C. elegans MELK ortholog PIG-1 regulates cell size asymmetry and daughter cell fate in asymmetric neuroblast divisions. Development 133, 2747–2756 (2006).
Seong, H.-A., Jung, H. Manoharan, R. & Ha, H. Positive regulation of apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 by ZPR9 protein, a zinc finger protein. J Biol Chem 286, 31123–31135 (2011).
Seong, H.-A., Jung, H. & Ha, H. Murine protein serine/threonine kinase 38 stimulates TGF-β signaling in a kinase-dependent manner via direct phosphorylation of Smad proteins. J Biol Chem 285, 30959–30970 (2010).
Seong, H.-A. & Ha, H. Murine protein serine/threonine kinase 38 activates p53 function through Ser15 phosphorylation. J Biol Chem 287, 20797–20810 (2012).
Trachootham, D., Lu, W., Ogasawara, M. A., Nilsa, R. D. & Huang, P. Redox regulation of cell survival. Antioxid Redox Signal 10, 1343–1374 (2008).
Krstić, J., Trivanović, D., Mojsilović, S. & Santibanez, J. F. Transforming growth factor-beta and oxidative stress interplay: implications in tumorigenesis and cancer progression. Oxid Med Cell Longev 2015, 654594 (2015).
Saitoh, M. et al. Mammalian thioredoxin is a direct inhibitor of apoptosis signal-regulating kinase (ASK) 1. EMBO J 17, 2596–2606 (1998).
Manoharan, R., Seong, H.-A. & Ha, H. Thioredoxin inhibits MPK38-induced ASK1, TGF‐β, and p53 function in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. Free Radic Biol Med 63, 313–324 (2013).
Seong, H.-A., Gil, M., Kim, K. T., Kim, S. J. & Ha, H. Phosphorylation of a novel zinc finger like protein, ZPR9, by murine protein serine/threonine kinase 38 (MPK38). Biochem J 361, 597–604 (2002).
Seong, H.-A., Kim, K. T. & Ha, H. Enhancement of B-myb transcriptional activity by ZPR9, a novel zinc finger protein. J Biol Chem 278, 9655–9662 (2003).
Jakobsen, S. N., Hardie, D. G., Morrice, N. & Tornqvist, H. E. 5.′-AMP-activated protein kinase phosphorylates IRS-1 on Ser-789 in mouse C2C12 myotubes in response to 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide riboside. J Biol Chem 276, 46912–46916 (2001).
Chung, S. et al. Development of an orally-administrative MELK-targeting inhibitor that suppresses the growth of various types of human cancer, Oncotarget 3, 1629–1640 (2012).
Seong, H.-A., Jung, H., Kim, K. T. & Ha, H. 3-Phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase-1 (PDK1) negatively regulates TGF-β-induced signaling in a kinase-dependent manner through physical interaction with SMAD proteins. J Biol Chem 282, 12272–12289 (2007).
Seong, H.-A., Jung, H., Manoharan, R. & Ha, H. PDK1 protein phosphorylation at Thr354 by murine protein serine-threonine Kinase 38 contributes to negative regulation of PDK1 protein activity. J Biol Chem 287, 20811–20822 (2012).
Seong, H.-A., Jung, H. & Ha, H. Nm23-H1 tumor suppressor physically interacts with STRAP, a TGF-β receptor interacting protein, and negatively regulates TGF-β signaling. J Biol Chem 282, 12075–12096 (2007).
Jung, H., Seong, H.-A. & Ha, H. Nm23-H1 tumor suppressor and its interacting partner STRAP activate p53 function. J Biol Chem 282, 35293–35307 (2007).
Anwar, A., Norris, D. A. & Fujita, M. Ubiquitin proteasomal pathway mediated degradation of p53 in melanoma. Arch Biochem Biophys 508, 198–203 (2011).
Sander, J. D. & Joung, J. K. CRISPR-Cas systems for editing, regulating and targeting genomes. Nat Biotechnol 32, 347–355 (2014).
Li, X. et al. Mitochondria-translocated PGK1 functions as a protein kinase to coordinate glycolysis and the TCA cycle in tumorigenesis. Mol Cell 61, 705–719 (2016).
Chitraju, C. et al. Lipidomic analysis of lipid droplets from murine hepatocytes reveals distinct signatures for nutritional stress. J Lipid Res 53, 2141–2152 (2012).
Chheda, M. G., Ashery, U., Thakur, P., Rettig, J. & Sheng, Z. H. Phosphorylation of Snapin by PKA modulates its interaction with the SNARE complex. Nat Cell Biol 3, 331–338 (2001).
Seong, H.-A., Manoharan, R. & Ha, H. A crucial role for the phosphorylation of STRAP at Ser188 by MPK38 in STRAP-dependent cell death through ASK1, TGF-β, p53, and PI3K/PDK1 signaling pathways. Cell Cycle 13, 3357–3374 (2014).
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by a National Research Foundation of Korea Grant (2015R1A2A2A01006098) and in part by a Chungbuk National University Grant 2015.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
H.S. and R.M. conducted experiments and analyzed data. H.H. designed experiments and wrote the manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Seong, HA., Manoharan, R. & Ha, H. Zinc finger protein ZPR9 functions as an activator of AMPK-related serine/threonine kinase MPK38/MELK involved in ASK1/TGF-β/p53 signaling pathways. Sci Rep 7, 42502 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep42502
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep42502
- Springer Nature Limited
This article is cited by
-
Integrated analysis of the roles of oxidative stress related genes and prognostic value in clear cell renal cell carcinoma
Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology (2023)
-
Functional genomics for breast cancer drug target discovery
Journal of Human Genetics (2021)
-
Thr55 phosphorylation of p21 by MPK38/MELK ameliorates defects in glucose, lipid, and energy metabolism in diet-induced obese mice
Cell Death & Disease (2019)
-
Smad proteins differentially regulate obesity-induced glucose and lipid abnormalities and inflammation via class-specific control of AMPK-related kinase MPK38/MELK activity
Cell Death & Disease (2018)