Publications (25)102.86 Total impact
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Article: Cdk5-induced neuronal cell death: the activation of the conventional Rb-E2F G 1 pathway in post-mitotic neurons.
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ABSTRACT: Comment on: Futatsugi A, et al. Cell Cycle 2012; 1603-10.Cell cycle (Georgetown, Tex.) 06/2012; 11(11):2049. · 5.36 Impact Factor -
Article: Phosphorylation of p35 and p39 by Cdk5 determines the subcellular location of the holokinase in a phosphorylation-site-specific manner.
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ABSTRACT: Cdk5 is a member of the cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) family, which is activated by neuronal activators p35 or p39. Cdk5 regulates a variety of neuronal activities including migration, synaptic activity and neuronal death. p35 and p39 impart cytoplasmic membrane association of p35-Cdk5 and p39-Cdk5, respectively, through their myristoylation, but it is not clearly understood how the cellular localization is related to different functions. We investigated the role of Cdk5 activity in the subcellular localization of p35-Cdk5 and p39-Cdk5. Cdk5 activity affected the localization of p35-Cdk5 and p39-Cdk5 through phosphorylation of p35 or p39. Using unphosphorylated or phosphomimetic mutants of p35 and p39, we found that phosphorylation at Ser8, common to p35 and p39, by Cdk5 regulated the cytoplasmic localization and perinuclear accumulation of unphosphorylated S8A mutants, and whole cytoplasmic distribution of phosphomimetic S8E mutants. Cdk5 activity was necessary to retain Cdk5-activator complexes in the cytoplasm. Nevertheless, small but distinct amounts of p35 and p39 were detected in the nucleus. In particular, nuclear p35 and p39 were increased when the Cdk5 activity was inhibited. p39 had a greater propensity to accumulate in the nucleus than p35, and phosphorylation at Thr84, specific to p39, regulated the potential nuclear localization activity of the Lys cluster in p39. These results suggest that the subcellular localization of the Cdk5-activator complexes is determined by its kinase activity, and also implicate a role for p39-Cdk5 in the nucleus.Journal of Cell Science 03/2012; 125(Pt 14):3421-9. · 6.11 Impact Factor -
Article: Calpastatin, an endogenous calpain-inhibitor protein, regulates the cleavage of the Cdk5 activator p35 to p25.
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ABSTRACT: Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) is a Ser/Thr kinase that is activated by binding to its regulatory subunit, p35. The calpain-mediated cleavage of p35 to p25 and the resulting aberrant activity and neurotoxicity of Cdk5 have been implicated in neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease. To gain further insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying the pathological function of Cdk5, we investigated the role of the calpain inhibitor protein calpastatin (CAST), in controlling the aberrant production of p25. For this purpose, brain tissue from wild-type, CAST-over-expressing (transgenic), and CAST knockout mice were analyzed. Cleavage of p35 to p25 was increased in extracts from CAST knockout mice, compared with wild-type. Conversely, generation of p25 was not detected in brain lysates from CAST-over-expressing mice. CAST expression was 5-fold higher in mouse cerebellum than cerebral cortex. Accordingly, p25 production was lower in the cerebellum than the cerebral cortex. Furthermore, the Ca(2+) -dependent degradation of p35 by proteasome was evident when calpain was inhibited. Taken together, these results suggest that CAST is a crucial regulator of calpain activity, the production of p25, and, hence, the deregulation of Cdk5. Therefore, impairment of CAST expression and its associated mechanisms may contribute to the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disorders.Journal of Neurochemistry 02/2011; 117(3):504-15. · 4.06 Impact Factor -
Article: Membrane association facilitates degradation and cleavage of the cyclin-dependent kinase 5 activators p35 and p39.
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ABSTRACT: Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) is activated by binding to its activators, p35 and p39. The level of Cdk5 activity is determined by the amount of p35 and p39, which is regulated not only by transcription but also via proteasomal degradation. Alternatively, calpain-induced cleavage of p35 to p25 can induce aberrant Cdk5 activation. As the regulation of p35 and p39 proteolysis is not well understood, we have studied here the mechanisms governing their degradation and cleavage. We find that p35 and p39 undergo proteasomal degradation in neurons, with p39 showing a slower degradation rate than p35. Degradation of the activators is dependent on their respective N-terminal p10 region, as indicated by experiments in which cognate p10 regions were swapped between p35 and p39. The effect of the p10 region on degradation and cleavage could be assigned to its membrane binding properties, mediated predominantly by myristoylation. Together, these results indicate that both proteasomal degradation and calpain cleavage of p35 and p39 are stimulated by membrane association, which is in turn mediated via myristoylation of their p10 regions. However, p35 and p39 show differences in degradation and cleavage rates, which may in fact underlie the distinct physiological and pathological functions of these two Cdk5 activators.Biochemistry 07/2010; 49(26):5482-93. · 3.42 Impact Factor -
Article: Quantitative measurement of in vivo phosphorylation states of Cdk5 activator p35 by Phos-tag SDS-PAGE.
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ABSTRACT: Phosphorylation is a major post-translational modification widely used in the regulation of many cellular processes. Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) is a proline-directed serine/threonine kinase activated by activation subunit p35. Cdk5-p35 regulates various neuronal activities such as neuronal migration, spine formation, synaptic activity, and cell death. The kinase activity of Cdk5 is regulated by proteolysis of p35: proteasomal degradation causes down-regulation of Cdk5, whereas cleavage of p35 by calpain causes overactivation of Cdk5. Phosphorylation of p35 determines the proteolytic pathway. We have previously identified Ser(8) and Thr(138) as major phosphorylation sites using metabolic labeling of cultured cells followed by two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping and phosphospecific antibodies. However, these approaches cannot determine the extent of p35 phosphorylation in vivo. Here we report the use of Phos-tag SDS-PAGE to reveal the phosphorylation states of p35 in neuronal culture and brain. Using Phos-tag acrylamide, the electrophoretic mobility of phosphorylated p35 was delayed because it is trapped at Phos-tag sites. We found a novel phosphorylation site at Ser(91), which was phosphorylated by Ca(2+)-calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II in vitro. We constructed phosphorylation-dependent banding profiles of p35 and Ala substitution mutants at phosphorylation sites co-expressed with Cdk5 in COS-7 cells. Using the standard banding profiles, we assigned respective bands of endogenous p35 with combinations of phosphorylation states and quantified Ser(8), Ser(91), and Thr(138) phosphorylation. The highest level of p35 phosphorylation was observed in embryonic brain; Ser(8) was phosphorylated in all p35 molecules, whereas Ser(91) was phosphorylated in 60% and Thr(138) was phosphorylated in approximately 12% of p35 molecules. These are the first quantitative and site-specific measurements of phosphorylation of p35, demonstrating the usefulness of Phos-tag SDS-PAGE for analysis of phosphorylation states of in vivo proteins.Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 06/2010; 9(6):1133-43. · 7.40 Impact Factor -
Article: AATYK1A phosphorylation by Cdk5 regulates the recycling endosome pathway.
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ABSTRACT: Trafficking of recycling endosomes (REs) is regulated by the small GTPase, Rab11A; however, the regulatory mechanism remains elusive. Apoptosis-associated tyrosine kinase 1A (AATYK1A) is a Ser/Thr kinase expressed highly in brain. We have recently shown that AATYK1A localizes to Rab11A-positive RE and is phosphorylated at Ser34 by cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5). Here, we have investigated a role of AATYK1A and its phosphorylation in recycling endosomal trafficking using Chinese hamster ovary-K1 (CHO-K1) cells. AATYK1A localizes predominantly to Rab11A-positive pericentrosomal endocytic recycling compartment (ERC). Phosphorylation at Ser34 of AATYK1A disrupts its accumulation in the pericentrosomal ERC. Consistently, phosphorylation-mimic mutant (AATYK1A-S34D) did not accumulate in the ERC and additionally attenuated ERC formation. ERC formation suppression can be reversed by constitutively active Rab11A-Q70L, suggesting a functional link between AATYK1A phosphorylation and Rab11A activity. Although no direct interaction between AATYK1A and Rab11A could be detected, the exchange of guanine nucleotides bound to Rab11A was significantly reduced in the presence of the phosphorylation-mimic AATYK1A-S34D. Together, our results reveal a regulatory role for AATYK1A in the formation of pericentrosomal ERC. They furthermore indicate that Cdk5 can disrupt ERC formation via Ser34 phosphorylation of AATYK1A. Finally, our data suggest a mechanism by which AATYK1A signaling couples Cdk5 to Rab11A activity.Genes to Cells 06/2010; 15(7):783-97. · 2.68 Impact Factor -
Article: Neuronal expression of two isoforms of mouse Septin 5.
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ABSTRACT: Septin 5 (Sept5) is a member of the Septin GTPase family and is thought to be involved in exocytosis through interactions with syntaxin 1 in postmitotic neurons. In rats, Sept5 is alternatively spliced to produce a short (Sept5_v2) and long (Sept5_v1) isoform. We recently identified Sept5 in rat brain as a substrate for Cdk5/p35, which phosphorylates Ser17 of Sept5_v1. To date, however, only the short Sept5_v2 isoform has been reported in the mouse. To determine the general expression of the Sept5_v1 isoform in mammals, we isolated Sept5_v1 cDNA by PCR using mouse brain total RNA. Mouse Sept5_v1 cDNA showed a high degree of nucleotide and amino acid sequence homology to the corresponding isoform of rat and human Sept5. Both isoforms were expressed mainly in brain and testis at the mRNA level, but expression was restricted to brain at the protein level. Whereas Sept5_v1 mRNA was highly expressed in the cortex and hippocampus, Sept5_v2 mRNA was expressed at the similar extent across in various brain regions. The protein ratio of Sept5_v1 to Sept5_v2 was high in the hippocampus, roughly equivalent in the cortex and low in the cerebellum and medulla. Sept5_v2 expression increased gradually from E17 to P30, but expression of Sept5_v1 was delayed until P10. The two isoforms were distinguished by their pattern of N-terminal phosphorylation. Thus, these different expression and phosphorylation patterns suggest isoform-specific functions for Sept5 and that a phosphorylation-specific antibody will be useful to study this idea.Journal of Neuroscience Research 11/2009; 88(6):1309-16. · 2.74 Impact Factor -
Article: Commitment of 1-methyl-4-phenylpyrinidinium ion-induced neuronal cell death by proteasome-mediated degradation of p35 cyclin-dependent kinase 5 activator.
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ABSTRACT: The dysfunction of proteasomes and mitochondria has been implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease. However, the mechanism by which this dysfunction causes neuronal cell death is unknown. We studied the role of cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5)-p35 in the neuronal cell death induced by 1-methyl-4-phenylpyrinidinium ion (MPP+), which has been used as an in vitro model of Parkinson disease. When cultured neurons were treated with 100 microM MPP+, p35 was degraded by proteasomes at 3 h, much earlier than the neurons underwent cell death at 12-24 h. The degradation of p35 was accompanied by the down-regulation of Cdk5 activity. We looked for the primary target of MPP+ that triggered the proteasome-mediated degradation of p35. MPP+ treatment for 3 h induced the fragmentation of the mitochondria, reduced complex I activity of the respiratory chain without affecting ATP levels, and impaired the mitochondrial import system. The dysfunction of the mitochondrial import system is suggested to up-regulate proteasome activity, leading to the ubiquitin-independent degradation of p35. The overexpression of p35 attenuated MPP+-induced neuronal cell death. In contrast, depletion of p35 with short hairpin RNA not only induced cell death but also sensitized to MPP+ treatment. These results indicate that a brief MPP+ treatment triggers the delayed neuronal cell death by the down-regulation of Cdk5 activity via mitochondrial dysfunction-induced up-regulation of proteasome activity. We propose a role for Cdk5-p35 as a survival factor in countering MPP+-induced neuronal cell death.Journal of Biological Chemistry 08/2009; 284(38):26029-39. · 4.77 Impact Factor -
Article: Effect of Pin1 or microtubule binding on dephosphorylation of FTDP-17 mutant Tau.
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ABSTRACT: Neurodegenerative tauopathies, including Alzheimer disease, are characterized by abnormal hyperphosphorylation of the microtubule-associated protein Tau. One group of tauopathies, known as frontotemporal dementia with parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17 (FTDP-17), is directly associated with mutations of the gene tau. However, it is unknown why mutant Tau is highly phosphorylated in the patient brain. In contrast to in vivo high phosphorylation, FTDP-17 Tau is phosphorylated less than wild-type Tau in vitro. Because phosphorylation is a balance between kinase and phosphatase activities, we investigated dephosphorylation of mutant Tau proteins, P301L and R406W. Tau phosphorylated by Cdk5-p25 was dephosphorylated by protein phosphatases in rat brain extracts. Compared with wild-type Tau, R406W was dephosphorylated faster and P301L slower. The two-dimensional phosphopeptide map analysis suggested that faster dephosphorylation of R406W was due to a lack of phosphorylation at Ser-404, which is relatively resistant to dephosphorylation. We studied the effect of the peptidyl-prolyl isomerase Pin1 or microtubule binding on dephosphorylation of wild-type Tau, P301L, and R406W in vitro. Pin1 catalyzes the cis/trans isomerization of phospho-Ser/Thr-Pro sequences in a subset of proteins. Dephosphorylation of wild-type Tau was reduced in brain extracts of Pin1-knockout mice, and this reduction was not observed with P301L and R406W. On the other hand, binding to microtubules almost abolished dephosphorylation of wild-type and mutant Tau proteins. These results demonstrate that mutation of Tau and its association with microtubules may change the conformation of Tau, thereby suppressing dephosphorylation and potentially contributing to the etiology of tauopathies.Journal of Biological Chemistry 05/2009; 284(25):16840-7. · 4.77 Impact Factor -
Article: Suppression of mutant Huntingtin aggregate formation by Cdk5/p35 through the effect on microtubule stability.
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ABSTRACT: Huntington's disease (HD) is a polyglutamine [poly(Q)] disease with an expanded poly(Q) stretch in the N terminus of the huntingtin protein (htt). A major pathological feature of HD neurons is inclusion bodies, detergent-insoluble aggregates composed of poly(Q)-expanded mutant htt (mhtt). Misfolding of mhtt is thought to confer a toxic property via formation of aggregates. Although toxic molecular species are still debated, it is important to clarify the aggregation mechanism to understand the pathogenesis of mhtt. We show Cdk5/p35 suppresses the formation of mhtt inclusion bodies in cell lines and primary neurons. Although we expressed the N-terminal exon 1 fragment of htt lacking phosphorylation sites for Cdk5 in COS-7 cells, the kinase activity of Cdk5 was required for the suppression. Furthermore, Cdk5/p35 suppressed inclusion formation of atrophin-1, another poly(Q) protein, raising the possibility that Cdk5/p35 generally suppresses inclusion formation of poly(Q) proteins. Microtubules (MTs) were a downstream component of Cdk5/p35 in the suppression of inclusion formation; Cdk5/p35 disrupted MTs, which were required for the formation of inclusions. Moreover, stabilization of MTs by Taxol induced inclusions even with overexpression of Cdk5/p35. The formation of inclusions was also regulated by manipulating the Cdk5/p35 activity in primary rat or mouse cortical neuron cultures. These results indicate that Cdk5-dependent regulation of MT organization is involved in the development of aggregate formation and subsequent pathogenesis of poly(Q) diseases. This Cdk5 inhibition of htt aggregates is a novel mechanism different from htt phosphorylation and interaction with Cdk5 reported previously (Luo et al., 2005; Anne et al., 2007).Journal of Neuroscience 09/2008; 28(35):8747-55. · 7.11 Impact Factor -
Article: Myristoylation of p39 and p35 is a determinant of cytoplasmic or nuclear localization of active cyclin-dependent kinase 5 complexes.
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ABSTRACT: Cdk5 is a member of the cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks), activated by the neuron-specific activator p39 or p35. The activators also determine the cytoplasmic distribution of active Cdk5, but the mechanism is not yet known. In particular, little is known for p39. p39 and p35 contain localization motifs, such as a second Gly for myristoylation and Lys clusters in the N-terminal p10 region. Using mutant constructs, we investigated the cellular distribution mechanism. We observed that p39 localizes the active Cdk5 complex in the perinuclear region and at the plasma membrane as does p35. We demonstrated the myristoylation of both p39 and p35, and found that it is a major determinant of their membrane association. Plasma membrane targeting depends on the amino acid sequence containing the Lys-cluster in the N-terminal p10 region. In contrast, a non-myristoylated Ala mutant (p39G2A or p35G2A) showed nuclear localization with stronger accumulation of p39G2A than p35G2A. These results indicate that myristoylation regulates the membrane association of p39 as well as p35 and that the Lys cluster controls their trafficking to the plasma membrane. The differential nuclear accumulation of p39 and p35 suggests their segregated functions, p35-Cdk5 in the cytoplasm and p39-Cdk5 in the nucleus.Journal of Neurochemistry 07/2008; 106(3):1325-36. · 4.06 Impact Factor -
Article: Regulation of the interaction of Disabled-1 with CIN85 by phosphorylation with Cyclin-dependent kinase 5.
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ABSTRACT: Disabled-1 (Dab1) is an adaptor protein mediating Reelin signaling in neuronal migration during brain development. Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5)-p35 is a proline-directed Ser/Thr kinase also involved in neuronal migration. The interaction between Dab1 and Cdk5 is in need of investigation. Dab1 was phosphorylated at Ser400 and Ser491 by Cdk5 in vivo. We search for proteins that interact with Dab1 in a phosphorylation-dependent manner at these sites, and identified CIN85, an SH3-containing adaptor protein involved in endocytosis, and CPalpha/CPbeta, which are subunits of barbed end F-actin-capping proteins (CP), as proteins bound to unphosphorylated Dab1 by mass spectrometric analysis. It was shown that the PTPAPR sequence of Dab1, conforming to the PxxxPR atypical SH3-binding motif, was the binding site for SH3 domains of CIN85. The results that phosphorylation at Ser491 close to the PTPAPR sequence inhibited association with CIN85 may provide a mechanism regulating the interaction between the PxxxPR motif proteins and SH3 domains of CIN85 family proteins. Together with previous results that CIN85 regulates actin assembly, present results raise the possibility that Cdk5 modulates actin dynamics through regulation of CIN85-Dab1 interaction by the Dab1 phosphorylation.Genes to Cells 01/2008; 12(12):1315-27. · 2.68 Impact Factor -
Article: Regulation of membrane association and kinase activity of Cdk5-p35 by phosphorylation of p35.
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ABSTRACT: Although protein kinase Cdk5-p35 is important in many aspects of the development and function of the central nervous system, relatively little is known about its regulation. In the present study, we examined the relationship between the association of this kinase with membranes and its activity in perinatal and adult rat brains. Cdk5-p35 in perinatal brain exhibited higher activity than that found in adult tissue. Gel filtration chromatography revealed that a portion of Cdk5-p35 from fetal brain occurred as a soluble complex, whereas Cdk5-p35 in adult brain occurred predominantly as a membrane-bound complex. Furthermore, soluble Cdk5-p35 in perinatal brain displayed elevated kinase activity, whereas membrane-bound Cdk5-p35 was highly active only in the presence of detergent. This more active soluble form of Cdk5-p35 correlated to a form in which p35 was phosphorylated, whereas the less active membrane-bound form of Cdk5 correlated to the dephosphorylated form of p35, as evidenced by a downward shift in electrophoretic mobility. Cdk5 activity and transition from soluble to membrane-associated compartments could be modulated by conditions that affected the phosphorylation or dephosphorylation of p35. For example, dephosphorylation of p35 in brain extracts was suppressed by selective inhibition of protein phosphatase-1. Together, these results suggest that the kinase activity of Cdk5-p35 is regulated through its association with membranes, which in turn is under the control of Cdk5-dependent phosphorylation and protein phosphatase-1-dependent dephosphorylation of p35.Journal of Neuroscience Research 12/2007; 85(14):3071-8. · 2.74 Impact Factor -
Article: Cdk5--p39 is a labile complex with the similar substrate specificity to Cdk5--p35.
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ABSTRACT: Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) is a proline-directed Ser/Thr kinase that plays important roles in various neuronal activities, including neuronal migration, synaptic activity, and neuronal cell death. Cdk5 is activated by association with a neuron-specific activator, p35 or its isoform p39, but little is known about the kinase activity of Cdk5--p39. In fact, kinase-active Cdk5--p39 was not prepared from rat brain extracts nor from HEK293 cells expressing Cdk5 and p39 by immunoprecipitation in the presence of non-ionic detergent, under conditions with which active Cdk5--p35 could be isolated. p39 dissociated from Cdk5 in the presence of detergent, indicating that p39 has a lower binding affinity for Cdk5 than p35. We developed a method for purifying kinase-active Cdk5--p39 from Sf9 cells infected with baculovirus encoding Cdk5 and p39. The purified Cdk5--p39 complex showed similar substrate specificity to that of Cdk5--p35, but with opposite sensitivity to detergent. Cdk5--p39 was inactivated by Triton X-100, whereas Cdk5--p35 was activated. The N-terminal deletion from p35 and p39, the amino acid sequences of which are different, did not change the stability or substrate specificity of either Cdk5 complex. The different stability between Cdk5--p35 and Cdk5--p39 suggests their distinct roles under different regulation mechanisms in neurons.Journal of Neurochemistry 09/2007; 102(5):1477-87. · 4.06 Impact Factor -
Article: p25/cyclin-dependent kinase 5 promotes the progression of cell death in nucleus of endoplasmic reticulum-stressed neurons.
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ABSTRACT: Dysregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) by cleavage of its activator p35 to p25 by calpain is involved in the neuronal cell death observed in neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer's disease. However, it is not yet clear how p25/Cdk5 induces cell death, although its cytosolic localization or extended half life are thought to be involved. We show here that endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress causes the calpain-dependent cleavage of p35 to p25 in primary cultured cortical neurons. Generation of p25 occurred at a cell death execution step in ER-stressed neurons. p25 translocated to the nucleus in ER-stressed neurons, whereas p35/Cdk5 was perinuclear in control neurons. Cdk5 inhibitors or dominant-negative Cdk5 suppressed ER stress-induced neuronal cell death. These findings indicate that p25/Cdk5 is a proapoptotic factor that promotes ER stress-induced neuronal cell death in nuclei.Journal of Neurochemistry 08/2007; 102(1):133-40. · 4.06 Impact Factor -
Article: Regulation of membrane association and kinase activity of Cdk5–p35 by phosphorylation of p35
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ABSTRACT: Although protein kinase Cdk5–p35 is important in many aspects of the development and function of the central nervous system, relatively little is known about its regulation. In the present study, we examined the relationship between the association of this kinase with membranes and its activity in perinatal and adult rat brains. Cdk5–p35 in perinatal brain exhibited higher activity than that found in adult tissue. Gel filtration chromatography revealed that a portion of Cdk5–p35 from fetal brain occurred as a soluble complex, whereas Cdk5–p35 in adult brain occurred predominantly as a membrane-bound complex. Furthermore, soluble Cdk5–p35 in perinatal brain displayed elevated kinase activity, whereas membrane-bound Cdk5–p35 was highly active only in the presence of detergent. This more active soluble form of Cdk5–p35 correlated to a form in which p35 was phosphorylated, whereas the less active membrane-bound form of Cdk5 correlated to the dephosphorylated form of p35, as evidenced by a downward shift in electrophoretic mobility. Cdk5 activity and transition from soluble to membrane-associated compartments could be modulated by conditions that affected the phosphorylation or dephosphorylation of p35. For example, dephosphorylation of p35 in brain extracts was suppressed by selective inhibition of protein phosphatase-1. Together, these results suggest that the kinase activity of Cdk5–p35 is regulated through its association with membranes, which in turn is under the control of Cdk5-dependent phosphorylation and protein phosphatase-1–dependent dephosphorylation of p35. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Journal of Neuroscience Research 07/2007; 85(14):3071 - 3078. · 2.74 Impact Factor -
Article: Phosphorylation of adult type Sept5 (CDCrel-1) by cyclin-dependent kinase 5 inhibits interaction with syntaxin-1.
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ABSTRACT: Increasing evidence implicates cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) in neuronal synaptic function. We searched for Cdk5 substrates in synaptosomal fractions prepared from mouse brains. Mass spectrometric analysis after two-dimensional SDS-PAGE identified several synaptic proteins phosphorylated by Cdk5-p35; one protein identified was Sept5 (CDCrel-1). Although septins were isolated originally as cell division-related proteins in yeast, Sept5 is expressed predominantly in neurons and is implicated in exocytosis. We confirmed that Sept5 is phosphorylated by Cdk5-p35 in vitro and identified Ser17 of adult type Sept5 (Sept5_v1) as a major phosphorylation site. We found that Ser17 of Sept5_v1 is phosphorylated in mouse brains. Coimmunoprecipitation from synaptosomal fractions and glutathione S-transferase-syntaxin-1A pulldown assays of Sept5_v1 expressed in COS-7 cells showed that phosphorylation of Sept5_v1 by Cdk5-p35 decreases the binding to syntaxin-1. These results indicate that the interaction of Sept5 with syntaxin-1 is regulated by the phosphorylation of Sept5_v1 at Ser17 by Cdk5-p35.Journal of Biological Chemistry 04/2007; 282(11):7869-76. · 4.77 Impact Factor -
Article: Suppression of calpain-dependent cleavage of the CDK5 activator p35 to p25 by site-specific phosphorylation.
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ABSTRACT: Cdk5 is a proline-directed Ser/Thr protein kinase predominantly expressed in postmitotic neurons together with its activator, p35. N-terminal truncation of p35 to p25 by calpain results in deregulation of Cdk5 and contributes to neuronal cell death associated with several neurodegenerative diseases. Previously we reported that p35 occurred as a phosphoprotein, phospho-p35 levels changed with neuronal maturation, and that phosphorylation of p35 affected its vulnerability to calpain cleavage. Here, we identify the p35 residues Ser(8) and Thr(138) as the major sites of phosphorylation by Cdk5. Mutagenesis of these sites to unphosphorylatable Ala increased susceptibility to calpain in cultured cells and neurons while changing them to phosphomimetic glutamate-attenuated cleavage. Furthermore, phosphorylation state-specific antibodies to these sites revealed that Thr(138) was dephosphorylated in adult rat, although both Ser(8) and Thr(138) were phosphorylated in prenatal brains. In cultured neurons, inhibition of protein phosphatases converted phosho-Ser(8) p35 to dual phospho-Ser(8)/Thr(138) p35 and conferred resistance to calpain cleavage. These results suggest phosphorylation of Thr(138) predominantly defines the susceptibility of p35 to calpain-dependent cleavage and that dephosphorylation of this site is a critical determinant of Cdk5-p25-induced cell death associated with neurodegeneration.Journal of Biological Chemistry 02/2007; 282(3):1687-94. · 4.77 Impact Factor -
Article: Identifying novel substrates for mouse Cdk5 kinase using the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
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ABSTRACT: Among the mammalian Cdk family members, Cdk5, activated by the binding of p35, plays an important role in the control of neurogenesis, and its deregulation is thought to be one of the causes of neurodegenerative diseases. Overproduction of Cdk5 and p35 in yeast cells causes growth arrest, probably because of hyperphosphorylation of yeast proteins. We screened mouse brain cDNA that could recover the growth of yeast cells overproducing Cdk5 and p35, hoping that such cDNA encodes a substrate or inhibitor of Cdk5. Mouse brain cDNA library was introduced into a yeast strain in which Cdk5, p35 and mouse cDNA were over-expressed under the control of the GAL promoter, and cDNA plasmids were isolated from the transformants that recovered growth on galactose medium. The analysis of those plasmids revealed that they harbored cDNA that encodes neuronal proteins including SCLIP and CRMP-1, and those with unknown function. We found that Cdk5 could phosphorylate SCLIP and CRMP-1 in vitro and the two proteins in cultured cells showed a mobility shift depending on Cdk5 activity and the presence of specific Ser or Thr residues, indicating that SCLIP and CRMP-1 are likely substrates for Cdk5 in vitro and in cultured cells. Further screening with these systems will enable us to identify more novel substrates and regulators of Cdk5/p35, which will lead to the exploration of Cdk5 function in diverse cellular systems.Genes to Cells 01/2007; 11(12):1393-404. · 2.68 Impact Factor -
Article: Enhanced activation of Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II upon downregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase 5-p35.
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ABSTRACT: Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5)-p35 is downregulated in cultured neurons by N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) via the proteasomal degradation of p35. However, it is not known where in neurons this downregulation occurs or the physiologic meaning of the reaction. We show the enrichment of Cdk5 and p35 in the postsynaptic density and the NMDA-induced degradation of postsynaptic p35 using brain slices and cultured neurons. To evaluate the role of this downregulation, we examined the relationship between Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) activation and Cdk5 downregulation, as events downstream from NMDA stimulation. Glutamate or NMDA stimulation induced CaMKII autophosphorylation over a time course that mirrored the time course of p35 degradation. To simulate the downregulation of postsynaptic Cdk5 in invitro experiments, we used the Cdk5 inhibitor roscovitine. The inhibition of Cdk5 activity by roscovitine enhanced CaMKII autophosphorylation and activation in cultured neurons, and in an isolated postsynaptic-density-enriched fraction. These results suggest that Cdk5 activity suppresses CaMKII activation, and that the downregulation of Cdk5 activity after treatment withNMDA facilitates CaMKII activation, leading to the easier induction of long-term potentiation.Journal of Neuroscience Research 10/2006; 84(4):747-54. · 2.74 Impact Factor
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Institutions
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2003–2012
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Tokyo Metropolitan University
- Department of Biological Sciences
Tokyo, Tokyo-to, Japan
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