Mitotic phosphorylation activates hepatoma-derived growth factor as a mitogen

AD Everett, J Yang, M Rahman, P Dulloor… - BMC cell biology, 2011 - Springer
AD Everett, J Yang, M Rahman, P Dulloor, DL Brautigan
BMC cell biology, 2011Springer
Background Hepatoma-derived growth factor (HDGF) is a nuclear protein that is a mitogen
for a wide variety of cells. Mass spectrometry based methods have identified HDGF as a
phosphoprotein without validation or a functional consequence of this post-translational
modification. Results We found that HDGF in primary mouse aortic vascular smooth muscle
cells (VSMC) was phosphorylated. Wild type HDGF was phosphorylated in asynchronous
cells and substitution of S103, S165 and S202 to alanine each demonstrated a decrease in …
Background
Hepatoma-derived growth factor (HDGF) is a nuclear protein that is a mitogen for a wide variety of cells. Mass spectrometry based methods have identified HDGF as a phosphoprotein without validation or a functional consequence of this post-translational modification.
Results
We found that HDGF in primary mouse aortic vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) was phosphorylated. Wild type HDGF was phosphorylated in asynchronous cells and substitution of S103, S165 and S202 to alanine each demonstrated a decrease in HDGF phosphorylation. A phospho-S103 HDGF specific antibody was developed and demonstrated mitosis-specific phosphorylation. HDGF-S103A was not mitogenic and FACS analysis demonstrated a G2/M arrest in HDGF-S103A expressing cells, whereas cells expressing HDGF-S103D showed cell cycle progression. Nocodazole arrest increased S103 phosphorylation from 1.6% to 29% (P = 0.037).
Conclusions
Thus, HDGF is a phosphoprotein and phosphorylation of S103 is mitosis related and required for its function as a mitogen. We speculate that cell cycle regulated phosphorylation of HDGF may play an important role in vascular cell proliferation.
Springer
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