Prolyl hydroxylation- and glycosylation-dependent functions of Skp1 in O2-regulated development of Dictyostelium

O2 regulates multicellular development of the social amoeba Dictyostelium, suggesting it may serve as an important cue in its native soil environment. Dictyostelium expresses an HIFα-type prolyl 4-hydroxylase (P4H1) whose levels affect the O2-threshold for culmination implicating it as a direct O2-s...

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Published inDevelopmental biology Vol. 349; no. 2; pp. 283 - 295
Main Authors Wang, Zhuo A., Singh, Divyendu, van der Wel, Hanke, West, Christopher M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 15.01.2011
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Summary:O2 regulates multicellular development of the social amoeba Dictyostelium, suggesting it may serve as an important cue in its native soil environment. Dictyostelium expresses an HIFα-type prolyl 4-hydroxylase (P4H1) whose levels affect the O2-threshold for culmination implicating it as a direct O2-sensor, as in animals. But Dictyostelium lacks HIFα, a mediator of animal prolyl 4-hydroxylase signaling, and P4H1 can hydroxylate Pro143 of Skp1, a subunit of E3SCFubiquitin-ligases. Skp1 hydroxyproline then becomes the target of five sequential glycosyltransferase reactions that modulate the O2-signal. Here we show that genetically induced changes in Skp1 levels also affect the O2-threshold, in opposite direction to that of the modification enzymes suggesting that the latter reduce Skp1 activity. Consistent with this, overexpressed Skp1 is poorly hydroxylated and Skp1 is the only P4H1 substrate detectable in extracts. Effects of Pro143 mutations, and of combinations of Skp1 and enzyme level perturbations, are consistent with pathway modulation of Skp1 activity. However, some effects were not mirrored by changes in modification of the bulk Skp1 pool, implicating a Skp1 subpopulation and possibly additional unknown factors. Altered Skp1 levels also affected other developmental transitions in a modification-dependent fashion. Whereas hydroxylation of animal HIFα results in its polyubiquitination and proteasomal degradation, Dictyostelium Skp1 levels were little affected by its modification status. These data indicate that Skp1 and possibly E3SCFubiquitin-ligase activity modulate O2-dependent culmination and other developmental processes, and at least partially mediate the action of the hydroxylation/glycosylation pathway in O2-sensing.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2010.10.013
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Current address: Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405-7003
ISSN:0012-1606
1095-564X
DOI:10.1016/j.ydbio.2010.10.013