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Sumoylation and the oncogenic E17K mutation affect AKT1 subcellular distribution and impact on Nanog-binding dynamics to chromatin in embryonic stem cells

Article

Authorship:

Francia, Marcos Gabriel ; Oses Oliveto, Camila Maite ; ROBERTI, SABRINA LORENA ; GARCIA, MORA RENEÉ ; COZZA, LUCAS HELIO ; DIAZ, MARIA CANDELARIA ; LEVI, VALERIA ; GUBERMAN, ALEJANDRA SONIA

Date:

2023

Publishing House and Editing Place:

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE

Magazine:

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY, vol. 215 (pp. 1-10) ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE

Summary

AKT/PKB is a kinase involved in the regulation of a plethora of cell processes. Particularly, in embryonic stem cells (ESCs), AKT is crucial for the maintenance of pluripotency. Although the activation of this kinase relies on its recruitment to the cellular membrane and subsequent phosphorylation, multiple other post-translational modifications (PTMs), including SUMOylation, fine-tune its activity and target specificity. Since this PTM can also modify the localization and availability of different proteins, in this work we explored if SUMOylation impacts on the subcellular compartmentalization and distribution of AKT1 in ESCs. We found that this PTM does not affect AKT1 membrane recruitment, but it modifies the AKT1 nucleus/cytoplasm distribution, increasing its nuclear presence. Additionally, within this compartment, we found that AKT1 SUMOylation also impacts on the chromatin-binding dynamics of NANOG, a central pluripotency transcription factor. Remarkably, the oncogenic E17K AKT1 mutant produces major changes in all these parameters increasing the binding of NANOG to its targets, also in a SUMOylation dependent manner. These findings demonstrate that SUMOylation modulates AKT1 subcellular distribution, thus adding an extra layer of regulation of its function, possibly by affecting the specificity and interaction with its downstream targets.

Key Words

AKT SUMOYLATIONNANOGAKT DISTRIBUTIONMYR AKTFCSE17K MUTANT

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http://hdl.handle.net/11336/228513