Publication | Open Access
ERK1 phosphorylates Nanog to regulate protein stability and stem cell self-renewal
116
Citations
39
References
2014
Year
Stem Cell BiologySignaling PathwayProtein StabilityCell RegulationCell InteractionReceptor Tyrosine KinaseAutophagyStem CellsCell SignalingMolecular SignalingNanog Protein StabilityEs Cell DifferentiationCell BiologySignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyMouse Embryonic StemStem Cell ResearchSystems BiologyMedicineCell DevelopmentEmbryonic Stem Cell
Nanog regulates human and mouse embryonic stem (ES) cell self-renewal activity. Activation of ERKs signaling negatively regulates ES cell self-renewal and induces differentiation, but the mechanisms are not understood. We found that ERK1 binds and phosphorylates Nanog. Activation of MEK/ERKs signaling and phosphorylation of Nanog inhibit Nanog transactivation, inducing ES cell differentiation. Conversely, suppression of MEK/ERKs signaling enhances Nanog transactivation to inhibit ES cell differentiation. We observed that phosphorylation of Nanog by ERK1 decreases Nanog stability through ubiquitination-mediated protein degradation. Further, we found that this phosphorylation induces binding of FBXW8 with Nanog to reduce Nanog protein stability. Overall, our results demonstrated that ERKs-mediated Nanog phosphorylation plays an important role in self-renewal of ES cells through FBXW8-mediated Nanog protein stability.
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