Publication | Open Access
Tunable regulation of CREB DNA binding activity couples genotoxic stress response and metabolism
18
Citations
43
References
2016
Year
Molecular RegulationGeneticsSer ResiduesMolecular BiologyGenomic MechanismCasein Kinase2Transcriptional RegulationTunable RegulationCell SignalingGenome InstabilityStress ResponseCamp Response ElementGene ExpressionCell BiologyProtein PhosphorylationTranscription RegulationReductive StressChromatinSignal TransductionNatural SciencesGene RegulationSystems BiologyMedicineCreb Dna
cAMP response element binding protein (CREB) is a key regulator of glucose metabolism and synaptic plasticity that is canonically regulated through recruitment of transcriptional coactivators. Here we show that phosphorylation of CREB on a conserved cluster of Ser residues (the ATM/CK cluster) by the DNA damage-activated protein kinase ataxia-telangiectasia-mutated (ATM) and casein kinase1 (CK1) and casein kinase2 (CK2) positively and negatively regulates CREB-mediated transcription in a signal dependent manner. In response to genotoxic stress, phosphorylation of the ATM/CK cluster inhibited CREB-mediated gene expression, DNA binding activity and chromatin occupancy proportional to the number of modified Ser residues. Paradoxically, substoichiometric, ATM-independent, phosphorylation of the ATM/CK cluster potentiated bursts in CREB-mediated transcription by promoting recruitment of the CREB coactivator, cAMP-regulated transcriptional coactivators (CRTC2). Livers from mice expressing a non-phosphorylatable CREB allele failed to attenuate gluconeogenic genes in response to DNA damage or fully activate the same genes in response to glucagon. We propose that phosphorylation-dependent regulation of DNA binding activity evolved as a tunable mechanism to control CREB transcriptional output and promote metabolic homeostasis in response to rapidly changing environmental conditions.
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