4.6 Article

Phosphorylation-Dependent Inhibition of Akt1

Journal

GENES
Volume 9, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes9090450

Keywords

genetic code expansion; protein kinase B; phosphoinositide dependent kinase 1; phosphoseryl-tRNA synthetase; tRNA(Sep)

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN 04282-2014]
  2. Canadian Cancer Society Research Institute innovation grant [704324]
  3. Canada Foundation for Innovation [229917]
  4. Ontario Research Fund [229917]
  5. Canada Research Chairs [950-229917]
  6. Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation

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Protein kinase B (Akt1) is a proto-oncogene that is overactive in most cancers. Akt1 activation requires phosphorylation at Thr308; phosphorylation at Ser473 further enhances catalytic activity. Akt1 activity is also regulated via interactions between the kinase domain and the N-terminal auto-inhibitory pleckstrin homology (PH) domain. As it was previously difficult to produce Akt1 in site-specific phosphorylated forms, the contribution of each activating phosphorylation site to auto-inhibition was unknown. Using a combination of genetic code expansion and in vivo enzymatic phosphorylation, we produced Akt1 variants containing programmed phosphorylation to probe the interplay between Akt1 phosphorylation status and the auto-inhibitory function of the PH domain. Deletion of the PH domain increased the enzyme activity for all three phosphorylated Akt1 variants. For the doubly phosphorylated enzyme, deletion of the PH domain relieved auto-inhibition by 295-fold. We next found that phosphorylation at Ser473 provided resistance to chemical inhibition by Akti-1/2 inhibitor VIII. The Akti-1/2 inhibitor was most effective against pAkt1(T308) and showed four-fold decreased potency with Akt1 variants phosphorylated at Ser473. The data highlight the need to design more potent Akt1 inhibitors that are effective against the doubly phosphorylated and most pathogenic form of Akt1.

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