4.6 Article

Multi-directional function of the protein phosphatase 1 regulatory subunit TIMAP

Journal

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2013.05.012

Keywords

TIMAP; Endothelial cell; PP1c; Protein phosphatase 1; Regulatory subunit; MYPT; MLC2; Non-integrin laminin receptor; LAMR1

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP 1367, MOP 641814]
  2. Pfizer Canada Cardiovascular Research Award

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TIMAP is an endothelial-cell predominant member of the MYPT family of PP1c regulatory subunits. This study explored the TIMAP-PP1c interaction and substrate specificity in vitro. TIMAP associated with all three PP1c isoforms, but endogenous endothelial cell TIMAP preferentially co-immunoprecipitated with PP1c beta. Structural modeling of the TIMAP/PP1c complex predicts that the PP1c C-terminus is buried in the TIMAP ankyrin cluster, and that the PP1c active site remains accessible. Consistent with this model, C-terminal PP1c phosphorylation by cdk2-cyclinA was masked by TIMAP, and PP1c bound TIMAP when the active site was occupied by the inhibitor microcystin. TIMAP inhibited PP1c activity toward phosphorylase a in a concentration-dependent manner, with half-maximal inhibition in the 0.4-1.2 nM range, an effect modulated by the length, and by Ser333/Ser337 phosphomimic mutations of the TIMAP C-terminus. TIMAP-bound PP1c beta effectively dephosphorylated MLC2 and TIMAP itself. By contrast, TIMAP inhibited the PP1c beta activity toward the putative substrate LAMR1, and instead masked LAMR1 PKA- and PKC-phosphorylation sites. This is direct evidence that MLC2 is a TIMAP/PP1c substrate. The data also indicate that TIMAP can modify protein phosphorylation independent of its function as a PP1c regulatory subunit, namely by masking phosphorylation sites of binding partners like PP1c and LAMR1. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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