Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.326, No.1, 136-146, 2005
The subcellular localization of 3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase is controlled by caveolin-1 binding
3-Phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase 1 (PDK1), a member of the serine/threonine kinase family, has been demonstrated to be crucial for cellular survival, differentiation, and metabolism. Here, we present evidence that PDK1 is associated with caveolin-1, a 22-kDa integral membrane protein, which is the principal structural and regulatory component of the caveolae membranes in COS-1. First, we noted the presence of two potential caveolin-1 binding Motifs ((FFVKLYFTF149)-F-141 and (YDFPEKFF306)-Y-299) in the PDK1 catalytic domain. Using a pull-down approach, we observed that PDK1 interacts physically with caveolin-1 both in vivo and in vitro. Second, we detected the co-localization of PDK1 and caveolin-1 via confocal microscopy. The localization of PDK1 to the plasma membrane was disrupted by caveolin binding. Third, in transient transfection assays, interaction with caveolin-1 induced a substantial reduction in the in vivo serine/threonine phosphorylation of PDK1, whereas the caveolin-1 binding site mutant ((FFVKLYFTF149)-F-141 and (YDFPEKFF306)-Y-299 change to(141)AFVKLAFTA(149) and (299)ADAPEFLA(306)) did not. Furthermore, a caveolin-1 scaffolding peptide (amino acids 82-101) functionally suppressed the self-phosphorylation and kinase activities of purified recombinant PDK1 protein. Thus, our observations indicated that PDK1 binds to caveolin-1 through its caveolin-binding motifs, and also that the protein-protein interaction between PDK1 and caveolin-1 regulates PDK1 self-phosphorylation, kinase activity, and subcellular localization. (C) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords:3-phosphatidyl-dependent kinase 1;caveolin;protein-protein interaction;protein phosphorylation;subcellular localization