pubmed:abstractText |
Here, we show how targeting protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), a key regulator of cellular protein phosphorylation, can either induce or prevent apoptosis depending on what other signals the cell is receiving. The oncoprotein polyoma small T interacts with PP2A to regulate survival. In the presence of growth factors, small T induces apoptosis. Akt activity, which usually promotes survival, is required for this death response, because inhibitors of Akt or PI3 kinase protect cells from death. The activation of Akt under these conditions is partial, characterized by T308 phosphorylation but not S473 phosphorylation. In the absence of growth factors, small T protects from cell death. Here, small T uses PP2A to promote phosphorylation of Akt on both T308 and S473. This effect results in a different pattern of phosphorylation of Akt substrates and shifts Akt from a proapoptotic (presence of growth factors) to an antiapoptotic mode (absence of growth factors). An intriguing possibility is that Akt phosphorylation could be therapeutically disregulated to decrease the survival of cancer cells.
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pubmed:affiliation |
Department of Biochemistry, Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, School of Medicine, Tufts University, Boston, MA 02111, USA.
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