pubmed:abstractText |
The serum response element (SRE), which is pivotal for transcriptional up-regulation of the c-fos protooncogene, is constitutively occupied by a protein complex comprising the serum response factor and a ternary complex factor (TCF). Phosphorylation of the TCFs Elk-1 and Sap-1a by the ERK and JNK subclasses of MAP kinases triggers c-fos transcription. We demonstrate here that Elk-1 is barely activated by a third subclass of MAP kinases (p38), most likely because the critical residues Ser383 and Ser389 are poorly phosphorylated by p38 MAP kinase. In contrast, the TCF Sap-1a is efficiently phosphorylated by p38 MAP kinase in vitro and in vivo on the homologous residues Ser381 and Ser387. Mutation of these sites to alanine severely reduces c-fos SRE-dependent transcription mediated by Sap-1a and p38 MAP kinase. Thus, Sap-1a may be an important target for mitogens, stress and apoptotic signals to elicit a nuclear response. However, signaling from p38 MAP kinase to Sap-1a or from Sap-1a to the basal transcription machinery does not occur in all cell types nor at promoters other than the c-fos SRE, which may ensure the specificity of signaling.
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