User:Isabela Fonseca de Oliveira Granha/Sandbox 1
From Proteopedia
ß-catenin
ß-catenin is an important element in cell-cell adherens junctions, called cadherins. Reported in all Eukaryota (Eukaryota) phylum, in humans the gene CTNNB1 (CTNNB1) transcribes a 95kDa protein that allows cadherins to anchor in cytoeskeleton (actin filaments) by connecting cytoplasmic proteins. Besides that, it is an essential regulator of the canonical Wnt pathway [1] (related to embryonic development). Disturbance of this activity is associated with cancer and other diseases. Therefore, ß-catenin is an important target for developing medication for many diseases, with considerable interest in its structure. [2]
StructureThe zebrafish (Danio rerio) (2Z6G) contains residues 126-681 and a central core of and an alpha helix, the , at the beginning of the ß-catenin C-terminal domain. The armadillo domain is made of (as shown in ARM repeat 2), except for the , and has a particular site which is positively charged, constituting the for the majority of ß-catenin ligands. [2] The terminal domains sequences are less conserved than the armadillo repeat domain, mediate some of the protein interactions and are both negatively charged. It is observed that the , and the N terminus of the first armadillo repeat has an . Both N- and C-terminal domains do not interact with the armadillo repeat domain. [2] In contrast to the armadillo ligand-binding structural groove, the C-terminal tail is highly negatively charged. The C-helix caps the Hydrophobic . However, the other side of the surface, exposed to solvent, is composed of Polar residues. Thereby, this structure forms part of the superhelical structure core of ß-catenin together with armadillo repeat domain. [2] It is possible that the C-helix is important for the transactivation of Wnt-responsive genes, but not for the cell adhesion through cadherins. Hence, this same β-catenin region is also the binding site of transcriptional inhibitors that compete directly with TCF for β-catenin binding.[2] Cell AdhesionIn the absence of Wnt stimulus, ß-catenin is located at the cytoplasmic side of the membrane as a component of cadherin-based cell-cell connections (Figure 1). Cadherins are transmembrane glycoproteins calcium-dependent that mediate cell-cell adhesion through link specially to ß-catenin by their cytoplasmic tails. The cadherin-catenin complex forms adherens junctions that polarize epithelial tissues and hold the cells together. However, in case of some tumor metastasis, that complex is reported as disrupted: in order to become more migratory, epithelial cells must loose their characteristic polarity, thus the complex might be affected (phenomenon described as 'cadherin switching' in epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, EMT).[3] The most known interaction occurs between , epithelial cadherin (the ß-catenin residues 134–671 are represented in green and the residues 577–728 of the mature E-cadherin sequence are colored in rose. The proteins are from Mus musculus) (1I7X). They are associated while still in the endoplasmic reticulum and interfering with the binding of these proteins results in proteasomal degradation of the cadherin. First, alpha-catenin binds to ß-catenin at the first ARM repeat, amino acids , resulting in an alpha-catenin/ß-catenin heterodimer. This binding stabilizes ß-catenin in the hinged form, and E-cadherin can connect simultaneously. The , covering the entire length of the ß-catenin ARM repeat domain and involving the C-terminal 100 residues of the cadherin cytoplasmic domain. [4] [5] Figure 1: Cadherin-based cell adhesion. Alpha-catenin/ß-catenin forms a heterodimer that can connects to E-cadherin promoting the adherens junctions. As a homodimer, alpha-catenin interacts with actin. Adapted from: Bubus12/CC BY (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0). https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Beta-catenin-moonlighting.png The ß-catenin destruction complexIn baseline conditions without Wnt signaling, ß-catenin concentrations are low in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus. Then, the destruction complex (Figure 2), formed by APC, Axin, CK1ɑ and GSK, is active and causes the degradation of the protein through proteasome. Initially it is recognized by APC and Axin that promote the phosphorylation of Ser45 by CK1ɑ. This facilitates the phosphorylation by GSK in the residues of the amino acids Thr41, Ser37 and Ser33. The last two, when phosphorylated, leads to recognition by ß-TrCP and consequently ubiquitination by an E3 ligase and degradation by 26S proteasome. [4] Furthermore, the relation Wnt/ß-catenin pathway usually are reported by 'canonical' and 'non-canonical', whose meaning remotes to the components of the cascate. The first leads to accumulation and stabilization of cytosolic (unphosphorylated) ß-catenin and the second promotes the increase in intracellular calcium or mediate cell polarity, but both are established in embryonic development of normal tissue and organs. [6] [7] Figure 2: A simplified diagram of the ß-catenin destruction complex. The destruction complex proteins promote the ß-catenin proteolysis in cytoplasm. Source: JWSchmidt at the English language Wikipedia/CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0). https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Axindestructioncomplex.png DNA binding and transcriptionThe inhibition of ß-catenin destruction complex through activation of the Wnt pathway (Figure 3) leads to increased levels of the protein in cytoplasm and its translocation into the nucleus. ß-catenin interacts with different nuclear pore complex components and ARM repeats are critical for its import and export. FoxM1 also facilitates its nuclear translocation directly interacting with ARM repeats . FoxM1 forms a complex with ß-catenin/TCF on the promoters of Wnt target genes. Once in the nucleus, ß-catenin and its DNA binding partners can activate transcription of Wnt/ß-catenin target genes. Therefore, ß-catenin can only initiates transcription in a multimeric complex, as its central transcriptional activator. [4] TCF transcription factors works as the principal nuclear member of ß-catenin multimeric complex. TCFs bind to DNA enhancers and ß-catenin acts as a link in a chain between them and others transcriptional coactivators. This interaction can be modulated to enhance, repress os switch off ß-catenin-mediated transcription. The majority of these transcription coactivators binds to and many of them can affect chromatin structure. Indeed, it seems that the C-terminus region of ß-catenin coordinates the recruitment and sequential exchange of these proteins. Binding of ß-catenin to TCF is blocked by some proteins such as (here ICAT is represented in orange and is a full length structure from Homo sapiens; ß-catenin is shown in green and is from Mus musculus). (1M1E) [4] This interaction can be divided in two regions: the and the . The first one overlaps with others ß-catenin ligands and is known for its several (for example, Val68, Met69, and Phe71 interact with hydrophobic sites on the surface of ß-catenin) and - Asp66 and Glu75 form salt bridges with ß-catenin residues Lys435 (repeat 8) and Lys312 (repeat 5). There are other polar contacts to stabilize the protein-protein binding. Finally, the interaction between the ICAT helical domain and the two last ARM repeat is water-mediated contact (with ARM 11) and hydrophobic interactions (ARM 12). The hydrophobic interactions are stabilized by the connections between the aliphatic portion of the . Lys19 also forms a with ß-catenin Glu664 (repeat 12). Another polar interaction occurs between . [8] Figure 3: The canonical Wnt pathway when Wnt is present. The inhibition of the destruction complex allows ß-catenin translocation from cytoplasm to nucleus. Source: Gpruett2/CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0). https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Canonical_Wnt_pathway_with_Wnt..jpg References
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