Phosphorylation regulates human OCT4

TitlePhosphorylation regulates human OCT4
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsBrumbaugh, J, Hou, ZG, Russell, JD, Howden, SE, Yu, PZ, Ledvina, AR, Coon, JJ, Thomson, JA
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume109
Pagination7162-7168
Date PublishedMay
Type of ArticleArticle
ISBN Number0027-8424
Accession NumberWOS:000304090600017
Keywordscells, defined conditions, embryonic stem-cells, es, expression, mammalian embryo, pluripotency, pou-domain, protein-interaction network, proteomics, posttranslational regulation, self-renewal, transcription factor
Abstract

The transcription factor OCT4 is fundamental to maintaining pluripotency and self-renewal. To better understand protein-level regulation of OCT4, we applied liquid chromatography-MS to identify 14 localized sites of phosphorylation, 11 of which were previously unknown. Functional analysis of two sites, T234 and S235, suggested that phosphorylation within the homeobox region of OCT4 negatively regulates its activity by interrupting sequence-specific DNA binding. Mutating T234 and S235 to mimic constitutive phosphorylation at these sites reduces transcriptional activation from an OCT4-responsive reporter and decreases reprogramming efficiency. We also cataloged 144 unique phosphopeptides on known OCT4 interacting partners, including SOX2 and SALL4, that copurified during immunoprecipitation. These proteins were enriched for phosphorylation at motifs associated with ERK signaling. Likewise, OCT4 harbored several putative ERK phosphorylation sites. Kinase assays confirmed that ERK2 phosphorylated these sites in vitro, providing a direct link between ERK signaling and the transcriptional machinery that governs pluripotency.

Short TitleProc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A.