Serine Phosphorylation Negatively Regulates RhoA in Vivo*

Shawn M. Ellerbroek {ddagger} §, Krister Wennerberg {ddagger} ¶ and Keith Burridge {ddagger}

From the {ddagger} Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599, Department of Pharmacology, Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599

Received for publication, December 20, 2002 , and in revised form, March 20, 2003.
    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Previous work indicates that RhoA phosphorylation on Ser188 by cAMP or cGMP-dependent kinases inhibits its activity. However, these studies lacked the possibility to directly study phosphorylated RhoA activity in vivo. Therefore, we created RhoA proteins containing phosphomimetic residues in place of the cAMP/cGMP-dependent kinase phosphorylation site. RhoA phosphorylation or phosphomimetic substitution did not affect Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor, GTPase activating protein, or geranylgeranyl transferase activity in vitro but promoted binding to the Rho guanine-dissociation inhibitor as measured by exchange factor competition assays. The in vitro similarities between RhoA phosphomimetic proteins and phosphorylated RhoA allowed us to study function of phosphorylated RhoA in vivo. RhoA phosphomimetic proteins display depressed GTP loading when transiently expressed in NIH 3T3 cells. Stable-expressing RhoA and RhoA(S188A) clones spread significantly slower than mock-transfected or RhoA(S188E) clones. RhoA(S188A) clones were protected from the morphological effects of a cAMP agonist, whereas phosphomimetic clones exhibit stress fiber disassembly similar to control cells. Together, these data provide in vivo evidence that addition of a charged group to Ser188 upon phosphorylation negatively regulates RhoA activity and indicates that this occurs through enhanced Rho guanine-dissociation inhibitor interaction rather than direct perturbation of guanine nucleotide exchange factor, GTPase activating protein, or geranylgeranyl transferase activity.


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
The intracellular protein RhoA, a member of the Ras super-family of low molecular weight G proteins, regulates cell cycle progression, gene expression, focal adhesion assembly/disassembly, and the acto-myosin generated contraction and tension events of cell motility, matrix remodeling, and cytokinesis (1). RhoA cycles between an active GTP-bound and an inactive GDP-bound state through nucleotide exchange and intrinsic GTPase activity. During cellular events of RhoA activation, guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs)1 can bind and activate RhoA by promoting uptake of free nucleotide (2). GTPase activating proteins (GAPs) negatively regulate RhoA by binding and stimulating GTP hydrolysis leading to an inactive GDP-bound state (3). RhoA signals within the cell by binding to a variety of effector molecules, such as mDia and the Rho kinases ROK{alpha}/ROCK2 and ROK{beta}/ROCK1 (4, 5, 6). The vast majority of RhoA (>95%) resides in the cytosolic fraction of the cell (7, 8), with the remainder associated with lipid membranes via a geranylgeranyl moiety attached to a carboxyl Cys190 residue (9). Prenylation of RhoA is required for promotion of cell growth, transformation, and cytoskeletal organization, indicating that membrane cycling is a critical component of Rho regulation (10). A primary mechanism of cytosolic sequestration of RhoA is through binding of Rho guanine-dissociation inhibitors (RhoGDIs) (11). RhoGDI contacts RhoA through two distinct domains, a flexible amino-terminal domain that impedes guanine nucleotide dissociation/hydrolysis and a highly folded carboxyl domain that stabilizes the RhoA geranylgeranyl moiety (12). RhoGDI is postulated to extract RhoA from membranes through concerted actions of both domains (11).

Administration of forskolin, an activator of adenylate cyclase, or dibutyryl cAMP to cells stimulates morphological changes that are strikingly similar to those observed upon introduction of the Rho-specific inhibitor C3-transferase (13). From this initial observation, cAMP- and cGMP-dependent kinase (PKA and PKG) were demonstrated to phosphorylate RhoA on Ser188 (13, 14), thereby joining RhoA with Rap1a and Rap1b as small GTPases regulated by carboxyl PKA phosphorylation (15, 16). Although PKA phosphorylation is linked to Rap activation (17, 18), evidence indicates that it negatively regulates RhoA function. RhoA phosphorylation promotes formation of RhoA·RhoGDI complexes (13, 19) and enhances the ability of RhoGDI to extract RhoA from membranes (13, 20). In support of enhanced RhoGDI binding, the ability of RhoA to cycle from membranes has been linked to cAMP and cGMP signaling within cells (21, 22). Functionally, constitutively active RhoA containing an S188A mutation is more effective in blocking actin dissolution promoted by dibutyryl cAMP (23) or 8-Bromo-cGMP (24), and constitutively active RhoA require a S188A mutation to promote stress fibers in cells co-transfected with constitutively active PKG (14).

On the other hand, the significance of RhoA phosphorylation to PKA/PKG regulation of its signaling is unclear considering recent reports. Thromboxane receptor stimulation promotes RhoA activation through a G{alpha}13 and a PKA-sensitive pathway(s) (25). Manganello et al. (26) demonstrated recently that PKA phosphorylates G{alpha}13 subunit to promote {beta}{gamma} subunit uncoupling, thereby effectively shutting down receptor activation of RhoA. Moreover, PKG inhibited G{alpha}13 activation of serum response factor transcription by impeding activation of RhoA (27). Notably, PKG also inhibited serum response factor transcriptional activity promoted by constitutively active forms of Rho kinase, protein kinase N, or protein kinase C-related kinase 2, indicating that PKG antagonizes RhoA signaling downstream of effector regulation. Thus, an emerging picture is that PKA/PKG negatively regulates RhoA at multiple levels.

In this work, we expressed Ser188 phosphomimetic RhoA proteins, in the absence of constitutive RhoA activity and aberrant PKA/PKG signaling, to assess the contribution of PKA phosphorylation to RhoA function. We report here that addition of a charged group to Ser188 upon phosphorylation negatively regulates RhoA activity in vivo and indicates that this occurs through enhanced RhoGDI interaction rather than direct perturbation of GEF, GAP, or geranylgeranyl transferase activity.


    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
Materials—Puromyocin, bovine serum albumin, and buffer reagents were acquired from Sigma. Polyvinylidene fluoride membranes were purchased from Millipore. RhoA monoclonal antibodies (clone 55) were purchased from BD Biosciences. NIH 3T3 cells were maintained in growth medium (Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 10% bovine calf serum (Sigma)).

Constructs—RhoA mutations (S188A, S188D, S188E, C190A) and RhoG mutation (S187A) were created through PCR mutagenesis using the QuikChange mutagenesis kit (Stratagene). Mutations were confirmed by DNA sequencing, and cDNAs were subcloned into either pGEX4T-1 (Amersham Biosciences) or pCMV-Myc (Clontech) using EcoRI and XhoI restriction sites. pGEX4T-1-RhoGDI (human) was created by subcloning RhoGDI cDNA into pGEX4T-1 using BamHI and EcoRI restriction sites. pPro-HT-Dbl (DH/PH) was a gift of Dr. K. Rossman, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC.

Antibody Production—Antibody production and purification was performed by Covance Research Products Inc. Rabbits were immunized with a phosphoserine peptide containing the proximal nine residues of RhoA (RRGKKKPSGC) thiol bonded to keyhole limpet hemocyanin. Antibodies were isolated by negative affinity purification with immobilized unphosphorylated RhoA peptide followed by positive affinity purification with immobilized phosphorylated RhoA peptide and low/high pH elutions.

Fusion Proteins—GST-Rho fusion proteins (GST, GST-RhoA, GSTRhoG, GST-Cdc42, GST-Rac1, GST-RhoGDI) were purified from BL21 Escherichia coli cells (Stratagene) using glutathione-Sepharose 4B (Amersham Biosciences). Proteins were eluted with free and reduced glutathione in Tris-buffered saline medium (50 mM Tris, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol) and stored in 30% glycerol. His6-Dbl DH/PH was purified from BL21 E. coli cells using nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid-Sepharose (Qiagen) and eluted with 20 units of tobacco etch virus protease (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's specifications. RhoGDI was produced by cleaving RhoGDI from GST-RhoGDI-Sepharose with 5 units of bovine thrombin (Sigma). RhoGDI was subsequently cleared with benzamidine-agarose (Sigma) to remove thrombin from incubation buffer. Recombinant geranylgeranyl transferase was purchased from Sigma. Phosphate-binding protein carrying an A197C mutation was purified and fluorescently labeled with N-[2–1-maleimidyl)ethyl]-7-(diethylamino)coumarin-3-carboxamide as described previously (28) from E. coli ANCC75 bacteria carrying plasmid pSN5182/7 (a kind gift of Dr. M. R. Webb, National Institute for Medical Research, London). His6-Larg DH/PH and His6-Vav2 DH/PH/CRD were kind gifts of Dr. M. Booden, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC. His6-DH/PH Dbs was a gift of Dr. K. Rossman, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC. Full-length p190RhoGAP was a generous gift of Dr. J. Settleman, Harvard Medical School.

Rho Protein Phosphorylation—To measure cPKA phosphorylation of Rho fusion proteins (see Fig. 1), 2.0 pmols of fusion proteins, 1.5 units of cPKA (Sigma), 330 pmols of ATP, and 3.3 pmols of [{gamma}-32P]ATP (Amersham Biosciences) were incubated in phosphorylation buffer (50 mM Tris, 5 mM MgCl2,1mM dithiothreitol) at 30 °C for 20 min. Samples were removed, resolved by 15% SDS-PAGE, and then analyzed by autoradiography of dried gels. For large scale production of phosphorylated GST-RhoA, 120 µg (2.5 nmols) of GST-RhoA-Sepharose, 150 units of cPKA, and excess ATP (2 mM) were rotated in 1 ml of phosphorylation buffer for 90 min at 25 °C. Phosphorylation efficiency was estimated by scaling down reaction to 1% the amount of GST-RhoA and cPKA. Specifically, 1.2 µg (25 pmols) of GST-RhoA-Sepharose, 1.5 units of cPKA, 2.12 nmols of ATP, and 3.3 pmols of [{gamma}-32P]ATP (1:645 dilution) were incubated in 10 µl of phosphorylation buffer with rotation for 30 min at 25 °C. Reactions were washed extensively, and incorporation of 32P was calculated and corrected with values obtained from GSTSepharose reactions. On average, 0.030–0.035 pmols of 32P was incorporated by RhoA into each reaction, indicating 80–90% phosphorylation efficiency ((645 x 0.03 pmol)/25 pmol GST-RhoA). To measure phosphorylation of geranylgeranylated RhoA, 2.0 pmol of unmodified or prenylated RhoA (see below) were incubated with 1.5 units of cPKA, 330 pmols of ATP, and 3.3 pmols of [{gamma}-32P]ATP in phosphorylation buffer at 30 °C for 20 min. Samples were boiled to stop the reaction and then TX-114 was added to a concentration of 1%, and phase partitioning was performed as described previously for Rho proteins (29). The detergent phase was washed with three 20-fold volumes of phosphate-buffered saline to ensure removal of non-prenylated RhoA. Both aqueous and detergent phases were aliquoted and analyzed for RhoA phosphorylation by measuring release of radioactivity and visualizing by SDS-PAGE and autoradiography.



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FIG. 1.
Characterization of Rho protein phosphorylation. A, GST-Rho fusion proteins were incubated in duplicate, as indicated, with [{gamma}-32P]ATP and cPKA, and phosphorylation was visualized by SDS-PAGE followed by autoradiography. Mutation of Ser188 and Ser187 blocks cPKA phosphorylation of RhoA and RhoG, respectively. B, GSTRhoA was incubated with geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate in the absence or presence of geranylgeranyl transferase to produce control and prenylated RhoA (ggRhoA). RhoA and ggRhoA fusion proteins were phosphorylated with [{gamma}-32P]ATP and cPKA and then subjected to TX-114 detergent partitioning as described previously (29). Phosphorylation (cpm) of unmodified RhoA, which remains associated with the aqueous phase, and of prenylated RhoA, which partitions into the TX-114 detergent phase, was measured for each reaction. Values are expressed as percent of total amount found in both phases (19,670 cpm for RhoA and 13,796 cpm for ggRhoA ± S.D.) and were corrected for the low contribution of kinase-bound radioactivity. C, RhoA and ggRhoA phosphorylation were visualized by analyzing 10% of the phase volume or 25% of the TX-114 phase volume by SDS-PAGE followed by autoradiography. TX-114 phase proteins run as wider bands because of the Triton detergent. Phosphorylation of prenylated RhoA was readily evident in the assay, demonstrating that prenylation does not interfere with the catalytic activity of cPKA against Ser188.

 

In Vitro Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor Assays—Fluorescence spectroscopic analysis of N-methylanthraniloyl (mant)-GTP (Biomol) incorporation into GDP-preloaded GST-Rho proteins was carried out using a FLUOstar fluorescence microplate reader at 25 °C similar to as described previously (30). 2 µM GST-RhoA or 1 µM prenylated GSTRhoA was prepared and allowed to equilibrate in exchange buffer (20 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 50 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol, 50 µg/ml bovine serum albumin, 1% glycerol). 500 nM mant-GTP and varying amounts of DH/PH (Larg, Dbl, or Dbs) or DH/PH/CRD (Vav2) protein were added at the indicated time, and the relative mant fluorescence (excitation = 360 nm, emission = 460 nm) was monitored. Experiments were performed in duplicate for every condition.

GAP Assays—GAP assays were performed in a Spectramax Gemini XS fluorescence microplate reader (Molecular Devices) (excitation = 425 nm, emission = 465 nm) at 25 °C by incubating 1 µM GTP-loaded GST-RhoA together with 2.5 µM fluorophore-labeled phosphate-binding protein in the absence or presence of 250 or 750 pM purified p190RhoGAP in a buffer containing 20 mM Tris, pH 7.6, and 1 mM MgCl2 at a total volume of 100 µl. Upon hydrolysis of GTP, the resulting free Pi is bound rapidly (1.36 x 108 M-1 s-1 at 22 °C) and with high affinity (about 100 nM) by the phosphate-binding protein, resulting in a 13-fold increase in the fluorescence at 465 nm (28). Because of this, the observed change in fluorescence corresponds to the rate and amount of Pi released from the GTPase.

RhoGDI Competition Assays—2 µM of the indicated GST-RhoA fusion protein was incubated for 10 min in exchange buffer containing 0.5, 1.0, or 2.0 µM RhoGDI to promote RhoA·RhoGDI complexes. Vav2 DH/PH/CRD and mant-GTP nucleotides were then added and allowed to equilibrate with mixing for 15 s, and the rate of mant-GTP incorporation was measured. Linear velocity of exchange was determined as described previously (31). Briefly, baseline and GEF-induced nucleotide exchange rates were calculated by dividing the change in emission at 460 nm by change in time. Values were averaged and standard deviations were calculated for each reaction. Velocity was considered linear as long as the regression value of the exchange slope was greater than 0.97. Data from these and all other experiments were considered significantly different if the p values, as determined by two-tailed t tests, were <0.02.

Geranylgeranyl Transferase Assays—GST or the indicated GSTRhoA-Sepharose (5 pmols), 100 pmols of 3H-geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate (PerkinElmer Life Sciences), and 0.36 units of geranylgeranyl transferase were incubated in Tris-buffered saline medium, pH 7.6, for 20 or 60 min. Samples were resolved by 15% SDS-PAGE, and gels were fixed, incubated in Amplify solution (Amersham Biosciences), and then exposed by autoradiography. Alternatively, reactions were collected at 20, 40, 60, and 80 min in duplicate, washed extensively, and placed in scintillation buffer, and the extent of 3H-geranygeranyl was quantified. To generate geranylgeranylated RhoA for kinetic assays, 50 µg (1 nmol) of GST-RhoA or phosphorylated GST-RhoA were incubated in solution with geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate (25 nmols) and in the absence or presence of 10 units of geranylgeranyl transferase overnight at 30 °C. Proteins were either GDP-loaded (GEF assays) or GTP-loaded (GAP assays) and eluted with small volumes of free glutathione in Trisbuffered saline containing 0.25% deoxycholate. Through dilutions, reactions contained either 0.025% (GEF) or 0.015% deoxycholate (GAP). Unmodified RhoA (no transferase) was utilized as an experimental control for the influence of prenylation on GTPase activity (see Fig. 5, C and D).



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FIG. 5.
RhoA phosphorylation does not affect p190RhoGAP activity. A, Rho GTPase activity was indirectly examined by incubating cPKA phosphorylated (white symbol) or control GST-RhoA (black symbol) preloaded with GTP in the presence of a coumarin-tagged phosphate-binding protein whose fluorescence increases (465 nm) following binding of phosphate released from GTP. Addition of 250 or 750 pM p190RhoGAP-stimulated GAP activity was not affected by RhoA serine phosphorylation. B, GST-RhoA (black symbol), GST-RhoA(S188A) (gray symbol), and GST-RhoA(S188E) (white symbol) were treated as in A. The presence of a phosphomimetic residue does not directly influence p190RhoGAP activity. GTP-loaded RhoA (C) or GTP-loaded ggRhoA (prenylated) (D) were stimulated with p190RhoGAP (500 pM) as indicated. Basal and GAP-induced activity of phosphorylated ggRhoA (gray curves) was consistent with control ggRhoA (black curves). Both basal and stimulated GTPase activities of unmodified RhoA proteins were slightly higher than their prenylated counterparts (basal initial linear velocity (% hydrolysis min-1 ± S.D.) of RhoA, phosphorylated RhoA, ggRhoA, and phosphorylated ggRhoA was 1.95 ± 0.15, 1.66 ± 0.18, 1.66 ± 0.17, and 1.50 ± 0.26, and stimulated was 5.50 ± 0.40, 5.13 ± 0.32, 3.96 ± 0.32, and 3.96 ± 0.20).

 

Transfections and Production of Stable Cells—NIH 3T3 fibroblast cells were transfected with the expression vectors indicated in each experiment according to the manufacturer's protocol using LipofectAMINE PLUS (Invitrogen). After introduction of the expression vectors for 3 h, the transfection medium was replaced with growth medium for 16 h. For creation of stable cell lines, NIH 3T3 cells were transfected with 1 µg of pPUR (Clontech) only or cotransfected with 0.05 µg of pPUR and 1 µg of pCMV-Myc RhoA construct and then selected in 10 µg/ml puromycin (Sigma). Clonal lines were established and screened for expression by Western blotting lysates with anti-c-Myc (clone 9E10; Sigma) monoclonal antibodies.

RhoA GTP Profile Assays—The amount of activated, GTP-bound RhoA protein was measured using a technique similar to the method described by Ren et al. (32). Briefly, transfected or stable cells were lysed in 300 µl of 50 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 10 mM MgCl2, 500 mM NaCl, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% SDS, 0.5% deoxycholate, and protease inhibitors. 500–750 µg of lysates were cleared at 16,000 x g for 5 min, and the supernatant was rotated for 30 min with 30 µg of GST-RBD (GST fusion protein containing the Rho-binding domain (RBD; amino acids 7–89) of Rhotekin) bound to glutathione-Sepharose beads. Samples were washed in 50 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 10 mM MgCl2, 150 mM NaCl, 1% Triton X-100, and protease inhibitors. GST-RBD pulldowns and lysates were then Western blotted with anti-c-Myc. To quantify GST-RBD pulldowns, Western blots of lysates and corresponding GST-RBD pulldowns from three unique experiments done in duplicate were scanned, and densitometry was performed using Metamorph imaging software.

Calculation of Cell Spreading—For all experiments cells were replated in the absence of puromycin the day before experiments, trypsinized, washed twice in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium, and then suspended before plating for 30 min in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium and 0.5% fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin. Suspended cells were plated on fibronectin-coated coverslips for 20, 40, and 60 min. Coverslips were fixed and stained with Coomassie Blue (2% Brilliant Blue, 45% methanol, and 10% acetic acid) for 10 min and then washed with water and mounted. The relative areas of individual cells from Metamorph images were quantified with the use of NIH Image software. At least 50 cells taken from 10 arbitrary fields were counted from each coverslip, with two coverslips counted for every condition.

Immunofluorescence—Cells were plated and grown overnight on fibronectin-coated glass coverslips in the presence of serum. Cells were washed free of serum with serum-free medium and then incubated in serum-free media containing either Me2SO vehicle or 25 µM forskolin (Sigma) for 20 min. Cells were then fixed for 15 min in 3.7% formaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline permeabilized for 5 min in 0.5% Triton X-100 in phosphate-buffered saline. Filamentous actin was labeled with Texas Red-conjugated phalloidin (Molecular Probes). Images were obtained on an Axiophot microscope (Zeiss) using a MicroMAX 5-MHz cooled CCD camera (Princeton Instrument) and Metamorph Image software (Universal Imaging Corp.).


    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
PKA Phosphorylation of Rho Proteins—We confirmed that PKA phosphorylates RhoA on Ser188 (Fig. 1A) as described previously (13). Although Forget et al. (19) demonstrated that PKA also phosphorylates Cdc42, we found Cdc42 to be a poor substrate for PKA in vitro, in agreement with an initial report (33). Further, Rac1 was not phosphorylated, whereas PKA efficiently phosphorylates RhoG on Ser187 (Fig. 1A), indicating that both RhoA and RhoG carboxyl termini are targets of PKA phosphorylation. The proximity of the Rho prenylation site (residue 190) to the site of PKA phosphorylation prompted us to examine whether prenylation affects PKA phosphorylation. Although RhoA is efficiently prenylated in our reactions (60–80% by molar incorporation of 3H-geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate), phosphorylated RhoA or geranylgeranylated RhoA (ggRhoA) were subjected to TX-114 phase extraction. TX-114 phase extraction partitions prenylated RhoA into the detergent phase because of the hydrophobic modification (29), ensuring that ggRhoA will be specifically examined as a substrate. Phosphorylation efficiency of RhoA and ggRhoA was comparable (Fig. 1, B and C), demonstrating that prenyl modification of RhoA does not impede PKA phosphorylation. To measure cellular RhoA phosphorylation, we generated affinity-purified antibodies that selectively recognize phospho-Ser188 RhoA (Fig. 2A). Characterization of two unique antisera revealed that geranylgeranylation of phosphorylated GST-RhoA proteins abrogated antibody binding (Fig. 2A), indicating that the presence of a C20 isoprenoid moiety sterically blocks antibody recognition. Therefore, we elected to use NIH 3T3 cells that stably express Myc epitope-tagged-RhoA(C190A) to measure cellular PKA phosphorylation of Ser188. Forskolin stimulation of cAMP production strongly enhanced Myc-RhoA(C190A) phosphorylation as measured by Western blotting of whole cell lysates or immunoprecipitated proteins (Fig. 2B). We and others (32, 34) have established previously that RhoA activity is reduced during the initial 15–30 min of cell spreading. Interestingly, PKA activity is transiently stimulated during the same time course (35). To address whether RhoA is a PKA target during spreading, cells expressing Myc-RhoA(C190A) were allowed to spread on fibronectin and at various times collected for immunoprecipitation with phospho-Ser188 antibodies. We observed that cellular phosphorylation of RhoA was significantly increased within the initial 20 min of NIH 3T3 cell spreading on fibronectin (Fig. 2C). These data support the conclusion that cellular PKA activity is elevated early in spreading (35, 36) and indicates that RhoA is a target of cellular PKA regulation.



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FIG. 2.
Intracellular RhoA phosphorylation. A, GST-RhoA fusion proteins were phosphorylated by cPKA as indicated and then incubated in the absence or presence of geranylgeranyl (gg) transferase. Fusion proteins were either stained by Coomassie or Western blotted (WB) with phospho-Ser188 RhoA antibodies isolated from two unique sera (pserRhoA1 and pserRhoA2). Antibody recognition was sensitive to the presence of the geranylgeranyl moiety. B, NIH 3T3 cells stably expressing Myc-RhoA(C190A) (non-prenylated) were stimulated with 25 µM forskolin (FSK) for 20 min, and lysates were collected and then Western blotted for recombinant protein (anti-Myc) or RhoA phosphorylation (pserRhoA1). Only recombinant Myc-RhoA(C190A) was recognized by pserRhoA1. Additionally, cells were treated as above, and Myc-RhoA(C190A) immunoprecipitated (IP) with anti-Myc, anti-pserRhoA1, or irrelevant IgG controls as indicated. Western blots of immunoprecipitated material confirm that Myc-RhoA(C190A) is a target of cellular PKA. Background in the IgG control for the Myc immunoprecipitation is from the light chain of mouse IgG, which runs at a similar apparent molecular weight. C, to address whether Myc-RhoA(C190A) is a target of PKA during an event of low RhoA activity, cells were allowed to spread on fibronectin for the indicated times, and lysates were collected and immunoprecipitated with either IgG control or pserRhoA1 antibodies and then Western blotted for the Myc tag. PKA activity and Myc-RhoA(C190A) phosphorylation were increased within 20 min of cell spreading.

 

GEF Exchange against Phosphorylated RhoA—GEFs bind GDP-bound Rho proteins and induce a transition state that promotes uptake of free GTP nucleotide, thereby stimulating Rho activation. It has been reported that cAMP inhibits GEF activation of RhoA in leukocytes (37), thereby raising the possibility that RhoA phosphorylation impairs GEF exchange. To address this hypothesis, GST-RhoA was phosphorylated in vitro with cPKA and compared with control protein for the ability of DH/PH domain-containing GEFs to promote nucleotide uptake. Using [{gamma}-32P]ATP, GST-RhoA was estimated to be at least 80–90% phosphorylated by cPKA. Basal incorporation of mant-GTP was identical for phosphorylated and control GST-RhoA proteins (Fig. 3A). Larg (Fig. 3A), Vav-2 (Table I), Dbl, and Dbs (not shown) all displayed similar exchange activity against control and phosphorylated GST-RhoA at multiple GEF concentrations. This finding also extended to phosphorylated and control geranylgeranylated RhoA proteins (Fig. 3B). Lastly, the phosphomimetics GST-RhoA(S188E) and GSTRhoA(S188D) were equivalent substrates as wild-type GSTRhoA or GST-RhoA(S188A) controls (Fig. 3C). These data demonstrate that phosphorylation of the RhoA tail does not directly interfere with GEF-induced exchange.



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FIG. 3.
RhoA phosphorylation does not affect GEF exchange. A, phosphorylated or control GST-RhoA were incubated in the presence of mant-GTP before stimulation of exchange by the addition of the Larg DH/PH domain at the indicated time (denoted GEF with arrow). Kinetics generated from phosphorylated (white symbol) or control proteins (black symbol) were indistinguishable. B, phosphorylated (gray curve) or control (black curve) prenylated RhoA was incubated with Vav2 DH/PH/CRD at the indicated time. Vav2 or Larg (not shown) exchange against prenylated RhoA fusion proteins is not affected by PKA phosphorylation of Ser188. C, GST-RhoA (black symbol), GST-RhoA(S188A) (gray symbol), and GST-RhoA(S188E) (white symbol) were treated as above. Larg DH/PH displayed similar activity against GST-RhoA and the GST-RhoA serine mutants.

 

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TABLE I
RhoGDI inhibition of GEF-exchange activity (units s-1 ± sd.)

 

RhoA Ser188 Phosphomimetics Display Increased Binding to RhoGDI—cPKA-phosphorylation of RhoA has been reported to increase its affinity toward RhoGDI, therefore we examined the ability of RhoGDI to bind RhoA proteins using solution-phase binding competition of RhoGDI and GEF molecules. Briefly, GST-RhoA proteins were pre-incubated with no or varying amounts of full-length RhoGDI for 10 min to promote the formation of RhoA·RhoGDI complexes. Vav2 DH/PH/CRD and mant-GTP nucleotides were subsequently added and allowed to equilibrate with mixing for 15 s and then mant-GTP incorporation was measured. Vav2 exchange was linear over the initial 150–200 s for phosphorylated, phosphoserine-mimetics, and control GST-RhoA proteins (see Fig. 4A and Tables I and II). As RhoGDI concentrations were increased, the velocity of nucleotide incorporation was both reduced and lengthened for all RhoA molecules (Tables I and II). Importantly, both phosphorylated and phosphomimetic GST-RhoA proteins exhibited a significant reduction in GEF exchange compared with control proteins at equal concentrations of RhoGDI (Fig. 4B). The bulkier S188E mutation resulted in slightly greater inhibition than the S188D mutation, suggesting tighter binding to RhoGDI. As prior experiments demonstrated that GEF exchange was equivalent for all RhoA proteins at multiple concentrations, these data provide additional evidence to previous reports that RhoA phosphorylation promotes or stabilizes RhoA·RhoGDI complex formation. Moreover, as these proteins are not post-translationally modified, these data indicate that adding a negative charge to the carboxyl terminus of RhoA enhances the protein-protein interactions of RhoA and RhoGDI.



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FIG. 4.
RhoA phosphorylation promotes RhoGDI interaction. A, GST-RhoA or GST-RhoA serine mutants, as indicated, were allowed to equilibrate for 15 min prior to the addition of the DH/PH/CRD Vav2 and mant-GTP. Vav2 promoted an equivalent linear exchange velocity for all GST-RhoA proteins. B, equal molar amounts of RhoGDI and GST-RhoA proteins (2 µM) were equilibrated with GST-RhoA proteins for 15 min prior to addition of DH/PH/CRD of Vav2. RhoGDI inhibition of GEF exchanges results in a slower and more sustained linear exchange velocity for all RhoA proteins compared with A. The linear exchange velocities of the two phosphomimetics, GST-RhoA(S188D) and GST-RhoA(S188E), were significantly depressed compared with GST-RhoA and GST-RhoA(S188A) protein controls.

 

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TABLE II
RhoGDI inhibition of GEF-exchange activity (units s-1 ± S.D.)

 

RhoA Phosphorylation Does Not Affect GAP Activity—RhoGAPs negatively regulate Rho activity by promoting the intrinsic GTP-hydrolyzing activity of Rho proteins. As cPKA phosphorylation is also hypothesized to negatively regulate RhoA, we analyzed whether p190RhoGAP activity against phosphorylated RhoA is perturbed in vitro. Basal and p190RhoGAP-induced GTP hydrolysis by phosphorylated, phosphoserine-mimetic, and control GST-RhoA proteins was essentially identical (Fig. 5, A and B). Moreover, p190RhoGAP activity against geranylgeranylated RhoA was also insensitive to PKA phosphorylation, although prenylated RhoA had a slightly lower basal and GAP-induced hydrolysis rate (Fig. 5, C and D). Together, these data indicate that phosphorylation of RhoA does not influence the ability of p190RhoGAP to bind and stimulate GTPase activity.

RhoA Phosphorylation Does Not Affect Geranylgeranyl Transferase Activity—Incubation of purified cellular membranes with cPKA promotes RhoA extraction from membranes by RhoGDI (13, 20). As non-prenylated RhoA is a cellular PKA target, we analyzed whether cPKA phosphorylation of RhoA impairs addition of a geranylgeranyl moiety as an additional level of regulation. Geranylgeranyl transferase possessed equivalent activity against phosphorylated and control protein GST-RhoA proteins (Fig. 6, A and B). Further, Ser188 mutants were also comparable substrates (Fig. 6C). Together, these data indicate that phosphorylation of the RhoA tail does not directly alter geranylgeranyl transferase modification of RhoA.



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FIG. 6.
RhoA phosphorylation does not affect geranylgeranyl transferase activity. A, duplicate phosphorylated or control GSTRhoA were incubated with 3H-geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate and geranylgeranyl transferase for 20 or 60 min, and the extent of prenylation was visualized by SDS-PAGE followed by autoradiography. B, GSTRhoA-Sepharose was phosphorylated as described under "Experimental Procedures" and then incubated with 3H-geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate and geranylgeranyl transferase for the indicated times and then repeatedly washed, and the extent of prenylation was calculated by measuring radiation counts released per min. Values represent two independent reactions ± S.D. C, duplicate samples of GST-RhoA, GST-RhoA(C190A) (cannot be prenylated), and GST-RhoA Ser188 mutants were incubated with 3H-geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate and geranylgeranyl transferase for 20 min, and the extent of prenylation was visualized by SDS-PAGE followed by autoradiography.

 

Transient Expression of Ser188 RhoA Mutants—NIH 3T3 cells transiently transfected with Myc epitope-tagged RhoA, RhoA(S188A), RhoA(S188D), or RhoA(S188E) displayed enhanced stress fibers compared with mock-transfected cells (data not shown), indicating that all transient proteins were functional. The extent of Myc-RhoA GTP loading was evaluated using GST-RBD pulldowns (32). Both phosphoserine-mimetic Myc-RhoA proteins, with Myc-RhoA(S188E) being the more significant, displayed reduced GTP loading in comparison with Myc-RhoA and Myc-RhoA(S188A) proteins (Fig. 7). Myc-RhoA(C190A) proteins were not appreciably GTP-loaded under these conditions and are included as a negative control for GTP loading. These data provide evidence that addition of a negative charge by phosphorylation of Ser188 is sufficient to negatively regulate RhoA activation.



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FIG. 7.
GTP loading of transiently expressed Myc-RhoA proteins. A, the indicated Myc-RhoA proteins were transiently transfected in duplicate for each protein and then collected and processed for GTP loading as described under "Experimental Procedures." B, three individual experiments done in duplicate were scanned and quantified by densitometry as described under "Experimental Procedures." The ratios of GTP-loaded Myc-RhoA to total Myc-RhoA were normalized to wild-type Myc-RhoA values. Error bars denote standard deviation of GTP loading (*, p < 0.01 compared with wild-type and Myc-RhoA(S188A) proteins).

 

Stable Expression of Ser188 RhoA Mutants—To examine whether a functional differences exists between Ser188 mutant RhoA proteins, stable clones of NIH 3T3 cells expressing Myc-RhoA, Myc-RhoA(S188A), or Myc-RhoA(S188E) were isolated. Two independent clones were chosen for each based solely on expression level and characterized further. Western blots revealed that Myc-RhoA migrates at higher apparent molecular weight than the endogenous RhoA proteins; therefore it was evident that all clones express Myc-RhoA protein at a significantly lower level than endogenous RhoA (Fig. 8A). GST-RBD pulldowns established that, contrary to transiently expressed proteins; there is little or no difference in the GTP-loading profile of stably expressed mutant Myc-RhoA proteins, with the exception of the non-prenylated mutant, Myc-RhoA(C190A) (Fig. 8B).



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FIG. 8.
Evaluation of NIH 3T3 cells stably expressing Myc-RhoA protein. Two isolated clones were chosen for each Myc-RhoA protein based on expression level. A, upper panel, lysates were collected from the indicated clone and Western blotted with an anti-RhoA monoclonal antibody. Myc-RhoA migrated at a higher molecular weight in 20% SDS-PAGE gels and was expressed at considerably lower amounts than endogenous RhoA. Lower panel, the above blot was stripped and re-probed with an anti-Myc antibody. B, stable Myc-RhoA clones were collected and processed for GTP-loading profiles. GST-RBD pulldowns were blotted with the anti-Myc antibody to specifically show loading of exogenous Myc-RhoA protein. Unlike during transient expression conditions, GTP loading of Myc-RhoA(S188E) proteins were comparable with Myc-RhoA(S188A) proteins. Myc-RhoA(C190A) had a depressed level of GTP loading compared with other RhoA proteins.

 

Activity of Stably Expressed RhoA Protein—As RhoA is hypothesized to antagonize cell spreading (34), NIH 3T3 clones were allowed to spread on fibronectin and collected at the indicated time, and rates of cell spreading were quantified (Fig. 9A). Both Myc-RhoA(S188E) clones spread at a similar rate as a pool of mock-transfected clones, whereas all the Myc-RhoA and Myc-RhoA(S188A) clones spread significantly slower. Additionally, a pool of Myc-RhoA(S188E)-expressing cells (five clones) that express a higher amount of Myc-RhoA (Fig. 9B, inset) still spread significantly faster than a corresponding pool of Myc-RhoA(S188A)-expressing cells (Fig. 9B).



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FIG. 9.
Spreading profiles of Myc-RhoA-expressing clones. A, the indicated Myc-RhoA clones were allowed to spread on fibronectin, and the extent of cell spreading was quantified. Myc-RhoA and Myc-RhoA(S188A) clones spread slower than mock-transfected clones or the two Myc-RhoA(S188E) clones (*, p < 0.01). B, five Myc-RhoA(S188A) clones or five Myc-RhoA(S188E) clones were pooled, and the rate of cell spreading on fibronectin was calculated. The pool of Myc-RhoA(S188E) clones spread more rapidly than Myc-RhoA(S188A) cells (**, p < 0.02), although GTP-loaded Myc-RhoA levels were higher in the Myc-RhoA(S188E)-expressing cells (panel inset as indicated).

 

RhoA signaling has been found to antagonize the morphological affects of cAMP (23); therefore the effects of forskolin on stress fiber organization were examined for the stable clones. Mock-expressing cells revealed dissolution of stress fibers following forskolin activation of adenylate cyclase (Fig. 10, panel above line). A minority of cells expressing wild-type Myc-RhoA were protected from filamentous actin disassembly, whereas cells expressing Myc-RhoA(S188A) were completely protected against the morphological affects of cAMP (Fig. 10, panels below line). On the other hand, both Myc-RhoA(S188E)-expressing clones uniformly displayed stress fiber dissolution (Fig. 10, panels below line). Together, these data provide evidence that addition of a negative charge to Ser188 by phosphorylation is sufficient to attenuate RhoA activity.



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FIG. 10.
Myc-RhoA(S188E) clones are sensitive to forskolin. Panel above line, mock-transfected NIH 3T3 cells attached to fibronectin-coated coverslips were incubated for 20 min in serum-free medium containing Me2SO vehicle ((-) Mock) or 25 µM forskolin ((+) Mock). Panels below line, the indicated NIH 3T3 clones were treated with 25 µM forskolin and then fixed and stained with phalloidin to identify filamentous actin.

 


    DISCUSSION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
 RESULTS
 DISCUSSION
 REFERENCES
 
In agreement with previous work (13, 19, 23), we found that RhoA is an excellent substrate for PKA. Additionally, we discovered that RhoG, but not Cdc42 or Rac1, was also phosphorylated by PKA. Although RhoA, RhoG, and Cdc42 possess carboxyl serine residues, the preceding three amino acids that target PKA diverge. Although RhoA, Rap1a, and Rap1b, all contain three lysines (KKKS), Cdc42 (PKKS) contains a proline turn in place of the initial basic residue, a divergence that may explain why Cdc42 is a poorer substrate than RhoA in vitro (33). On the other hand, RhoG (KRGRS) contains a glycine flanked by three basic residues, a motif more consistent with KKKS. The significance of RhoG phosphorylation is unknown and currently under investigation.

Unlike Rap1a and Rap1b, which are easily isolated as phosphoproteins from cells (15, 16), a clear demonstration of intracellular RhoA phosphorylation is lacking. Lang et al. (13) were able to immunoprecipitate only small amounts of 32P-labeled RhoA from intact cells, whereas Essler et al. (38) reported recently that a significant charge shift of RhoA was not observed following cAMP stimulation of HUVEC cells. To address this problem, we created antibodies that specifically recognize the phosphorylated form of RhoA. When expressed in cells, the non-prenylated RhoA (C190A) was a cellular target of PKA following forskolin stimulation and during cell spreading, an event associated with low RhoA (32, 34) and high PKA activity (35, 36). Although limited by antibody constraints, these results provide the first conclusive evidence, at least in the case of non-prenylated RhoA, that Ser188 is phosphorylated in response to cellular PKA activation in vivo.

Treatment of cells with cAMP or cGMP agonists is associated with translocation of RhoA from membranes (13, 14). Nonprenylated RhoA is efficiently phosphorylated within the cell (Fig. 2), suggesting that it may be a target of PKA regulation. We therefore analyzed whether Ser188 phosphorylation controls RhoA cycling by impeding prenylation. In vitro assays demonstrated that geranylgeranyl transferase activity was not sensitive to the presence of a phosphate on Ser188. As events of Rho protein prenylation are poorly understood, it remains possible that phosphorylation of this residue affects post-translation modification of RhoA through mechanisms not reflected by in vitro assays. However, regulating RhoA cycling at the step of prenylation appears to be an inefficient and long term approach for a kinase that depends on localized and transient activity (reviewed in Ref. 39).

We found that transiently expressed phosphomimetic Myc-RhoA proteins were poorly loaded with GTP nucleotides compared with control proteins. We also demonstrated that Myc-RhoA(S188E) protein signaling is significantly attenuated compared with control proteins and that this difference was not reflected in the GTP-loading profiles of stably transfected cells. Both of these results are consistent with enhanced sequestration of Myc-RhoA(S188E) by RhoGDI. In the case of transiently expressed protein, sequestration by RhoGDI would reduce the accessibility of GEFs, as is observed in vitro (Tables I and II). In the case of stably expressed proteins, Myc-RhoA(S188E) that has become GTP-loaded over time could still be aberrantly sequestered by RhoGDI. This would be reflected by low RhoA activity in the cell (see Figs. 9 and 10) but not by RBD pulldowns because of a limitation of the assay. The lysis conditions of RBD pulldown assays requires disruption of both RhoA(GTP)·membrane and RhoA(GTP)·effector complexes to form RhoA(GTP)·GST-RBD complexes that are driven by the vast molar excess of GST fusion protein. Not unexpectedly, we found that the lysis conditions completely disrupt RhoA·RhoGDI complexes,2 and have been unable to find lysis conditions that liberate RhoA(GTP) for RBD pulldown assays and preserve RhoA·RhoGDI binding. It is probable, therefore, that a portion of the stably expressed and GTP-loaded Myc-RhoA(S188E) protein is released from inactive RhoA(GTP)·RhoGDI pools, in addition to active RhoA-(GTP)·effector complexes. Thus, GST-RBD pulldowns, while an effective tool for measuring RhoGAP-mediated inhibition (34) or GEF activation of RhoA (31), will not reflect RhoGDI inhibition by sequestration.

In addition to enhanced binding to RhoGDI, Myc-RhoA(S188E) proteins may have lower binding affinity to an effector, such as Rho kinase (23). However, we found that constitutively active GST-RhoA(63L, S188E) was as efficient as GST-RhoA(63L, S188A) proteins in pulling down Rho kinase from NIH cell lysates.3 Further, stably expressed phosphomimetic RhoA proteins bound the RBD domain of the Rho effector Rhotekin (Fig. 8B). Therefore, we propose that attenuation of phosphomimetic RhoA activation and activity is because of cytosolic sequestration of RhoA driven by enhanced RhoGDI interactions that are observed in vitro.

The data presented here provide information regarding RhoA phosphorylation in context of regulatory protein interactions and demonstrate that the addition of a negative charge to Ser188 is sufficient to diminish both RhoA activation and activity within the context of a cell. As PKA also uncouples GEF activation from receptor stimulation (26, 37) and antagonizes microfilament integrity by directly phosphorylating and inhibiting myosin light chain kinase (40), it is becoming clear that PKA inhibits RhoA signaling pathways at multiple levels. It will be important in future work to establish where and when RhoA phosphorylation occurs within the cell and to address whether PKA phosphorylation works in parallel with RhoGAP-mediated inhibition of RhoA during events of cell protrusion and migration.


    FOOTNOTES
 
* This work was supported by an American Cancer Society Postdoctoral Fellowship (to S. M. E.), by the Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education (to K. W.), and by National Institutes of Health Grants GM29860 and HL45100 (to K. B.). The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. Back

§ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, CB 7295, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599. Tel.: 919-966-1904; Fax: 919-966-1856; E-mail: hawkeye{at}med.unc.edu.

1 The abbreviations used are: GEF, guanine nucleotide exchange factor; cPKA, catalytic domain of protein kinase A; GAP, GTPase activating protein; DH, Dbl homology; PH, pleckstrin homology; CRD, cysteine-rich domain; GST, glutathione S-transferase; mant, N-methylanthraniloyl; RBD, Rho-binding domain of Rhotekin; RhoGDI, Rho guanine-dissociation inhibitor; ggRhoA, geranylgeranylated RhoA; PKA, cAMP-dependent kinase; PKG, cGMP-dependent kinase. Back

2 S. M. Ellerbroek and K. Burridge, unpublished results. Back

3 S. M. Ellerbroek and K. Burridge, unpublished results. Back


    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
We thank Drs. David Siderovski and Adam Shutes for technical assistance in the preparation of phosphate-binding protein, Christy Barlow for technical assistance in preparation of GSTRBD, and the collaborators mentioned under "Experimental Procedures" for providing reagents.



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