Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Methylated PP2A stabilizes Gcn4 to enable a methionine-induced anabolic program.

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

December 25, 2020

Journal

The Journal of biological chemistry

Volume/Issue

295/52

ISSN

1083-351X

Methionine, through -adenosylmethionine, activates a multifaceted growth program in which ribosome biogenesis, carbon metabolism, and amino acid and nucleotide biosynthesis are induced. This growth program requires the activity of the Gcn4 transcription factor (called ATF4 in mammals), which facilitates the supply of metabolic precursors that are essential for anabolism. However, how Gcn4 itself is regulated in the presence of methionine is unknown. Here, we discover that Gcn4 protein levels are increased by methionine, despite conditions of high cell growth and translation (in which the roles of Gcn4 are not well-studied). We demonstrate that this mechanism of Gcn4 induction is independent of transcription, as well as the conventional Gcn2/eIF2α-mediated increased translation of Gcn4. Instead, when methionine is abundant, Gcn4 phosphorylation is decreased, which reduces its ubiquitination and therefore degradation. Gcn4 is dephosphorylated by the protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A); our data show that when methionine is abundant, the conserved methyltransferase Ppm1 methylates and alters the activity of the catalytic subunit of PP2A, shifting the balance of Gcn4 toward a dephosphorylated, stable state. The absence of Ppm1 or the loss of the PP2A methylation destabilizes Gcn4 even when methionine is abundant, leading to collapse of the Gcn4-dependent anabolic program. These findings reveal a novel, methionine-dependent signaling and regulatory axis. Here methionine directs the conserved methyltransferase Ppm1 via its target phosphatase PP2A to selectively stabilize Gcn4. Through this, cells conditionally modify a major phosphatase to stabilize a metabolic master regulator and drive anabolism.

Alternate Journal

J Biol Chem

PubMed ID

33122193

PubMed Central ID

PMC7939465

Authors

Adhish S Walvekar
Ganesh Kadamur
Sreesa Sreedharan
Ritu Gupta
Rajalakshmi Srinivasan
Sunil Laxman

Keywords

Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins
Methylation
S-Adenosylmethionine
Phosphorylation
Basic-Leucine Zipper Transcription Factors
Protein Biosynthesis
Protein Phosphatase 2
Signal Transduction
Anabolic Agents