Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Phosphorylation of Smad7 at Ser-249 does not interfere with its inhibitory role in transforming growth factor-beta-dependent signaling but affects Smad7-dependent transcriptional activation.

Smad proteins are major components in the intracellular signaling pathway of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), and phosphorylation is an important mechanism in regulation of their functions. Smad7 was identified as a potent inhibitor of TGF-beta-dependent signaling. We have identified serine 249 in Smad7 as a major phosphorylation site, the phosphorylation of which was not affected by TGF-beta1. Abrogation of the phosphorylation by substitution of Ser-249 with alanine or aspartic acid residues did not affect the ability of Smad7 to inhibit TGF-beta1 and BMP7 signaling. No differences were found in the stability or in the intracellular distribution of Smad7 mutants compared with the wild-type molecule. However, Smad7 fused to the DNA-binding domain of GAL4 induced transcription from a reporter with mutated TATA minimal promoter in a Ser-249-dependent manner. Moreover, a reporter with the SV40 minimal promoter was inhibited by GAL4-Smad7, and this effect was also dependent on Ser-249 phosphorylation. The amplitude of effects on transcriptional regulation was dependent on cell type. Our results suggest that phosphorylation of Smad7, unlike phosphorylation of the receptor-regulated Smads, does not regulate TGF-beta signaling but rather affects TGF-beta-independent effects of Smad7 on transcriptional regulation.

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