CGC Bibliography Paper 5245

Activation of Ras and the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway promotes protein degradation in muscle cells of Caenorhabditis elegans.

Szewczyk NJ, Peterson BK, Jacobson LA

Medline:
12024031
Citation:
Molecular and Cellular Biology 22: 4181-4188 2002
Type:
ARTICLE
Genes:
gap-1 gap-2 let-23 let-60 lin-45 mek-2 mpk-1 unc-54
Abstract:
To discover and study intracellular signals that regulate proteolysis in muscle, we have employed transgenic strains of Caenorhabditis elegans that produce a soluble LacZ reporter protein limited to body-wall and vulval muscles. This reporter protein is stable in well-fed wild-type animals, but its degradation is triggered upon a shift to 25degreesC in a strain carrying a temperature-sensitive activating mutation in the Ras oncogene homologue let-60. These mutants are not physiologically starved, inasmuch as growth rates are normal at 25degreesC. Ras-induced degradation is not prevented by the presence of cycloheximide added at or before the temperature shift and thus uses preexisting proteolytic systems and signaling components. Furthermore, degradation is triggered when adult animals are shifted to conditions of 25degreesC, confirming that Ras acutely promotes protein degradation in muscles whose developmental history is normal. Reduction-of-function mutations in the downstream protein kinase Raf (lin-45), MEK (mek-2), or mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) (mpk-1) prevent Ras-induced protein degradation, whereas activated MPK-1 is sufficient to trigger degradation, indicating that this kinase cascade is the principal route by which Ras signaling triggers protein degradation in muscle. This pathway is activated in hypodermal cells by the LET-23 epidermal growth factor receptor homologue, but an activating mutation in let-23 does not promote proteolysis in muscle. Starvation-induced LacZ reporter degradation is unaffected by reduction-of-function mutations in Ras, Raf, MEK, or MAPK, implying that Ras activation and starvation trigger proteolysis by mechanisms that are at least partially independent. This is the first evidence that Ras-Raf-MEK-MAPK signaling activates protein degradation in