Sc. Sun et al., BOTH AMINO-TERMINAL AND CARBOXYL-TERMINAL SEQUENCES WITHIN I-KAPPA-B-ALPHA REGULATE ITS INDUCIBLE DEGRADATION, Molecular and cellular biology, 16(3), 1996, pp. 1058-1065
Nuclear expression and consequent biological action of the eukaryotic
NF-kappa B transcription factor complex are tightly regulated through
its cytoplasmic retention by an ankyrin-rich inhibitory protein termed
I kappa B alpha. I kappa B alpha specifically binds to and masks the
nuclear localization signal of the RelA subunit of NF-kappa B, thereby
effectively sequestering this transcription factor complex in the cyt
oplasm. Specific cellular activation signals lead to the rapid proteol
ytic degradation of I kappa B alpha and the concomitant nuclear transl
ocation of NF-kappa B. However, the precise biochemical mechanisms und
erlying the inhibitory effects of I kappa B alpha On RelA and its indu
cible pattern of degradation remain unclear. By using HeLa cells trans
fected with various cDNAs encoding epitope-tagged mutants of I kappa B
alpha, our studies demonstrate the following: (i) sequences within th
e 72-amino-acid N-terminal region of I kappa B alpha are required for
tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha)-induced degradation but are fu
lly dispensable for I kappa B alpha binding to and inhibition of RelA;
(ii) serine residues located at positions 32 and 36 within the N-term
inal region of I kappa B alpha represent major sites of induced phosph
orylation (substitution of these serine residues with alanine abrogate
s TNF-alpha-induced degradation of I kappa B alpha); (iii) the C-termi
nal 40 residues of I kappa B alpha (amino acids 277 to 317), which inc
lude a PEST-like domain, are entirely dispensable for TNF-alpha-induce
d degradation and inhibition of RelA; (iv) a glutamine- and leucine-ri
ch (QL) region of I kappa B alpha located between residues 263 and 277
and overlapping with the sixth ankyrin repeat is required for both in
ducible degradation and inhibition of RelA function; (v) regulation of
I kappa B alpha degradation by this QL-rich region appears to occur i
ndependently of phosphorylation at serines 32 and 36. These findings t
hus indicate that I kappa B alpha is generally organized within distin
ct modular domains displaying different functional and regulatory prop
erties. These studies have also led to the identification of a novel c
lass of dominant-negative I kappa B alpha molecules that retain full i
nhibitory function on NF-kappa B yet fail to undergo stimulus-induced
degradation. These molecules, which lack N-terminal sequences, potentl
y inhibit TNF-alpha-induced activation of the human immune deficiency
virus type 1 kappa B enhancer, thus indicating their possible use as g
eneral inhibitors of NF-kappa B.