The recruitment of AMP-activated protein kinase to glycogen is regulated by autophosphorylation
Abstract
The mammalian AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is an obligatory αβγ heterotrimeric complex carrying a carbohydrate-binding module (CBM) in the β-subunit (AMPKβ) capable of attaching AMPK to glycogen. Nonetheless, AMPK localizes at many different cellular compartments, implying the existence of mechanisms that prevent AMPK from glycogen binding. Cell-free carbohydrate binding assays revealed that AMPK autophosphorylation abolished its carbohydrate-binding capacity. X-ray structural data of the CBM displays the central positioning of threonine 148 within the binding pocket. Substitution of Thr-148 for a phospho-mimicking aspartate (T148D) prevents AMPK from binding to carbohydrate. Overexpression of isolated CBM or β1-containing AMPK in cellular models revealed that wild type (WT) localizes to glycogen particles, whereas T148D shows a diffuse pattern. Pharmacological AMPK activation and glycogen degradation by glucose deprivation but not forskolin enhanced cellular Thr-148 phosphorylation. Cellular glycogen content was higher if pharmacological AMPK activation was combined with overexpression of T148D mutant relative to WT AMPK. In summary, these data show that glycogen-binding capacity of AMPKβ is regulated by Thr-148 autophosphorylation with likely implications in the regulation of glycogen turnover. The findings further raise the possibility of regulated carbohydrate-binding function in a wider variety of CBM-containing proteins. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000101213Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Journal of Biological ChemistryVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular BiologySubject
AMP-activated Kinase (AMPK); Carbohydrate-binding Protein; Cellular Regulation; Glycogen; Phosphorylation; Post-translational Modification (PTM); Autophosphorylation; Subcellular LocalizationNotes
Received 16 December 2014, In revised form 9 March 2015, Published online 19 March 2015.More
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