A new model for regulation of sphingosine kinase 1 translocation to the plasma membrane in breast cancer cells

2021 
The translocation of sphingosine kinase 1 (SK1) to the plasma membrane (PM) is crucial in promoting oncogenesis. We have previously proposed that SK1 exists as both a monomer and dimer in equilibrium, although it is unclear whether these species translocate to the PM via the same or different mechanisms. We therefore investigated the structural determinants involved to better understand how translocation might potentially be targeted for therapeutic intervention. We report here that monomeric wild type (WT) mouse SK1 (GFP-mSK1) translocates to the PM of MCF-7L cells stimulated with carbachol or phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), whereas the dimer translocates to the PM in response to sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P); thus, the equilibrium between monomer and dimer is sensitive to cellular stimulus. In addition, carbachol and PMA induced translocation of monomeric GFP-mSK1 to lamellipodia, while S1P induced translocation of dimeric GFP-mSK1 to filopodia, suggesting that SK1 regulates different cell biological processes dependent on dimerization. GFP-mSK1 mutants designed to modulate dimerization confirmed this difference in localization. Regulation by the C-terminal tail of SK1 was investigated using GFP-mSK1 truncations. Removal of the last five amino acids (PPEEP) prevented translocation of the enzyme to the PM, while removal of the last ten amino acids restored translocation. This suggests that the penultimate five amino acids (SRRGP) function as a translocation brake, which can be released by sequestration of the PPEEP sequence. We propose that these determinants alter the arrangement of N-terminal and C-terminal domains in SK1, leading to unique surfaces that promote differential translocation to the PM.
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