Cdk5 mediates vimentin Ser56 phosphorylation during GTP-induced secretion by neutrophils.

J Cell Physiol

Department of Cell Biology & Anatomy, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

Published: February 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • Neutrophil secretion plays a key role in acute inflammation after injury or infection, and vimentin is crucial for this process.
  • Researchers discovered that vimentin is a substrate for cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5), which phosphorylates it at a specific site (Ser56) during neutrophil activation.
  • The study reveals that Cdk5 regulates vimentin phosphorylation which is linked to GTP-induced secretion by neutrophils, while the secretion induced by another agent, fMLP, involves Cdk5 in a different way.

Article Abstract

Secretion by neutrophils contributes to acute inflammation following injury or infection. Vimentin has been shown to be important for secretion by neutrophils but little is known about its dynamics during secretion, which is regulated by cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5). In this study, we sought to examine the vimentin dynamics and its potential regulation by Cdk5 during neutrophil secretion. We show that vimentin is a Cdk5 substrate that is specifically phosphorylated at Ser56. In response to neutrophil stimulation with GTP, vimentin Ser56 was phosphorylated and colocalized with Cdk5 in the cytoplasmic compartment. Vimentin pSer56 and Cdk5 colocalization was consistent with coimmunoprecipitation from stimulated cells. Vimentin Ser56 phosphorylation occurred immediately after stimulation, and a remarkable increase in phosphorylation was noted later in the secretory process. Decreased GTP-induced vimentin Ser56 phosphorylation and secretion resulted from inhibition of Cdk5 activity by roscovitine or olomoucine or by depletion of Cdk5 by siRNA, suggesting that GTP-induced Cdk5-mediated vimentin Ser56 phosphorylation may be related to GTP-induced Cdk5-mediated secretion by neutrophils. Indeed, inhibition of vimentin Ser56 phosphorylation led to a corresponding inhibition of GTP-induced secretion, indicating a link between these two events. While fMLP also induced vimentin Ser56 phosphorylation, such phosphorylation was unaffected by roscovitine, which nonetheless, inhibited secretion, suggesting that Cdk5 regulates fMLP-induced secretion via a mechanism independent of Cdk5-mediated vimentin Ser56 phosphorylation. These findings demonstrate the distinct involvement of Cdk5 in GTP- and fMLP-induced secretion by neutrophils, and support the notion that specific targeting of Cdk5 may serve to inhibit the neutrophil secretory process.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3855454PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jcp.22782DOI Listing

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