Glutathione S-Transferase Mu Modulates the Stress-activated Signals by Suppressing Apoptosis Signal-regulating Kinase 1

Ssang‐Goo Cho(Korea University), Yong Hee Lee(Korea University), Hee-Sae Park(Korea University), Kanghyun Ryoo(Korea University), Keon Wook Kang(Seoul National University), Jihyun Park(Korea University), Soo-Jung Eom(Korea University), Myeong‐Jin Kim(Korea University), Tong-Shin Chang(Korea University), Soo-Yeon Choi(Korea University), Jaekyung Shim(Korea University), Young Ho Kim(Korea University), Mi-Sook Dong(Korea University), Min Jae Lee(Seoul National University Hospital), Sang Geon Kim(Seoul National University), Hidenori Ichijo(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Eui‐Ju Choi(Korea University)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
April 1, 2001
Cited by 400Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1) is a mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase that can activate the c-Jun N-terminal kinase and the p38 signaling pathways. It plays a critical role in cytokine- and stress-induced apoptosis. To further characterize the mechanism of the regulation of the ASK1 signal, we searched for ASK1-interacting proteins employing the yeast two-hybrid method. The yeast two-hybrid assay indicated that mouse glutathione S-transferase Mu 1-1 (mGSTM1-1), an enzyme involved in the metabolism of drugs and xenobiotics, interacted with ASK1. We subsequently confirmed that mGSTM1-1 physically associated with ASK1 both in vivo and in vitro. The in vitro binding assay indicated that the C-terminal portion of mGSTM1-1 and the N-terminal region of ASK1 were crucial for binding one another. Furthermore, mGSTM1-1 suppressed stress-stimulated ASK1 activity in cultured cells. mGSTM1-1 also blocked ASK1 oligomerization. The ASK1 inhibition by mGSTM1-1 occurred independently of the glutathione-conjugating activity of mGSTM1-1. Moreover, mGSTM1-1 repressed ASK1-dependent apoptotic cell death. Taken together, our findings suggest that mGSTM1-1 functions as an endogenous inhibitor of ASK1. This highlights a novel function for mGSTM1-1 insofar as mGSTM1-1 may modulate stress-mediated signals by repressing ASK1, and this activity occurs independently of its well-known catalytic activity in intracellular glutathione metabolism.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis