Citation
- Authors: Wang, H., Lo, W. T., Vujicic Zagar, A., Gulluni, F., Lehmann, M., Scapozza, L., Haucke, V., Vadas, O.
- Year: 2018
- Journal: Mol Cell 71 343-351 e4
- Applications: in vitro / siRNA / jetPRIME
- Cell type: COS-7
Description: African green monkey kidney cells
Known as: COS, COS7
Method
Cells were seeded and transfected with siRNA on day 1 using jetPRIME according to the manufacturer’s instructions by reverse transfection, expanded on day 2 and processed on day 4.
Abstract
Class II phosphoinositide 3-kinases (PI3K-C2) are large multidomain enzymes that control cellular functions ranging from membrane dynamics to cell signaling via synthesis of 3'-phosphorylated phosphoinositides. Activity of the alpha isoform (PI3K-C2alpha) is associated with endocytosis, angiogenesis, and glucose metabolism. How PI3K-C2alpha activity is controlled at sites of endocytosis remains largely enigmatic. Here we show that the lipid-binding PX-C2 module unique to class II PI3Ks autoinhibits kinase activity in solution but is essential for full enzymatic activity at PtdIns(4,5)P2-rich membranes. Using HDX-MS, we show that the PX-C2 module folds back onto the kinase domain, inhibiting its basal activity. Destabilization of this intramolecular contact increases PI3K-C2alpha activity in vitro and in cells, leading to accumulation of its lipid product, increased recruitment of the endocytic effector SNX9, and facilitated endocytosis. Our studies uncover a regulatory mechanism in which coincident binding of phosphoinositide substrate and cofactor selectively activate PI3K-C2alpha at sites of endocytosis.