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MutLα is essential for human DNA mismatch repair (MMR). It harbors a latent endonuclease, is responsible for recruitment of process associated proteins and is relevant for strand discrimination. Recently, we demonstrated that the MMR function of MutLα is regulated by phosphorylation of MLH1 at serine (S) 477. In the current study, we focused on S87 located in the ATPase domain of MLH1 and on S446, S456 and S477 located in its linker region. We analysed the phosphorylation-dependent impact of these amino acids on DNA binding, MMR ability and thermal stability of MutLα. We were able to demonstrate that phosphorylation at S87 of MLH1 inhibits DNA binding of MutLα. In addition, we detected that its MMR function seems to be regulated predominantly via phosphorylation of serines in the linker domain, which are also partially involved in the regulation of DNA binding. Furthermore, we found that the thermal stability of MutLα decreased in relation to its phosphorylation status implying that complete phosphorylation might lead to instability and degradation of MLH1. In summary, we showed here, for the first time, a phosphorylation-dependent regulation of DNA binding of MutLα and hypothesized that this might significantly impact its functional regulation during MMR in vivo.
DNA mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency plays an essential role in the development of colorectal cancer (CRC). We recently demonstrated in vitro that the serine/threonine casein kinase 2 alpha (CK2α) causes phosphorylation of the MMR protein MLH1 at position serine 477, which significantly inhibits the MMR. In the present study, CK2α-dependent MLH1 phosphorylation was analyzed in vivo. Using a cohort of 165 patients, we identified 88 CRCs showing significantly increased nuclear/cytoplasmic CK2α expression, 28 tumors with high nuclear CK2α expression and 49 cases showing a general low CK2α expression. Patients with high nuclear/cytoplasmic CK2α expression demonstrated significantly reduced 5-year survival outcome. By immunoprecipitation and Western blot analysis, we showed that high nuclear/cytoplasmic CK2α expression significantly correlates with increased MLH1 phosphorylation and enriched somatic tumor mutation rates. The CK2α mRNA levels tended to be enhanced in high nuclear/cytoplasmic and high nuclear CK2α-expressing tumors. Furthermore, we identified various SNPs in the promotor region of CK2α, which might cause differential CK2α expression. In summary, we demonstrated that high nuclear/cytoplasmic CK2α expression in CRCs correlates with enhanced MLH1 phosphorylation in vivo and seems to be causative for increased mutation rates, presumably induced by reduced MMR. These observations could provide important new therapeutic targets.