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The human WW45 protein enhances MST1-mediated apoptosis in vivo.

International journal of molecular medicine (2009-02-13)
Xuelai Luo, Zhaoming Li, Qun Yan, Xiaolan Li, Deding Tao, Jing Wang, Yan Leng, Kevin Gardner, Susan I V Judge, Qingdi Q Li, Junbo Hu, Jianping Gong
ABSTRACT

Mammalian sterile 20-like kinase 1 (MST1) is a serine/threonine protein kinase that is activated in response to a variety of apoptotic stimuli and causes apoptosis when over-expressed in mammalian cells. The physiological regulation and cellular targets of MST1 are not well understood. Using a yeast two-hybrid system, we identified human WW45 (hWW45, also called hSav1) as an MST1-binding protein. The association between the two proteins was confirmed by immunofluorescence and co-immunoprecipitation, and hWW45 was present in both the cytoplasm and nucleus. When hWW45 alone was over-expressed, it weakly induced apoptosis. However, hWW45 augmented MST1-induced apoptosis when the two were co-expressed. Conversely, RNA interference-mediated depletion of endogenous hWW45 suppressed MST1-induced apoptosis. These results indicate that hWW45 is required to enhance MST1-mediated apoptosis in vivo and thus is a critical player in an MST1-driven cell death signaling pathway.