Abstract
Mitotic kinase Aurora A (AURKA) diverges from other kinases in its multiple active conformations that may explain its interphase roles and association with cancer, and the limited efficacy of drugs targeting the kinase pocket. Regulation of AURKA activity by the cell is critically dependent on destruction mediated by the Anaphase-Promoting Complex (APC/CFZR1) during mitotic exit and G1 phase and requires an atypical N-terminal degron in AURKA called the ‘A-box’ in addition to a reported canonical D-box degron in the C-terminus. Here we find that the proposed C-terminal D-box of AURKA does not act as a degron and instead mediates essential structural features of the protein. In living cells, as previously reported in vitro, the N-terminal intrinsically disordered region (IDR) of AURKA containing the A-box is sufficient to confer FZR1-dependent mitotic degradation. Both in silico and in cellulo assays predict the QRVL Short Linear Interacting Motif (SLiM) of the A-box to be a phospho-regulated D-box. We propose that degradation of full-length AURKA additionally depends on an intact C-terminal domain because of critical conformational parameters permissive for both activity and mitotic degradation of AURKA.
Summary blurb AURKA degron motifs are redefined to show that the so-called N-terminal ‘A-box’ is in fact a D-box, and the so-called ‘D-box’ in the C-terminus is not a degron but a motif critical for the active, degradable conformation of AURKA
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Supplementary Figures added