c‐Fos associates with the endoplasmic reticulum and activates phospholipid metabolism

Abstract
C-Fos, a transcription factor that constitutes DNA-binding AP-1 complexes, regulates gene expression that promotes long-lasting cellular changes. We show that, in addition to its transcription factor activity, c-Fos regulates the metabolism of phospholipids cytoplasmically by an AP-1-independent activity. Two waves of c-Fos expression that promote subsequent waves of stimulation of 32P-orthophosphate incorporation into phospholipids are evidenced in quiescent cultured fibroblasts induced to re-enter the cell cycle. The first wave of c-Fos expression peaks at 7.5 min and returns to control levels by 15 min. The second wave starts by 30 min and remains elevated at 120 min. In the first wave, the lipids that incorporate 32P are predominantly second-messenger polyphosphoinositides (PIP, PIP2, PIP3); whereas in the second wave, membrane-biogenesis-related lipids (PI, PE, PA), become radioactive. Both waves of phospholipid activation depend on c-Fos expression. It is interesting that a peptide that blocks AP-1 nuclear import does not affect phospholipid activation. Immunocytochemical examination showed c-Fos immunoreactivity associated to the endoplasmic reticulum. We conclude that c-Fos, rapidly induced upon cell stimulation, associates to the endoplasmic reticulum where it first regulates the synthesis/ replenishment of phospholipids required for signal transduction pathways and subsequently regulates enzymes involved in the genesis of new membrane necessary for cell growth.