Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.1 (protein kinase)
81,284 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

PAK I is a member of the PAK (p21-activated protein kinase) family and is activated by Cdc42 (Jakobi, R., Chen, C.-J., Tuazon, P. T., and Traugh, J. A. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 6206-6211). To examine the effects of PAK I on cleavage arrest, subfemtomole amounts of endogenously active (58 kDa) and inactive (60 kDa) PAK I and a tryptic peptide (37 kDa) containing the active catalytic domain were injected into one blastomere of 2-cell frog embryos. Active PAK I resulted in cleavage arrest in the injected blastomere at mitotic metaphase, whereas the uninjected blastomere progressed through mid- to late cleavage. Injection of other protein kinases at similar concentrations had no effect on cleavage. Endogenous PAK I was highly active in frog oocytes, and antibody to PAK I reacted specifically with protein of 58-60 kDa. PAK I protein was decreased at 60 min post-fertilization, with little or no PAK I protein or activity detectable at 80 min post-fertilization or in 2-cell embryos. At the 4-cell stage PAK I protein increased, but the protein kinase was present primarily as an inactive form. Rac2 and Cdc42, but not Rac 1, were identified in oocytes and throughout early embryo development. Thus, PAK I appears to be a potent cytostatic protein kinase involved in maintaining cells in a non-dividing state. PAK I activity is high in oocytes and appears to be regulated by degradation/synthesis and through autophosphorylation via binding of Cdc42. PAK I may act through regulation of the stress-activated protein kinase signaling pathway and/or by direct regulation of multiple metabolic pathways.
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PMID:Cleavage arrest of early frog embryos by the G protein-activated protein kinase PAK I. 870 34

gamma-PAK, originally designated PAK I and subsequently identified as a member of the p21-activated protein kinase family, has been shown to have cytostatic properties and to be involved in maintaining cells in a nondividing state [Rooney, R. D., et al., (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 21498-21504]. The determinants for phosphorylation of substrates by gamma-PAK have been identified by examining the kinetics of phosphorylation of a series of synthetic peptides patterned after the sequence KKRKSGL, which is the site phosphorylated by gamma-PAK in the Rous sarcoma virus nucleocapsid protein NC in vivo and in vitro. With these peptides, the recognition sequence for gamma-PAK has been shown to contain two basic amino acids in the -2 and -3 positions, as represented by (K/R)RXS, in which the -2 position is an arginine, the -3 position is an arginine or a lysine, and X can be an acidic, basic, or neutral amino acid. A basic amino acid in the -1 or -4 position improves the rate of phosphorylation by increasing the Vmax and decreasing the Km. An acidic amino acid in the -1 position increases the rate (2.5-fold), as does an acidic residue in the -4 position, although to a lower extent (1.6-fold). Proline in the -1 or +1 position has a deleterious effect and inhibits phosphorylation by gamma-PAK. The substrate requirements of protein kinases that recognize basic amino acids on the N-terminal side of the phosphorylatable residue such as cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) and Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (PKC) have been compared with gamma-PAK using the same peptides. An acidic residue in the -1 position negatively affects PKA and PKC; thus, peptides containing the sequence KRES can be used to identify gamma-PAK.
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PMID:Determinants for substrate phosphorylation by p21-activated protein kinase (gamma-PAK). 940 39

Autophosphorylation-dependent protein kinase (auto-kinase) was identified from pig brain and liver on the basis of its unique autophosphorylation/activation property [Yang, Fong, Yu and Liu (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 7034-7040; Yang, Chang and Soderling (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 9421-9427]. Its substrate consensus sequence motif was determined as being -R-X-(X)-S*/T*-X3-S/T-. To characterize auto-kinase further, we partly sequenced the kinase purified from pig liver. The N-terminal sequence (VDGGAKTSDKQKKKAXMTDE) and two internal peptide sequences (EKLRTIV and LQNPEK/ILTP/FI) of auto-kinase were obtained. These sequences identify auto-kinase as a C-terminal catalytic fragment of p21-activated protein kinase 2 (PAK2 or gamma-PAK) lacking its N-terminal regulatory region. Auto-kinase can be recognized by an antibody raised against the C-terminal peptide of human PAK2 by immunoblotting. Furthermore the autophosphorylation site sequence of auto-kinase was successfully predicted on the basis of its substrate consensus sequence motif and the known PAK2 sequence, and was further demonstrated to be RST(P)MVGTPYWMAPEVVTR by phosphoamino acid analysis, manual Edman degradation and phosphopeptide mapping via the help of phosphorylation site analysis of a synthetic peptide corresponding to the sequence of PAK2 from residues 396 to 418. During the activation process, auto-kinase autophosphorylates mainly on a single threonine residue Thr402 (according to the sequence numbering of human PAK2). In addition, a phospho-specific antibody against a synthetic phosphopeptide containing this identified sequence was generated and shown to be able to differentially recognize the activated auto-kinase autophosphorylated at Thr402 but not the non-phosphorylated/inactive auto-kinase. Immunoblot analysis with this phospho-specific antibody further revealed that the change in phosphorylation level of Thr402 of auto-kinase was well correlated with the activity change of the kinase during both autophosphorylation/activation and protein phosphatase-mediated dephosphorylation/inactivation processes. Taken together, our results identify Thr402 as the regulatory autophosphorylation site of auto-kinase, which is a C-terminal catalytic fragment of PAK2.
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PMID:Identification of the regulatory autophosphorylation site of autophosphorylation-dependent protein kinase (auto-kinase). Evidence that auto-kinase belongs to a member of the p21-activated kinase family. 969 11

p21-activated protein kinase gamma-PAK (Pak2, PAK I) is cleaved by CPP32 (caspase 3) during apoptosis and plays a key role in regulation of cell death. In vitro, CPP32 cleaves recombinant gamma-PAK into two peptides; 1-212 contains the majority of the regulatory domain whereas 213-524 contains 34 amino acids of the regulatory domain plus the entire catalytic domain. Following cleavage, both peptides become autophosphorylated with [gamma-32P]ATP. Peptide 1-212 migrates at 27,000 daltons (p27) upon SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and at 32,000 daltons following autophosphorylation on serine (p27P); the catalytic subunit migrates at 34,000 daltons (p34) before and after autophosphorylation on threonine. Following caspase cleavage, a significant lag (approximately 5 min) is observed before autophosphorylation and activity are detected. When gamma-PAK is autophosphorylated with ATP(Mg) alone and then cleaved, only p27 contains phosphate, and the enzyme is inactive with exogenous substrate. After autophosphorylation of gamma-PAK in the presence of Cdc42(GTPgammaS) or histone 4, both cleavage products contain phosphate and gamma-PAK is catalytically active. Mutation of the conserved Thr-402 to alanine greatly reduces autophosphorylation and protein kinase activity following cleavage. Thus activation of gamma-PAK via cleavage by CPP32 is a two-step mechanism wherein autophosphorylation of the regulatory domain is a priming step, and activation coincides with autophosphorylation of the catalytic domain.
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PMID:Cleavage and activation of p21-activated protein kinase gamma-PAK by CPP32 (caspase 3). Effects of autophosphorylation on activity. 978 69

The pathway involving the signalling protein p21Ras propagates a range of extracellular signals from receptors on the cell membrane to the cytoplasm and nucleus. The Ras proteins regulate many effectors, including members of the Raf family of protein kinases. Ras-dependent activation of Raf-1 at the plasma membrane involves phosphorylation events, protein-protein interactions and structural changes. Phosphorylation of serine residues 338 or 339 in the catalytic domain of Raf-1 regulates its activation in response to Ras, Src and epidermal growth factor. Here we show that the p21-activated protein kinase Pak3 phosphorylates Raf-1 on serine 338 in vitro and in vivo. The p21-activated protein kinases are regulated by the Rho-family GTPases Rac and Cdc42. Our results indicate that signal transduction through Raf-1 depends on both Ras and the activation of the Pak pathway. As guanine-nucleotide-exchange activity on Rac can be stimulated by a Ras-dependent phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase, a mechanism could exist through which one Ras effector pathway can be influenced by another.
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PMID:The protein kinase Pak3 positively regulates Raf-1 activity through phosphorylation of serine 338. 982 99

To examine the requirements for activation of the p21-activated protein kinase gamma-PAK (Pak2, PAK I) from rabbit reticulocytes by Cdc42(GTPgammaS), autophosphorylation with ATP(Mg) or ATP(Mn) and its effects on protein kinase activity were examined. Autophosphorylation with ATP(Mg) alone was minimal with negligible protein kinase activity; the rate of autophosphorylation was increased 3-4-fold upon binding of Cdc42(GTPgammaS), resulting in a 3-fold stimulation of protein kinase activity with peptide and protein substrates. The rate of autophosphorylation with ATP(Mn) was 4.7-fold faster than with ATP(Mg) alone and was stimulated 2-fold by Cdc42(GTPgammaS). However, gamma-PAK autophosphorylated with ATP(Mn) in the presence or absence of Cdc42(GTPgammaS) did not phosphorylate peptide or protein substrates in the presence of ATP(Mn), indicating that gamma-PAK can utilize ATP(Mn) for autophosphorylation but not for phosphorylation of exogenous substrates. Tryptic phosphopeptide maps of gamma-PAK autophosphorylated with ATP(Mg) alone showed 3 phosphopeptides, while with Cdc42(GTPgammaS) a total of 9 major phosphopeptides was observed. When gamma-PAK was autophosphorylated with ATP(Mn) in the presence or absence of Cdc42(GTPgammaS), 7 major phosphopeptides were observed, which were identical to peptides obtained with Cdc42(GTPgammaS) and ATP(Mg). Utilizing a recombinant mutant of gamma-PAK with alanine replacing threonine 402 in the catalytic region (T402A), it was determined that the two additional phosphopeptides observed in active PAK (peptides 7 and 8) were due to phosphorylation of threonine 402. These results show that Mn sustains autophosphorylation on serine but does not support autophosphorylation of threonine 402, which is required for activity toward exogenous substrates, or phosphorylation of these substrates.
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PMID:Autophosphorylation and protein kinase activity of p21-activated protein kinase gamma-PAK are differentially affected by magnesium and manganese. 983 97

An ERK2-binding site at the N terminus of MEK1 was reported to mediate their stable association. We examined the importance of this binding site in the feedback phosphorylation of MEK1 on Thr(292) and Thr(386) by ERK2, the phosphorylation and activation of ERK2 by MEK1, and the interaction of MEK1 with ERK2 and Raf-1. Deletion of the binding site from MEK1 reduced its phosphorylation by ERK2, but had no effect on its phosphorylation by p21-activated protein kinase-1 (PAK1). A MEK1 N-terminal peptide containing the binding site inhibited MEK1 phosphorylation by ERK2. However, it did not affect MEK1 phosphorylation by p21-activated protein kinase or myelin basic protein phosphorylation by ERK2. Deletion of the N-terminal ERK-binding domain of MEK1 also reduced its ability to phosphorylate ERK2 in vitro, to co-immunoprecipitate with ERK2, and to stimulate ERK2 activation in transfected cells, but it did not alter the association with endogenous Raf-1. Using ERK2-p38 chimeras and an ERK2 deletion mutant, a MEK1-binding site of ERK2 was localized to its N terminus.
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PMID:The N-terminal ERK-binding site of MEK1 is required for efficient feedback phosphorylation by ERK2 in vitro and ERK activation in vivo. 1056 69

The p21-activated protein kinase gamma-PAK from rabbit, expressed in insect cells, is activated following binding of Cdc42(GTPgammaS). The rate of autophosphorylation is increased fivefold and the protein kinase activity 13-fold, as measured with the synthetic heptapeptide (AKRESAA). The mutant K278R, where the invariant lysine in the catalytic site is replaced by arginine, shows neither autophosphorylation nor activity. Replacement of the conserved threonine in the catalytic domain with alanine (T402A) reduces autophosphorylation and protein kinase activity to 1% that of the wild-type gamma-PAK, indicating autophosphorylation of Thr402 in the activation loop is essential for protein kinase activity. In contrast, certain protein substrates such as histone 2B, histone 4 and myelin basic protein, stimulate both autophosphorylation and protein kinase activity to levels similar to those observed with Cdc42(GTPgammaS). This substrate-level activation does not require autophosphorylation of Thr402 in the activation loop. As shown with T402A, the protein kinase activity with histone 4 is similar to that observed with recombinant wild-type gamma-PAK. Basic proteins or peptides which are not substrates of gamma-PAK, such as histone 1 and polylysine, do not stimulate autophosphorylation or activity. Other substrates such as the Rous sarcoma virus protein NC are phosphorylated by gamma-PAK following activation by Cdc42(GTPgammaS), but are not phosphorylated by T402A. The data suggest that some substrates can override the requirement for Cdc42(GTPgammaS), by activating gamma-PAK directly.
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PMID:Substrates enhance autophosphorylation and activation of p21-activated protein kinase gamma-PAK in the absence of activation loop phosphorylation. 1088 Sep 65

The Raf-1 kinase domain is kept in an inactive state by the N-terminal regulatory domain. Activation of the kinase domain occurs following release from the N-terminal repression and possible catalytic upregulation. To distinguish the regulatory mechanisms that directly influence the catalytic activity of the enzyme from those which act through the inhibitory domain, the catalytic domain of Raf-1 (CR3) was expressed in COS-7 cells. The role of phosphorylation in the direct regulation of this domain was determined by substituting non-phosphorylatable amino acids for known serine and tyrosine phosphorylation sites. The intrinsic activity of each mutant protein was determined as well as stimulation by v-Src and phorbol esters. Both v-Src and phorbol esters were potent activators of CR3, requiring the serine 338/339 (p21-activated protein kinase, Pak) and tyrosine 340/341 (Src) phosphorylation sites for full stimulation of CR3. In contrast, loss of the serine 497/499 protein kinase C phosphorylation sites had little effect on CR3 activation by either v-Src or phorbol esters. Loss of serine 621, a 14-3-3 adaptor-protein-binding site, prevented activation of CR3 by v-Src or phorbol esters and partially decreased the high basal activity of the kinase fragment. When co-expressed in COS-7 cells, 14-3-3 associated strongly with full-length Raf-1, weakly with wild-type CR3 and not at all with the A621 and D621 CR3 mutants. The role of 14-3-3 in maintaining the activity of the catalytic domain of Raf-1 was investigated further by performing peptide-competition studies with wild-type CR3, wild-type CR3 and v-Src or constitutively active CR3 (CR3[YY340/341DD]). In each case, incubation of the proteins with a phosphoserine-621 Raf-1 peptide, which we show displaced Raf-1 and CR3[YY340/341DD] from 14-3-3, was found to substantially reduce catalytic activity. Taken together, our results support a model of Raf regulation in which the activity of the Raf-1 catalytic domain is directly upregulated by phosphorylation, following relief of inhibition by the N-terminal regulatory domain upon Ras-GTP binding. Moreover, the presence of serine 621 in the free catalytic fragment is required for full CR3 activation by stimulatory factors, and the continuous presence of 14-3-3 at this site is necessary for retaining activity once the kinase is activated.
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PMID:Regulation of the Raf-1 kinase domain by phosphorylation and 14-3-3 association. 1099 57

The identification of substrates is a key aspect in the study of the biological function of protein kinases. The procedure here described is aimed at profiling substrate phosphorylation at the phosphopeptide level by sequentially involving (i). the assessment of the in vitro activity of individual protein kinases on a complex mix of immobilized proteins, (ii). the fractionation of the phosphopeptides being released upon proteolysis of substrates, and (iii). the final identification of the targeted sequences. In particular, the protein sample is spotted onto nitrocellulose membrane and then subjected to a solid-phase kinase assay in the presence of [32P]ATP, prior to solid-phase proteolytic digestion and two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping. Radiolabeled phosphopeptides are subsequently isolated and sequenced to identify the substrates being targeted by the examined protein kinase. Using the gamma-isotype of p21-activated protein kinase (gamma-PAK) and its known in vitro substrates, I verified that both the specificity of substrate phosphorylation and its efficiency are similar upon solid- and liquid-phase conditions. To demonstrate the feasibility of the overall experimental system, I then employed a fairly crude cell extract as a source of candidate substrates and successfully identified the sequence of a putative substrate of gamma-PAK.
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PMID:Profiling substrate phosphorylation at the phosphopeptide level. 1247 33


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