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Query: EC:2.7.11.1 (
protein kinase
)
81,284
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A Dictyostelium
myosin light chain kinase
has been purified approximately 15,000-fold to near homogeneity. The purified kinase is a single polypeptide of approximately 34 kDa that phosphorylates only the 18-kDa Dictyostelium myosin regulatory light chain and itself among substrates tested. The enzyme was purified largely by ammonium sulfate fractionation and hydrophobic (butyl) interaction chromatography. Analysis using polyclonal antibodies raised against the purified 34-kDa protein confirms that this protein is responsible for
myosin light chain kinase
activity. Protein microsequence of the 34-kDa protein reveals conserved
protein kinase
sequences. The purified Dictyostelium
myosin light chain kinase
exhibits a Km for Dictyostelium myosin of 4 microM and a Vmax of 8 nmol/min/mg. Unlike other characterized myosin light chain kinases, this enzyme is not regulated by calcium/calmodulin. Western blot analysis demonstrates that the purified kinase is not a proteolytic fragment that has lost calcium/calmodulin regulation. The Dictyostelium
myosin light chain kinase
activity is not directly regulated by cyclic nucleotides. However, this kinase undergoes an intramolecular autophosphorylation that activates the enzyme.
...
PMID:Dictyostelium myosin light chain kinase. Purification and characterization. 238 Jan 88
Purified
myosin light chain kinase
from smooth muscle is phosphorylated by
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
, protein kinase C, and the multifunctional calmodulin-dependent
protein kinase
II. Because phosphorylation in a specific site (site A) by any one of these kinases desensitizes
myosin light chain kinase
to activation by Ca2+/calmodulin, kinase phosphorylation could play an important role in regulating smooth muscle contractility. This possibility was investigated in 32P-labeled bovine tracheal smooth muscle. Treatment of tissues with carbachol, KCl, isoproterenol, or phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate increased the extent of kinase phosphorylation. Six primary phosphopeptides (A-F) of
myosin light chain kinase
were identified. Site A was phosphorylated to an appreciable extent only with carbachol or KCl, agents which contract tracheal smooth muscle. The extent of site A phosphorylation correlated to increases in the concentration of Ca2+/calmodulin required for activation. These results show that
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
and protein kinase C do not affect smooth muscle contractility by phosphorylating site A in
myosin light chain kinase
. It is proposed that phosphorylation of
myosin light chain kinase
in site A in contracting tracheal smooth muscle may play a role in the reported desensitization of contractile elements to activation by Ca2+.
...
PMID:Myosin light chain kinase phosphorylation in tracheal smooth muscle. 239 69
Synthetic peptide analogs of the bovine myelin basic protein (MBP) corresponding to residues 104-118 were found to specifically inhibit phospholipid/ Ca2+-dependent
protein kinase
(protein kinase C). The peptides [Ala107]MBP (104-118) and [Ala113]MBP (104-118) inhibited protein phosphorylation of intact MBP, histone H1 and peptide phosphorylation with MBP(104-123), MBP(104-118) or [Ala105]MBP (104-118) as substrates. The inhibitor peptides [Ala107]MBP(104-118) and [Ala113]MBP (104-118), containing alanine in place of the arginine recognition sites, apparently inhibited the enzyme noncompetitively with respect to substrates, with IC50 values ranging from 46-145 and 28-62 microM, respectively. These peptide analogs did not inhibit
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
or
myosin light chain kinase
but inhibited phospholipid/Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation of endogenous proteins in the total, solubilized fraction of rat brain.
...
PMID:Synthetic myelin basic protein peptide analogs are specific inhibitors of phospholipid/calcium-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C). 241 28
Following incubation of HPV 1-induced warts in the presence of [32P] phosphate several of the E4-encoded proteins were found to be radiolabeled. Two-dimensional isoelectric focusing sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that the 17K E4 polypeptides had incorporated [32P]phosphate whereas those of 16K were unlabeled. Purified E4 gene products were separated by ion exchange chromatography into a large number of different species, which were of similar size but of different charge due to varying extents of phosphorylated peptides have been isolated and identified. Phosphoserine and phosphothreonine were identified in all 16/17K E4 fractions but not phosphotyrosine. Both HPV 1 E4 16K and 17K fractions were phosphorylated in vitro by
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
but not by
myosin light chain kinase
or by phosphorylase kinase. Incubation with cAMP PK gave incorporation of approx. 0.5 mole phosphate/mol of protein indicating that the
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
site(s) was partially phosphorylated in vivo. This view was supported by the fact that species which were more heavily phosphorylated in vivo incorporated less phosphate after
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
phosphorylation. HPV 1 E4 was also phosphorylated at serine and threonine residues by a crude cytoplasmic extract prepared from cultured human keratinocytes and cultured human retinoblasts. These results are discussed in the light of the known effects of phosphorylation on the interactions of other keratinocyte-specific proteins.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of the human papillomavirus type 1 E4 proteins in vivo and in vitro. 247 Jan 93
Calmodulin's calculated electrostatic potential surface is asymmetrically distributed about the molecule. Concentrations of uncompensated negative charge are localized near certain alpha-helices and calcium-binding loops. Further calculations suggest that these charge features of calmodulin can be selectively perturbed by changing clusters of phylogenetically conserved acidic amino acids in helices to lysines. When these cluster charge reversals are actually produced by using cassette-based site-specific mutagenesis of residues 82-84 or 118-120, the resulting proteins differ in their interaction with two distinct calmodulin-dependent protein kinases,
myosin light chain kinase
and calmodulin-dependent
protein kinase
II. Each calmodulin mutant can be purified to apparent chemical homogeneity by an identical purification protocol that is based on conservation of its overall properties, including calcium binding. Although cluster charge reversals result in localized perturbations of the computed negative surface, single amino acid changes would not be expected to alter significantly the distribution of the negative surface because of the relatively high density of uncompensated negative charge in the region around residues 82-84 and 118-120. However, this does not preclude the possibility of single amino acid charge perturbations having a functional effect on the more intimate, catalytically active complex. The electrostatic surface of calmodulin described in this report may be a feature that would be altered only by cluster charge reversal mutations. Overall, the results suggest that the charge properties of calmodulin are one of several properties that are important for the efficient assembly of calmodulin-
protein kinase
signal transduction complexes in eukaryotic cells.
...
PMID:Computational and site-specific mutagenesis analyses of the asymmetric charge distribution on calmodulin. 255 79
A 40-kDa fragment of chicken smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase was produced and partially purified from a bacterial expression system. This fragment exhibits calmodulin binding and substrate phosphorylation properties similar to those of the isolated chicken gizzard enzyme. A series of 3'-deletion mutants was prepared and used to produce proteins with the same NH2 terminus but with COOH termini varying over 180 amino acids. Results show that truncation of the enzyme at Ser-512 (based on the amino acid numbering system described for the partial cDNA clone by Guerriero, V., Jr., Russo, M. A., Olson, N. J., Putkey, J. A., and Means, A. R. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 8372-8381) does not alter calmodulin binding, calmodulin regulation, or enzymatic properties. Removal of an additional 5 residues from the COOH terminus completely inhibits calmodulin binding and results in an inactive kinase that can be fully activated by limited proteolysis. Site specific mutations within these 5 residues demonstrate that Gly-508 and Arg-509 are independently involved in calmodulin-dependent binding and activation of
myosin light chain kinase
. Truncation of the enzyme at residues within the
protein kinase
catalytic domain results in inactive protein that cannot be activated by proteolysis.
...
PMID:Myosin light chain kinase structure function analysis using bacterial expression. 267 19
We examined the extranuclear effects of thyroid hormones on human platelets. Pretreatment with DL-thyroxine or DL-triiodothyronine inhibited collagen-induced aggregation, in a dose-dependent manner, but other derivatives of thyroid hormone had no significant effects. In contrast to collagen, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate-induced aggregation was not affected by thyroid hormones at the same concentration range. Thyroxine also inhibited the release of [14C] serotonin from collagen-stimulated platelets, with a marked reduction in the phosphorylation of 20,000-dalton protein. Thyroxine and triiodothyronine had inhibitory effects on
myosin light chain kinase
purified from human platelets and inhibited more markedly the
myosin light chain kinase
than protein kinase C (Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent enzyme) and
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
. In addition, L-thyroxine behaved as a competitive inhibitor of
myosin light chain kinase
toward calmodulin, and the Ki value was calculated to be 2.6 microM. To determine whether or not thyroxine directly binds
myosin light chain kinase
, we prepared an affinity column, using L-thyroxine as the ligand. Myosin light chain kinase was selectively bound to the column while calmodulin passed through. We also designed a procedure for the purification of
myosin light chain kinase
from human platelets, using L-thyroxine-affinity chromatography. A markedly increased purification was thus achieved, and DEAE-cellulose and L-thyroxine-affinity chromatography were made feasible. These results suggest that thyroxine can serve as a pharmacological tool for elucidating the biological significance of
myosin light chain kinase
-mediated reactions and is a pertinent ligand which can be used to purify
myosin light chain kinase
from platelets as a substitute for calmodulin.
...
PMID:Thyroid hormones inhibit platelet function and myosin light chain kinase. 272 89
The transport of cholesterol to the inner mitochondrial membrane, a key step in steroidogenesis, is subject to hormonal modulation that, at least in part, could be mediated by protein phosphorylation. This step is stimulated by sterol carrier protein 2 (SCP2) and Ca2+. To explore whether SCP2 itself is a potential control point for regulation by Ca2+-dependent phosphorylation we investigated whether highly purified SCP2 could serve as a substrate for major type Ca2+ and non-Ca2+-dependent protein kinases. Phosphorylation by calmodulin
protein kinase
II (CaM-PK II),
myosin light chain kinase
(
MLCK
), cAMP-dependent kinase (
PKA
) and protein kinase C (PKC) was monitored under optimal conditions for each enzyme.
PKA
, CaM-PK II and
MLCK
catalyzed the radiolabeling of histone 2A, synapsin I and myosin light chain (MLC), known substrates for these kinases, respectively, yet no phosphate transfer to SCP2 was observed. In contrast, PKC from two different sources (rat and calf brain) effectively catalyzed the phosphorylation of the highly purified SCP2. The phosphorylation of SCP2 depended on the addition of Ca2+ and phospholipids and was completely blocked by Polymyxin B, a PKC inhibitor. PKC catalyzed phosphorylation of SCP2 displayed a similar dependence on the concentration of ATP. Lineweaver Burk plots of the data indicate Km values for ATP of approximately 6 microM for the phosphorylation of SCP2. Our results, which have revealed for the first time that SCP2 is a substrate for PKC, are consistent with the possibilities that the control of steroidogenesis by tropic hormones and by PKC activation are mediated, at least in part, by the phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of SCP2.
...
PMID:Protein kinase C catalyzed phosphorylation of sterol carrier protein 2. 273 66
Kaempferol, 3,5,7-trihydroxy-2-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-4H-1-benzopyran-4-one, was found to inhibit bovine aorta
myosin light chain kinase
with a Ki of 0.3-0.5 microM. It was found to be competitive with ATP and non-competitive with isolated myosin light chains. The specificity of this inhibitor was studied relative to protein kinase C and cAMP dependent
protein kinase
(IC50 = 15 microM and 150 microM, respectively). It appears not to interact strongly with calmodulin binding proteins, such as Ca2+-calmodulin dependent phosphodiesterase (IC50 = 45 microM), and had little effect on actin-activated myosin subfragment-1 ATPase activity (IC50 greater than 100 microM) or smooth muscle phosphatase activities (IC50 greater than 100 microM).
...
PMID:Kaempferol inhibits myosin light chain kinase. 280 9
The purified catalytic subunit (C) of
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
produced a 2-fold activation of the low Km phosphodiesterase in crude microsomes (P-2 pellet) of rat adipocytes. This activation was C subunit concentration-dependent, ATP-dependent, blocked by a specific peptide inhibitor, and lost if the C subunit was first heat denatured. The concentration of ATP necessary for half-maximal activation of the low Km phosphodiesterase was 4.50 +/- 1.1 microM, which was nearly the same as the known Km of C subunit for ATP (3.1 microM) using other substrates. The concentration of C subunit producing half-maximal activation of phosphodiesterase was 0.22 +/- 0.04 microM, slightly less than the measured concentration of total C subunit in adipocytes (0.45 microM). The activation of the low Km phosphodiesterase by C subunit was specific, since on an equimolar basis,
myosin light chain kinase
,
cGMP-dependent protein kinase
, or Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II did not activate the enzyme. The percent stimulation of phosphodiesterase by C subunit was about the same as that produced by incubation of adipocytes with a cAMP analog, and the enzyme first activated in vivo with the analog was not activated to the same extent (on a percentage basis) by in vitro treatment with C subunit. Treatment of the crude microsomes with trypsin resulted in transfer of phosphodiesterase catalytic activity from the particulate to the supernatant fraction, but the enzyme in the supernatant was minimally activated by C subunit, suggesting either loss or dislocation of the regulatory component. The C subunit-mediated activation of phosphodiesterase was preserved after either transfer of phosphodiesterase activity to the supernatant fraction by nonionic detergents or partial purification of the transferred enzyme. The present findings are consistent with the suggestion that
protein kinase
regulates the concentration of cAMP through phosphodiesterase activation and provide direct evidence that the mechanism of activation involves phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Activation of the particulate low Km phosphodiesterase of adipocytes by addition of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. 283 86
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