Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Our previous studies have suggested that phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase D (PtdCho-PLD) plays a role in IgE-dependent diacylglycerol production, protein kinase C activation and mediator release in the RBL 2H3 mast cell line. We have extended these studies to examine the mechanisms by which PtdCho-PLD may be regulated in these cells. RBL 2H3 cellular lipids were labeled with [14C]arachidonic acid or [3H]myristic acid, then PtdCho-PLD activity was monitored by the formation of radiolabeled phosphatidylethanol when ethanol was included in the incubation medium. Trinitrophenol-ovalbumin conjugate (10 ng/ml), when added to cells previously sensitized with anti-(trinitrophenelated mouse IgE) (0.5 microgram/ml), ionomycin (1 microM) and thapsigargin (0.1 microM), stimulated PtdCho-PLD activation and mediator release in cells incubated in buffer containing 1.8 mM calcium, but not in cells incubated in calcium-free, buffer. Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (0.1 microM) activated PtdCho-PLD in both buffers, but on its own did not trigger mediator release. When intracellular calcium was chelated with 5,5'-dimethyl-1,2-bis(2- aminophenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, trinitrophenol-ovalbumin conjugate failed to activate PtdCho-PLD and histamine release. Similarly, down-regulation of protein kinase C activity by long-term exposure to the phorbol ester (0.1 microM) and preincubation of the cells with protein kinase inhibitors resulted in the loss of the trinitrophenol-ovalbumin response on PtdCho-PLD activity and histamine release. Taken together, the above results suggest that IgE-dependent PtdCho-PLD activation is dependent on both activation of protein kinase C and a rise in the intracellular free calcium concentration.
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PMID:The role of calcium and protein kinase C in the IgE-dependent activation of phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase D in a rat mast (RBL 2H3) cell line. 137 1

Covalent attachment of myristic acid (C14:0) to the amino-terminal glycine residue of a variety of eukaryotic cellular and viral proteins can have a profound influence on their biological properties. The enzyme that catalyzes this modification, myristoyl-CoA-protein N-myristoyltransferase (NMT), has been identified as a potential target for antiviral and antifungal therapy. Its reaction mechanism is ordered Bi Bi with myristoyl-CoA binding occurring before binding of peptide and CoA release preceding release of myristoylpeptide. Perturbations in the binding of its acyl-CoA substrate would therefore be expected to have an important influence on catalysis. We have synthesized 56 analogs of myristic acid (C14:0) to further characterize the acyl-CoA binding site of Saccharomyces cerevisiae NMT. The activity of fatty acid analogs was assessed using a coupled in vitro assay system that employed the reportedly nonspecific Pseudomonas acyl-CoA synthetase, purified S. cerevisiae NMT, and octapeptide substrates derived from residues 2-9 of the catalytic subunit of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and the Pr55gag polyprotein precursor of human immunodeficiency virus I (HIV-I). Analysis of ketocarbonyl-, ester-, and amide-containing myristic acid analogs (the latter in two isomeric arrangements, the acylamino acid (-CO-NH-) and the amide (-NH-CO)) indicated that the enzyme's binding site is able to accommodate a dipolar protrusion from C4 through C13. This includes the region of the acyl chain occurring near C5-C6 (numbered from carboxyl) that appears to be bound in a bent conformation of 140-150 degrees. The activities of NMT's acyl-CoA substrates decrease with increasing polarity. This relationship was particularly apparent from an analysis of a series of analogs in which the hydrocarbon chain was terminated by (i) an azido group or (ii) one of three nitrogen heterocycles (imidazole, triazole, and tetrazole) alkylated at either nitrogen or carbon. This inverse relationship between polarity and activity was confirmed after comparison of the activities of the closely related ester- or amide-containing tetradecanoyl-CoA derivatives. Members from all of the analog series were surveyed to determine whether they could inhibit replication of human immunodeficiency virus I (HIV-I), a retrovirus that depends upon N-myristoylation of its Pr55gag for propagation. 12-Azidododecanoic acid was the most active analog tested, producing a 60-90% inhibition of viral production in both acutely and chronically infected T-lymphocyte cell lines at a concentration of 10-50 microM without associated cellular toxicity.
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PMID:Substrate specificity of Saccharomyces cerevisiae myristoyl-CoA: protein N-myristoyltransferase. Analysis of fatty acid analogs containing carbonyl groups, nitrogen heteroatoms, and nitrogen heterocycles in an in vitro enzyme assay and subsequent identification of inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus I replication. 155 67

N-myristoyl-CoA:protein N-myristoyl transferase is the enzyme that catalyzes the covalent transfer of myristic acid to the NH2-terminal glycine residue of a protein, or peptide, substrate. We have established a new, rapid, reliable, and inexpensive myristoyl-CoA:protein N-myristoyl transferase assay. This N-myristoyl transferase assay is based on the binding of the [3H]myristoylated peptide to a P81 phosphocellulose paper matrix and is more convenient for assaying multiple samples than existing procedures. Two peptides, derived from the N-terminal sequences of the type II catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase and pp60src, were used as substrates. A survey of rat and bovine tissue extracts demonstrated that in both cases brain contained the highest NMT activity (i.e., brain greater than spleen greater than heart greater than liver). Under the assay conditions used, the rate of myristoylation was linear for 10 min and with up to 4.0 mg/ml of brain extract.
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PMID:N-myristoyl transferase assay using phosphocellulose paper binding. 172 48

The protooncogene product, Raf-1, is a serine/threonine kinase and has been implicated as an intermediate in signal transduction mechanisms. We examined neoplastic and normal B cells for phosphorylation and activation of Raf-1 protein in response to anti-immunoglobulin antibody (anti-Ig). Anti-Ig induced rapid phosphorylation of Raf-1 protein in both neoplastic B-cells of hairy cell leukemia and normal tonsillar B-cells which proliferated well in response to anti-Ig. The increase in phosphorylation was due primarily to an increase in phosphoserine. The immune complex kinase assay using Histone V-S as an exogenous substrate also showed an increase in Raf-1-associated kinase activity. An inhibitor of protein kinase C, H7, inhibited the proliferation as well as the Raf-1 phosphorylation in response to the proliferative signal of anti-Ig. Further, downregulation of protein kinase C by the treatment with 12-phorbol 13-myristic acid significantly abrogated the induction of Raf-1 phosphorylation. These results suggest that, in human B-cells, Raf-1 protein may be involved in the signal transduction pathway mediated by surface immunoglobulin, and that it may be, at least partially, phosphorylated by activated PKC.
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PMID:Surface immunoglobulin-mediated signal transduction involves rapid phosphorylation and activation of the protooncogene product Raf-1 in human B-cells. 173 44

The product of the c-raf-1 proto-oncogene, Raf-1, is a 74,000-dalton cytoplasmic serine/threonine protein kinase that has been implicated as an intermediate in signal transduction mechanisms. In the human factor-dependent myeloid cell line MO7, both granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) and interleukin-3 (IL-3) were found to induce rapid, dose-dependent phosphorylation of Raf-1, which resulted in altered Raf-1 mobility in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. The increase in phosphorylation was due primarily to an increase in phosphoserine, with only a minor component (less than 2%) of phosphotyrosine. PMA (12-phorbol 13-myristic acid) also induced Raf-1 phosphorylation in MO7 cells, but the resulting alteration in electrophoretic mobility was different than that observed after GM-CSF or IL-3. GM-CSF and IL-3 rapidly and transiently increased Raf-1 kinase activity using Histone H1 as a substrate in an immune complex kinase assay in vitro. These results suggest that phosphorylation of Raf-1 could play a role in some aspect of GM-CSF and IL-3 signal transduction.
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PMID:Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and interleukin-3 induce rapid phosphorylation and activation of the proto-oncogene Raf-1 in a human factor-dependent myeloid cell line. 184 31

The amino-terminal domain of the large subunit of herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) ribonucleotide reductase (ICP10) was previously shown to possess protein kinase (PK) activity that localizes to the cytosolic, cytoskeletal, and plasma membrane fractions. Further studies of the PK domain using computer-assisted sequence analysis have identified a single transmembrane segment and fatty acid incorporation findings indicate that ICP10 is myristylated. Myristylation does not depend on a viral enzyme, since myristic acid is incorporated into ICP10 precipitated from cells transfected with an ICP10 expression vector. It is also incorporated into the 57-kDa protein expressed by the amino-terminal PK expression vector. The myristyl moiety is linked through an amide bond. The basic protein polylysine stimulates the kinase activity and alters its divalent cation requirements resulting in 20- to 40-fold stimulation in the presence of 0.1 mM Mn2+. The PK activity is inhibited by antibody to synthetic peptides corresponding to residues 355-369 and 13-26, respectively, located within, and amino-terminal to, the predicted PK catalytic domain.
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PMID:Myristylation and polylysine-mediated activation of the protein kinase domain of the large subunit of herpes simplex virus type 2 ribonucleotide reductase (ICP10). 217 Dec 4

An enzyme activity in rat brain, capable of catalysing the transfer of myristic acid from myristoyl CoA to the amino terminus of synthetic peptides, has been characterised. The synthetic peptides used as substrates were one based on the N-terminal eight amino acids of cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase and another hexadecapeptide based on the N-terminal sequence of p60src. This N-myristoyl transferase (NMT) activity, which is both peptide dependent and heat labile, occurs in rat brain at levels at least three times those found in other rat tissues. In the presence of both ATP and CoA the enzyme catalysed the transfer of myristic acid, but not palmitic acid, specifically to the N-terminal glycine of the peptides. Both peptide substrates exhibited Michaelis-Menten kinetics yielding Km values of 100 microM and 60 microM, and Vmax values of 5 and 14.8 pmol/min/mg for the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase peptide and src-derived peptides, respectively. The majority of the NMT activity was present in the cytosol of the brain homogenates, and there was evidence of an NMT inhibitory activity in both the particulate fraction of brain homogenates and in brain cytosol. NMT activity could also be demonstrated in the 100,000 g supernatant of lysed synaptosomes, and the synaptosomal membranes also exhibited an inhibitory activity on the soluble enzyme. Different brain areas exhibited different levels of the N-myristoyl transferase activity and there was a fivefold difference in the activity found in the most active area, the hippocampus, compared to spinal cord.
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PMID:Characterisation of a myristoyl CoA:glycylpeptide N-myristoyl transferase activity in rat brain: subcellular and regional distribution. 229 3

Protein N-myristoylation refers to the covalent attachment of a myristoyl group (C14:0), via amide linkage, to the NH2-terminal glycine residue of certain cellular and viral proteins. Myristoyl-CoA:protein N-myristoyltransferase (NMT) catalyzes this cotranslational modification. We have developed a system for studying the substrate requirements and biological effects of protein N-myristoylation as well as NMT structure-activity relationships. Expression of the yeast NMT1 gene in Escherichia coli, a bacterium that has no endogenous NMT activity, results in production of the intact 53-kDa NMT polypeptide as well as a truncated polypeptide derived from proteolytic removal of its NH2-terminal 39 amino acids. Each E. coli-synthesized NMT species has fatty acid and peptide substrate specificities that are indistinguishable from those of NMT recovered from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, suggesting that the NH2-terminal domain of this enzyme is not required for its catalytic activity. By using a dual plasmid system, N-myristoylation of a mammalian protein was reconstituted in E. coli by simultaneous expression of the yeast NMT1 gene and a murine cDNA encoding the catalytic (C) subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PK-A). The fatty acid specificity of N-myristoylation was preserved in this system: [9,10(n)-3H]myristate but not [9,10(n)3H]palmitate was efficiently linked to Gly-1 of the C subunit. [13,14(n)-3H]10-Propoxydecanoic acid, a heteroatom-containing analog of myristic acid with reduced hydrophobicity but similar chain length, was an effective alternative substrate for NMT that also could be incorporated into the C subunit of PK-A. Such analogs have recently been shown to inhibit replication of certain retroviruses that depend upon linkage of a myristoyl group to their gag polyprotein precursors (e.g., the Pr55gag of human immunodeficiency virus type 1). A major advantage of the bacterial system over eukaryotic systems is the absence of endogenous NMT and substrates, providing a more straightforward way of preparing myristoylated, analog-substituted, and nonmyristoylated forms of a given protein for comparison of their structural and functional properties. The system should facilitate screening of enzyme inhibitors as well as alternative NMT fatty acid substrates for their ability to be incorporated into a specific target protein. Our experimental system may prove useful for recapitulating other eukaryotic protein modifications in E. coli so that structure-activity relationships of modifying enzymes and their substrates can be more readily assessed.
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PMID:Protein N-myristoylation in Escherichia coli: reconstitution of a eukaryotic protein modification in bacteria. 240 21

The catalytic of subunit of cAMP-dependent protein kinase is acylated at its NH2 terminus with myristic acid. This type of modification is thought to mediate the association of proteins with lipid bilayers, yet the catalytic subunit shows no preferential binding with membranes. We investigated the role of C subunit myristylation using a cDNA expression vector in which the acylated NH2-terminal Gly was mutagenized to Ala. Protein synthesized in NIH 3T3 cells from this modified gene did not incorporate [3H]myristate. However, the kinase activity of this altered C subunit on a synthetic substrate was not diminished, nor was its ability to form holoenzyme with regulatory subunit. Non-myristylated C subunit also regulated several biological processes occurring in specific subcellular compartments; mutant C subunit stimulated dramatic cell shape changes controlled by the cytoskeleton, restored steroidogenesis in the mitochondria of defective adrenocortical cells, and effectively induced the transcription of genes in the nucleus. These results suggest that myristylation is nonessential for C subunit conformation and enzyme activation, and is not required for C subunit interaction with other proteins in regions where C is thought to localize upon activation. The purpose for NH2-terminal myristylation of this important signal-transducing enzyme remains an enigma.
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PMID:A mutation in the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A prevents myristylation but does not inhibit biological activity. 258 9

We have studied protein acylation in neutrophils of guinea pigs using [3H]myristate. A large number of neutrophil proteins were acylated with exogenously added myristic acid. The myristoylation was detected on 110, 77, 56, 54, 52, 42, and 37 kDa proteins. These myristoylations were stronger in peripheral blood than in peritoneal cells. Myristic acid was found to be covalently linked by an amid bond to these proteins since the proteins were resistant to boiling, chloroform/methanol and hydroxylamine treatment. Most myristoylated proteins appeared to be associated with the membrane fraction, while some of the proteins such as 77 kDa one was distributed also in the cytoplasm and translocated from the cytoplasm to the plasma membrane by stimulation. Lysozyme was myristoylated in vitro by the N-hydroxysuccinimide ester of myristic acid. The myristoylated lysozyme had an ability to be associated with phospholipid liposomes, and the membrane-associated lysozyme became a substrate of the rat brain Ca2+- and phospholipid dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C). These results indicate that myristoylation in neutrophil proteins may have an important role in metabolic regulation through their membrane association.
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PMID:Myristoylation of neutrophil proteins and their biological characteristics. 285 65


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