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Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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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)
Filamin is a high molecular weight actin-binding protein found in large quantities in smooth muscle and other
non-muscle
cells. We have studied the phosphorylation of filamin in a mammalian smooth muscle, the guinea pig vas deferens. Intact vas deferens incorporated [32P]orthophosphate into filamin. Incubation of particulate fractions of vas deferens with [gamma-32P]ATP resulted in 32P-labeling of filamin. Cyclic AMP stimulated this phosphorylation, whereas cyclic GMP and Ca2+ had no effect. Purified vas deferens filamin can be phosphorylated by purified
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
. We have compared cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP effects on phosphorylation in smooth muscle. Cyclic GMP stimulated phosphorylation of two particulate proteins, G-I (Mr = 130,000) a protein previously described by Casnellie, J. E., and Greengard, P. (1974) Proc. Natl. Acad, Sci. U.S.A. 71, 1891-1895 and G-III (Mr = 240,000). Both proteins and the kinase responsible for their phosphorylation appear to be membrane-bound. Phosphorylation of both proteins is stimulated by cyclic GMP (Ka = 3 x 10(-8) M), cyclic AMP (Ka = 3 x 10(-7) M), and to a lesser degree by Ca2+. In contrast, filamin phosphorylation is due to a soluble kinase stimulated only by cyclic AMP (Ka = 3 x 10(-7) M) and not by cyclic GMP or Ca2+.
...
PMID:Cyclic AMP-dependent phosphorylation of filamin in mammalian smooth muscle. 20 8
We have purified the high molecular weight actin-binding protein, filamin from guinea pig vas deferens. We find this mammalian filamin is very similar to chicken gizzard filamin in subunit molecular weight, amnio acid composition, actin-binding properties, immunological cross-reactivity, and the ability to be phosphorylated by
cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase
. Anti-filamin antibodies cross-react with a high molecular weight macrophage actin-binding protein, and with a high molecular weight protein in platelets and fibroblasts. Furthermore like filamin, these proteins are also phosphorylated and cyclic AMP stimulates their phosphorylation. Anti-filamin antibodies do not cross-react with the erythrocyte membrane protein spectrin or with high molecular weight proteins in brain extracts. We conclude that filamin from avian and mammalian smooth muscle are very similar proteins and furthermore that many, but not all,
non-muscle
cells contain a protein closely related to filamin.
...
PMID:Purification of mammalian filamin. Similarity to high molecular weight actin-binding protein in macrophages, platelets, fibroblasts, and other tissues. 64 Oct 65
The Physarum EGTA-resistant actin-fragmin complex, previously named cap 42(a+b), is phosphorylated in the actin subunit by an endogenous kinase [Maruta and Isenberg (1983) J. Biol. Chem., 258, 10151-10158]. This kinase has been purified and characterized. It is an 80 kDa monomeric enzyme, unaffected by known kinase regulators. Staurosporine acts as a potent inhibitor. The actin-fragmin complex is the preferred substrate. The phosphorylation is inhibited by micromolar Ca2+ concentrations, but only in the presence of additional actin. Polymerized actin (vertebrate muscle and
non-muscle
isoforms) and actin complexes with various actin-binding proteins are poorly phosphorylated. The heterotrimer consisting of two actins and one fragmin, which is formed from cap 42(a+b) and actin in the presence of micromolar concentrations of Ca2+, is also a poor substrate. From the other substrates tested, only histones were significantly phosphorylated, in particular histone H1. In the same manner,
casein kinase I
could also phosphorylate the actin-fragmin complex. The major phosphorylation site in actin is Thr203. A second minor site is Thr202. These residues constitute one of the contact sites for DNase I [Kabsch et al. (1990) Nature, 347, 37-44] and are also part of one of the predicted actin-actin contact sites in the F-actin model [Holmes et al. (1990) Nature, 347, 44-49].
...
PMID:Physarum actin is phosphorylated as the actin-fragmin complex at residues Thr203 and Thr202 by a specific 80 kDa kinase. 132 66
The ability of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) to cause diarrhoea in man is associated with the formation of characteristic histopathological lesions in small-intestine enterocytes, with gross cytoskeletal damage and loss of brush-border microvilli. Investigation of enterocyte protein phosphorylation in response to EPEC infection showed that the major phosphorylated protein, identified by immunoprecipitation, is myosin light-chain--an important cytoskeletal protein known to affect actin organisation in
non-muscle
cells. High enterocyte concentrations of actin and myosin were observed at sites of bacterial infection. Our findings indicate that enterocyte cytoskeletal changes in response to EPEC may be directly triggered by bacterial adherence through signal transduction pathways that stimulate
protein kinase
activity.
...
PMID:Intestinal epithelial cell protein phosphorylation in enteropathogenic Escherichia coli diarrhoea. 134 80
The heterodimer complex of calmodulin (CaM) and the
protein kinase
catalytic subunit of myosin light chain kinase from vertebrate smooth muscle and
non-muscle
tissues (sm/nmMLCK) is one of the most extensively characterized CaM-regulated enzyme complexes and it has an established in vivo role in the transduction of calcium signals into biological responses. We have used a combination of approaches to the study of CaM and sm/nmMLCK in order to derive initial insight into the key features of each protein and of the CaM-MLCK heterodimeric complex that are involved in protein-protein and calcium-protein recognition and regulation of enzyme activity. On-going studies are described here that include site-specific mutagenesis, fluorescence spectroscopy, enzymology and peptide analog analysis. These and previous results indicate that: (1), both electrostatic and hydrophobic features are important in the functionally correct interactions between CaM and MLCK; (2), even the interactions between CaM and peptide analogs of the CaM binding site of MLCK are heterogeneous and non-trivial in nature; (3), amino-acid residues that have been conserved in CaM across millions of years of evolution and that are conserved in CaMs with quantitative MLCK activator activity can be mutated without any detectable effect on activity and (4), structures different from the prototypical EF-hand domain of CaM can have similar calcium-binding activity in the presence of a CaM binding structure.
...
PMID:The heterodimer calmodulin: myosin light-chain kinase as a prototype vertebrate calcium signal transduction complex. 142 Mar 36
The human trk oncogene (originally identified in a colon carcinoma) was activated by a genetic rearrangement which resulted in replacement of the extracellular ligand-binding domain of the proto-trk transmembrane receptor by
non-muscle
tropomyosin sequences. The product of the trk oncogene, a protein of 70 kDa (p70trk), possesses tyrosine-specific
protein kinase
activity, is autophosphorylated in vitro on tyrosine and is phosphorylated on serine, threonine and tyrosine residues in trk-transformed cells. By site-directed mutagenesis of trk oncogene cDNA, the codon for lysine (367) at the putative ATP-binding site was changed to that for methionine and the codons for tyrosines (503 and 504) at the putative autophosphorylation sites were changed to those for phenylalanine. Replacement of Lys-367 by methionine results in a biologically inactive, kinase-negative mutant. Phe-ala mutants of trk showed drastically reduced ability to induce morphologic transformation, anchorage-independent growth and tumorigenicity in mouse NIH3T3 cells and showed reduced in vitro tyrosine kinase activity when assayed by autophosphorylation and phosphorylation of histone as exogenous substrate. The present study indicates the role of these specific conserved residues in regulating the biochemical and biological properties of p70trk oncoprotein.
...
PMID:Mutational analysis of conserved residues in the tyrosine kinase domain of the human trk oncogene. 183 50
In this article we summarize our recent experiments studying the phosphorylation of vertebrate myosin heavy chains by protein kinase C and
casein kinase II
. Protein kinase C phosphorylates vertebrate
non-muscle
myosin heavy chains both in vitro and in intact cells. A single serine residue near the end of the helical portion of the myosin rod is the only site phosphorylated in a variety of vertebrate nonmuscle myosin heavy chains. There does not appear to be a site for protein kinase C phosphorylation in vertebrate smooth muscle myosin heavy chains. Casein kinase II phosphorylates a single serine residue located near the carboxyl terminus of the 204 x 10(3) Mr smooth muscle myosin heavy chain in vitro as well as in cultured smooth muscle cells. It does not phosphorylate the 200 x 10(3) Mr smooth muscle myosin heavy chain. However, the site is present in vertebrate nonmuscle myosin heavy chains. The 204 x 10(3) Mr myosin heavy chain of embryonic chicken gizzard smooth muscle is exceptional in not containing a site for
casein kinase II
phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of vertebrate smooth muscle and nonmuscle myosin heavy chains in vitro and in intact cells. 188 59
Caldesmon is a calmodulin- and actin-binding protein present in both smooth and
non-muscle
tissue. The present study demonstrates that platelet caldesmon is a substrate for
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
(
protein kinase A
). Purified platelet caldesmon has an apparent molecular mass of 82 kDa on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels and can be phosphorylated in vitro by the catalytic subunit of
protein kinase A
to a level of 2 mol of phosphate/mol of caldesmon. Phosphorylation of caldesmon by
protein kinase A
results in a shift in the apparent molecular mass of the protein to 86 kDa. When caldesmon was immunoprecipitated from intact platelets treated with prostacyclin (PGI2) the same shift in apparent molecular mass of caldesmon was observed. Comparison of two-dimensional tryptic phosphopeptide maps of caldesmon phosphorylated in vitro by
protein kinase A
with caldesmon immunoprecipitated from intact platelets verified that
protein kinase A
was responsible for the observed increase in caldesmon phosphorylation in PGI2-treated platelets. The present study demonstrates that although caldesmon is basally phosphorylated in the intact platelet, activation of
protein kinase A
by PGI2 results in the significant incorporation of phosphate into two new sites. In addition, the effects of phorbol ester, collagen, and thrombin on caldesmon phosphorylation were also examined. Although phorbol ester treatment results in a significant increase in caldesmon phosphorylation apparently by protein kinase C, treatment of intact platelets with thrombin or collagen does not result in an increase in caldesmon phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Caldesmon phosphorylation in intact human platelets by cAMP-dependent protein kinase and protein kinase C. 205 Jun 83
The first primary structure for a nonmuscle myosin light chain kinase (nmMLCK) has been determined by elucidation of the cDNA sequence encoding the
protein kinase
from chicken embryo fibroblasts, and insight into the molecular mechanism of calmodulin (CaM) recognition and activation has been obtained by the use of site-specific mutagenesis and suppressor mutant analysis. Treatment of chicken and mouse fibroblasts with antisense oligodeoxynucleotides based on the cDNA sequence results in an apparent decrease in MLCK levels, an altered morphology reminiscent of that seen in v-src-transformed cells, and a possible effect on cell proliferation. nmMLCK is distinct from and larger than smooth muscle MLCK (smMLCK), although their extended DNA sequence identity is suggestive of a close genetic relationship not found with skeletal muscle MLCK. The analysis of 20 mutant MLCKs indicates that the autoinhibitory and CaM recognition activities are centered in distinct but functionally coupled amino acid sequences (residues 1,068-1,080 and 1,082-1,101, respectively). Analysis of enzyme chimeras, random mutations, inverted sequences, and point mutations in the 1,082-1,101 region demonstrates its functional importance for CaM recognition but not autoinhibition. In contrast, certain mutations in the 1,068-1,080 region result in a constitutively active MLCK that still binds CaM. These results suggest that CaM/
protein kinase
complexes use similar structural themes to transduce calcium signals into selective biological responses, demonstrate a direct link between nmMLCK and
non-muscle
cell function, and provide a firm basis for genetic studies and analyses of how nmMLCK is involved in development and cell proliferation.
...
PMID:Use of DNA sequence and mutant analyses and antisense oligodeoxynucleotides to examine the molecular basis of nonmuscle myosin light chain kinase autoinhibition, calmodulin recognition, and activity. 220 34
As long ago as 1970, it was proposed that Ca2+ can act as a 'second messenger' like cAMP (Rasmussen & Nagata, 1979). The recognition that calmodulin is a major Ca2+ binding protein in
non-muscle
cells has prompted the suggestion that calmodulin may serve an analogous role for Ca2+ to that served by
protein kinase
for cAMP (Wang & Waisman, 1979), or at least to the regulatory subunit of the cyclic nucleotide-dependent kinases. It is becoming clear that calmodulin probably does play a role in stimulus secretion coupling in endocrine cells. Nevertheless, some of the experimental approaches which have led to this rather tentative conclusion do induce some doubts, as we have attempted to indicate. Many of the pharmacological agents used in the studies cited in this review are not specific in their interaction with calmodulin. For example, the phenothiazines also inhibit phospholipid-sensitive
protein kinase
. The introduction of more specific drugs, such as the naphthalene sulphonamides, may lead to a clearer picture of the role of calmodulin in hormone secretion. Relationships probably exist between cyclic nucleotides, calcium, calmodulin, phosphatidylinositol (PI) turnover and phospholipids in the overall control of the secretory process (see Fig. 1). There is considerable evidence that calcium is the primary internal signal initiating exocytosis of hormone from many glands. However, it appears that cyclic nucleotides can modulate the calcium signal either positively or negatively and it is possible that cAMP and calcium can separately activate secretion. The presence of both calmodulin-activated adenylate cyclase and cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase in the same tissue would appear to suggest either spatial or temporal control mechanisms or that (diagram; see text) the calcium requirement for calmodulin activation differs between the two enzymes. The true explanation is probably far more complex and involves perhaps as yet unknown factors that can differentially influence the activity of calmodulin itself in membranes and in cytosol. Berridge (1982) and Rasmussen (1980) give detailed accounts and review current hypotheses regarding relationships between the cyclic nucleotide and calcium second messenger systems. The various possible interrelationships of the putative messengers have been encompassed by the term 'Synarchic regulation' (Rasmussen, 1980). These concepts and the elucidation of the mechanisms by which cyclic AMP and calcium are involved in the control of secretion from particular cell types will make fascinating reading over the next few years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Calcium calmodulin and hormone secretion. 299 10
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