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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)
14-3-3
proteins may function as adapter or scaffold proteins in signal transduction pathways. We reported previously that several
14-3-3
isotypes bind to protein kinase C (PKC)-zeta and facilitate coupling of PKC-zeta to
Raf-1
[van der Hoeven, van der Wal, Ruurs, van Dijk and van Blitterswijk (2000) Biochem. J. 345, 297-306], an event that boosts the mitogen-activated protein kinase (ERK) pathway in Rat-1 fibroblasts. The present work investigated whether bound
14-3-3
would affect PKC-zeta activity. Using recombinant
14-3-3
proteins and purified PKC-zeta in a convenient, newly developed in vitro kinase assay, we found that
14-3-3
proteins stimulated PKC-zeta activity in a dose-dependent fashion up to approx. 2.5-fold. Activation of PKC-zeta by
14-3-3
isotypes was unrelated to their mutual affinity, estimated by co-immunoprecipitation from COS cell lysates. Accordingly, PKC-zeta with a defective (point-mutated)
14-3-3
-binding site, showed the same
14-3-3
-stimulated activity as wild-type PKC-zeta. As 14-13-3 proteins are acidic, we tested several other acidic proteins, which turned out to stimulate PKC-zeta activity in a similar fashion, whereas neutral or basic proteins did not. These effects were not restricted to the atypical PKC-zeta, but were also found for classical PKC. Together, the results suggest that the stimulation of PKC activity by
14-3-3
proteins is non-specific and solely due to the acidic nature of these proteins, quite similar to that known for acidic lipids.
...
PMID:Protein kinase C activation by acidic proteins including 14-3-3. 1076 83
The onset of mitosis is controlled by the cyclin dependent kinase Cdc2p. Cdc2p activity is controlled through the balance of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of tyrosine-15 (Y15) by the Wee1p kinase and Cdc25p phosphatase. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, detection of DNA damage in G(2) activates a checkpoint that prevents entry into mitosis through the maintenance of Y15 phosphorylation of Cdc2p, thus ensuring DNA repair precedes chromosome segregation. The
protein kinase
Chk1p is the endpoint of this checkpoint pathway. We have previously reported that overexpression of Chk1p causes a wee1(+)-dependent G(2) arrest, and this or irradiation leads to hyperphosphorylation of Wee1p. Moreover, Chk1p directly phosphorylates Wee1p in vitro. These data suggested that Wee1p is a key target of Chk1p action in checkpoint control. However, cells lacking wee1(+) are checkpoint proficient and sustained Chk1p overexpression arrests cell cycle progression independently of Wee1p. Therefore, up-regulation of Wee1p alone cannot enforce a checkpoint arrest. Chk1p can also phosphorylate Cdc25p in vitro. These phosphorylation events are thought to promote the interaction with
14-3-3
proteins the cytoplasmic retention of the
14-3-3
/Cdc25p complexes. However, we show here that the G(2) DNA damage checkpoint is intact in cells that regulate mitotic entry independently of Cdc25p. Further, these cells are still sensitive to Chk1p-mediated arrest, and so down-regulation of Cdc25p is also insufficient to regulate checkpoint arrest. Conversely, inactivation of both wee1(+) and cdc25(+ )abolishes checkpoint control. We also show that activation of the G(2) DNA damage checkpoint induces a transient increase in Wee1p levels. We conclude that the G(2) DNA damage checkpoint simultaneously signals via both up-regulation of Wee1p and down-regulation of Cdc25p, thus providing a double-lock mechanism to ensure cell cycle arrest and genomic stability.
...
PMID:The G(2) DNA damage checkpoint targets both Wee1 and Cdc25. 1076 4
Wee1
protein kinase
plays an important regulatory role in cell cycle progression. It inhibits Cdc-2 activity by phosphorylating Tyr15 and arrests cells at G2-M phase. In an attempt to understand Wee1 regulation during cell cycle, yeast two-hybrid screening was used to identify Wee1-binding protein(s). Five of the eight positive clones identified encode 14-3-3beta. In vivo binding assay in 293 cells showed that both full-length and NH2-terminal truncated Wee1 bind with 14-3-3beta. The 14-3-3beta binding site was mapped to a COOH-terminal consensus motif, RSVSLT (codons 639 to 646). Binding with 14-3-3beta increases the protein level of full-length Wee1 but not of the truncated Wee1. Accompanying the protein level increases, the kinase activity of Wee1 also increases when coexpressed with 14-3-3beta. Increased Wee1 protein level/enzymatic activity is accountable, at least in part, to an increased Wee1 protein half-life when coexpressed with 14-3-3beta. The protein half-life of the NH2-terminal truncated Wee1 is much longer than that of the full-length protein and is not affected by 14-3-3beta cotransfection. Biologically, 14-3-3beta/Wee1 coexpression increases the cell population at G2-M phase. Thus, Wee1 binding with 14-3-3beta increases its biochemical activity as well as its biological function. The finding reveals a novel mechanism by which
14-3-3
regulates G2-M arrest and suggests that the NH2-terminal domain of Wee1 contains a negative regulatory sequence that determines Wee1 stability.
...
PMID:Binding of 14-3-3beta to the carboxyl terminus of Wee1 increases Wee1 stability, kinase activity, and G2-M cell population. 1077 38
The Bcl-2 family protein BAD promotes apoptosis by binding through its BH3 domain to Bcl-x(L) and related cell death suppressors. When BAD is phosphorylated on either Ser(112) or Ser(136), it forms a complex with
14-3-3
in the cytosol and no longer interacts with Bcl-x(L) at the mitochondria. Here we show that phosphorylation of a distinct site Ser(155), which is at the center of the BAD BH3 domain, directly suppressed the pro-apoptotic function of BAD by eliminating its affinity for Bcl-x(L). Protein kinase A functioned as a BAD Ser(155) kinase both in vitro and in cells. BAD Ser(155) was found to be a major site of phosphorylation induced following stimulation by growth factors and prevented by
protein kinase A
inhibitors but not by inhibitors of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt pathway. Growth factors inhibited BAD-induced apoptosis in both a Ser(112)/Ser(136)- and a Ser(155)-dependent fashion. Thus, growth factors engage an anti-apoptotic signaling pathway that inactivates BAD by direct modification of its BH3 cell death effector domain.
...
PMID:Growth factors inactivate the cell death promoter BAD by phosphorylation of its BH3 domain on Ser155. 1083 73
Neurofibrillary tangles associated with Alzheimer's disease are composed mainly of paired helical filaments that are formed by the aggregation of abnormally phosphorylated microtubule-associated protein tau.
14-3-3
, a highly conserved protein family that exists as seven isoforms and regulates diverse cellular processes is present in neurofibrillary tangles (Layfield, R., Fergusson, J., Aitken, A., Lowe, J., Landon, M., Mayer, R. J. (1996) Neurosci. Lett. 209, 57-60). The role of
14-3-3
in Alzheimer's disease pathogenesis is not known. In this study, we found that the 14-3-3zeta isoform is associated with tau in brain extract and profoundly stimulates
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
catalyzed in vitro phosphorylation on Ser(262)/Ser(356) located within the microtubule-binding region of tau. 14-3-3zeta binds to both phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated tau, and the binding site is located within the microtubule-binding region of tau. From brain extract, 14-3-3zeta co-purifies with microtubules, and tubulin blocks 14-3-3zeta-tau binding. Among four
14-3-3
isoforms tested, beta and zeta but not gamma and epsilon associate with tau. Our data suggest that 14-3-3zeta is a tau protein effector and may be involved in the abnormal tau phosphorylation occurring during Alzheimer's disease ontogeny.
...
PMID:14-3-3zeta is an effector of tau protein phosphorylation. 1084 38
Despite
14-3-3
proteins being implicated in the control of the eukaryotic cell cycle, metabolism, cell signalling and survival, little is known about the global regulation or functions of the phosphorylation-dependent binding of 14-3-3s to diverse target proteins. We identified Arabidopsis cytosolic proteins that bound 14-3-3s in competition with a
14-3-3
-binding phosphopeptide, including nitrate reductase, glyceraldehyde- 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, a calcium-dependent
protein kinase
, sucrose-phosphate synthase (SPS) and glutamyl-tRNA synthetase. Remarkably, in cells starved of sugars or fed with non-metabolizable glucose analogues, all
14-3-3
binding was lost and the target proteins were selectively cleaved into proteolytic fragments.
14-3-3
binding reappeared after several hours of re-feeding with sugars. Starvation-induced degradation was blocked by 5-amino imidazole-4-carboxamide riboside (which is converted to an AMP-mimetic) or the protease inhibitor MG132 (Cbz-leu-leu-leucinal). Extracts of sugar-starved (but not sugar-fed) Arabidopsis cells contained an ATP-independent, MG132-sensitive, neutral protease that cleaved Arabidopsis SPS, and the mammalian
14-3-3
-regulated transcription factor, FKHR. Cleavage of SPS and phosphorylated FKHR in vitro was blocked by binding to 14-3-3s. The finding that 14-3-3s participate in a nutrient-sensing pathway controlling cleavage of many targets may underlie the effects of these proteins on plant development.
...
PMID:14-3-3s regulate global cleavage of their diverse binding partners in sugar-starved Arabidopsis cells. 1085 32
The interaction of BAD (Bcl-2/Bcl-X(L)-antagonist, causing cell death) with Bcl-2/Bcl-X(L) is thought to neutralize the anti-apoptotic effects of the latter proteins, and may represent one of the mechanisms by which BAD promotes apoptosis. A variety of survival signals are reported to induce the phosphorylation of BAD at Ser(112) or Ser(136), triggering its dissociation from Bcl-2/Bcl-X(L). Ser(136) is thought to be phosphorylated by protein kinase B (PKB, also called Akt), which is activated when cells are exposed to agonists that stimulate phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K). In contrast, Ser(112) is reported to be phosphorylated by mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase-activated
protein kinase
-1 (MAPKAP-K1, also called RSK) and by
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
(
PKA
). Here we identify Ser(155) as a third phosphorylation site on BAD. We find that Ser(155) is phosphorylated preferentially by
PKA
in vitro and is the only residue in BAD that becomes phosphorylated when cells are exposed to cAMP-elevating agents. The phosphorylation of BAD at Ser(155) prevents it from binding to Bcl-X(L) and promotes its interaction with
14-3-3
proteins. We also provide further evidence that MAPKAP-K1 mediates the phosphorylation of Ser(112) in response to agonists that activate the classical MAP kinase pathway. However insulin-like growth factor 1, a potent activator of PI3K and PKB does not increase the phosphorylation of Ser(136) in BAD-transfected HEK-293 cells, and nor is the basal level of Ser(136) phosphorylation suppressed by inhibitors of PI3K.
...
PMID:Regulation of BAD by cAMP-dependent protein kinase is mediated via phosphorylation of a novel site, Ser155. 1088 Mar 54
The dynamic balance between polymerization and depolymerization of microtubules is critical for cells to enter and exit mitosis, and drugs that disrupt this balance, such as taxol, colchicine, and nocodazole, arrest the cell cycle in mitosis. Although the Raf/MEK/MAPK pathway can be activated by these drugs, its role in mitosis has not been addressed. Here, we characterize activation of Raf/MEK/MAPK by nocodazole when mitosis is induced. We find that at early time points (up to 3 h) in nocodazole induction, Raf/MEK/MAPK is activated, and inhibition of MAPK activation by a MEK inhibitor, PD98059 or U0126, reduces the number of cells entering mitosis by creating a block at G(2). At later time points and in mitosis, activation of MEK/MAPK is severely inhibited, even though
Raf-1
activity remains high and can be further increased by growth factor. This inhibition is reversed when cells are released from metaphase and enter G(0)/G(1) phase. In addition, we find that binding of
Raf-1
to
14-3-3
is progressively induced by nocodazole, reaching a maximum in mitosis, and that this binding is necessary to maintain mitotic
Raf-1
activity. Our present study indicates that activation of the Raf/MEK/MAPK pathway is necessary for the G(2)/M progression.
...
PMID:Raf-1/MEK/MAPK pathway is necessary for the G2/M transition induced by nocodazole. 1088 85
14-3-3
proteins play a regulatory role and participate in both signal transduction and checkpoint control pathways.
14-3-3
proteins bind phosphoserine ligands, such as
Raf-1
kinase and Bad, by recognizing the phosphorylated consensus motif, Arg-Ser-Xaa-pSer-Xaa-Pro (where 'Xaa' represents 'any residue', and 'pSer' is 'phosphoserine'). However,
14-3-3
proteins must bind unphosphorylated ligands, such as glycoprotein Ibalpha and Pseudomonas aeruginosa exoenzyme S (ExoS), since it has been suggested that specific residues of
14-3-3
proteins are required for activation of ExoS. Furthermore, an unphosphorylated peptide derived from a phage display library inhibited the binding of both ExoS and
Raf-1
to
14-3-3
, and bound within the same conserved amphipathic groove on the surface of
14-3-3
as the Raf-derived phosphopeptide (pS-Raf-259). In the present study we identify the interaction site on ExoS for
14-3-3
, and show that ExoS and
14-3-3
do indeed interact in vivo. In addition, we show that this interaction is critical for the ADP-ribosylation of Ras by ExoS, both in vitro and in vivo. Loss of the
14-3-3
binding site on ExoS results in an ExoS molecule that is unable to efficiently inactivate Ras, and displays reduced killing activity.
...
PMID:14-3-3 proteins are required for the inhibition of Ras by exoenzyme S. 1090 29
WPK4 is a wheat
protein kinase
related to the yeast
protein kinase
SNF1, which plays a role in catabolite repression. To identify proteins involved in signal transduction through WPK4, we performed yeast two-hybrid screens and isolated two cDNA clones designated as TaWIN1 and TaWIN2. Both encode
14-3-3
proteins that, upon autophosphorylation, bind the C-terminal regulatory domain of WPK4. Mutational analysis through amino acid substitution revealed that TaWIN1 and TaWIN2 primarily bind WPK4 through phosphoserines at the positions 388 and 418, both located in the C-terminal region. Mutations in the conserved residues of the TaWIN1 amphipathic groove impaired the ability of TaWIN1 to bind to WPK4. A screen for in vitro phosphorylation of proteins involved in nutrient metabolism revealed a putative WPK4 substrate, nitrate reductase; its hinge 1 region was efficiently phosphorylated by WPK4. Subsequent far Western blots showed that it specifically bound TaWIN1. Since nitrate reductase has been shown to be inactivated by phosphorylation upon
14-3-3
binding, the present findings strongly suggest that WPK4 is the
protein kinase
responsible for controlling the nitrogen metabolic pathway, assembling the nitrate reductase and
14-3-3
complex through its phosphorylation specificity.
...
PMID:Specific binding of a 14-3-3 protein to autophosphorylated WPK4, an SNF1-related wheat protein kinase, and to WPK4-phosphorylated nitrate reductase. 1091 58
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