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Query: EC:2.7.11.22 (
cdc2
)
8,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cyclin-dependent, proline-directed protein kinases normally function to execute critical cell cycle transitions; abnormal expression and/or viral subversion of the positive (cyclins) and negative (Pic1) regulatory subunits may contribute to neoplastic transformation and tumorigenesis. In addition to the binding of regulatory subunits, the enzymatic activities of the cyclin-dependent kinases, Cdc2 and
Cdk2
, are tightly regulated by site-specific protein phosphorylation events. Recent studies have identified a critical phosphorylation site (Thr-161) located within kinase Subdomain VIII that is necessary for Cdc2 activation, and enzymatic activities capable of carrying out this heterologous phosphorylation event have been detected in both Xenopus oocytes and human somatic cells. In this report, we characterize by molecular cloning a human homologue of the Xenopus Cdk-activating kinase (Cak, encoded by MO15); the novel human gene is designated (HS)
CAK1
. While only 75% identity is observed at the nucleotide level, the deduced amino acid sequence encoded by (HS)
CAK1
is approximately 87% identical to that of the Xenopus MO15 gene in corresponding regions. The catalytic domain of (HS)
Cak1
, defined by conserved kinase Subdomains I through XI, exhibits considerable homology with (HS)Cdc2, suggesting that this kinase cascade involves closely related enzymes. Immunological studies with anti-Cak antibodies confirm the presence of specific immunoreactivity in highly purified preparations of the human Cdc2-activating kinase. The molecular characterization of (HS)
CAK1
should facilitate studies of its physiological regulation, as well as its potential utility as a target for therapeutic intervention in the treatment of proliferative disorders.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning of the human CAK1 gene encoding a cyclin-dependent kinase-activating kinase. 820 56
Activation of the cyclin-dependent kinases to promote cell cycle progression requires their association with cyclins as well as phosphorylation of a threonine (residue 161 in human p34cdc2). This phosphorylation is carried out by CAK, the Cdk-activating kinase. We have purified and cloned CAK from S. cerevisiae. Unlike CAKs from other organisms,
Cak1p
is active as a monomer, has full activity when expressed in E. coli, and is not a component of the basal transcription factor, TFIIH. A temperature-sensitive mutation in
CAK1
confers a G2 delay accompanied by low
Cdc28p
protein kinase activity and shows genetic interactions with altered expression of the gene for the major mitotic cyclin, CLB2. Our data raise the intriguing possibility that p40MO15-cyclin H-MAT1, identified as the predominant CAK in vertebrate cell extracts, may not function as a physiological CAK.
...
PMID:The Cdk-activating kinase (CAK) from budding yeast. 875 10
Progress through the cell cycle is governed by the cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), the activation of which requires phosphorylation by the CDK-activating kinase (CAK). In vertebrates, CAK is a trimeric enzyme containing CDK7, cyclin H, and MAT1. CAK from the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was identified as an unusual 44-kilodalton protein kinase,
Cak1
, that is only distantly related to CDKs.
Cak1
accounted for most CAK activity in yeast cell lysates, and its activity was constant throughout the cell cycle. The
CAK1
gene was essential for cell viability. Thus, the major CAK in S. cerevisiae is distinct from the vertebrate enzyme, suggesting that budding yeast and vertebrates may have evolved different mechanisms of CDK activation.
...
PMID:A cyclin-dependent kinase-activating kinase (CAK) in budding yeast unrelated to vertebrate CAK. 878 Dec 34
The
CAK1
gene encodes the major CDK-activating kinase (CAK) in budding yeast and is required for activation of
Cdc28p
for cell cycle progression from G2 to M phase. Here we describe the isolation of a mutant allele of
CAK1
in a synthetic lethal screen with the Sit4 protein phosphatase. Analysis of several different cak1 mutants shows that although the G2 to M transition appears most sensitive to loss of
Cak1p
function,
Cak1p
is also required for activation of
Cdc28p
for progression from G1 into S phase. Further characterization of these mutants suggests that, unlike the CAK identified from higher eukaryotes,
Cak1p
of budding yeast may not play a role in general transcription. Finally, although
Cak1
protein levels and in vitro protein kinase activity do not fluctuate during the cell cycle, at least a fraction of
Cak1p
associates with higher molecular weight proteins, which may be important for its in vivo function.
...
PMID:The Cak1p protein kinase is required at G1/S and G2/M in the budding yeast cell cycle. 928 68
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, entry into S phase requires the activation of the protein kinase
Cdc28p
through binding with cyclin Clb5p or Clb6p, as well as the destruction of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor Sic1p. Mutants that are defective in this activation event arrest after START, with unreplicated DNA and multiple, elongated buds. These mutants include cells defective in CDC4, CDC34 or CDC53, as well as cells that have lost all CLB function. Here we describe mutations in another gene,
CAK1
, that lead to a similar arrest. Cells that are defective in
CAK1
are inviable and arrest with a single nucleus and multiple, elongated buds.
CAK1
encodes a protein kinase most closely related to the Cdc2p family of protein kinases. Mutations that lead to the production of an inactive kinase that can neither autophosphorylate, nor phosphorylate
Cdc28p
in vitro are also incapable of rescuing a cell with a deletion of
CAK1
. These results underscore the importance of the
Cak1p
protein kinase activity in cell cycle progression.
...
PMID:Mutational analysis of Cak1p, an essential protein kinase that regulates cell cycle progression. 939 34
Cdk7 has been shown previously to be able to phosphorylate and activate many different Cdks in vitro. However, conclusive evidence that Cdk7 acts as a Cdk-activating kinase (CAK) in vivo has remained elusive. Adding to the controversy is the fact that in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, CAK activity is provided by the
CAK1
/Civ1 protein, which is unrelated to Cdk7. Furthermore Kin28, the budding yeast Cdk7 homolog, functions not as a CAK but as the catalytic subunit of TFIIH. Vertebrate Cdk7 is also known to be part of TFIIH. Therefore, in the absence of better genetic evidence, it was proposed that the CAK activity of Cdk7 may be an in vitro artifact. In an attempt to resolve this issue, we cloned the Drosophila
cdk7
homolog and created null and temperature-sensitive mutations. Here we demonstrate that
cdk7
is necessary for CAK activity in vivo in a multicellular organism. We show that
cdk7
activity is required for the activation of both Cdc2/Cyclin A and Cdc2/Cyclin B complexes, and for cell division. These results suggest that there may be a fundamental difference in the way metazoans and budding yeast effect a key modification of Cdks.
...
PMID:Cdk7 is essential for mitosis and for in vivo Cdk-activating kinase activity. 945 Sep 31
Many protein kinases are regulated by phosphorylation in the activation loop, which is required for enzymatic activity. Glutamic acid can substitute for phosphothreonine in some proteins activated by phosphorylation, but this substitution (T169E) at the site of activation loop phosphorylation in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk)
Cdc28p
blocks biological function and protein kinase activity. Using cycles of error-prone DNA amplification followed by selection for successively higher levels of function, we identified mutant versions of
Cdc28p
-T169E with high biological activity. The enzymatic and biological activity of the mutant
Cdc28p
was essentially normally regulated by cyclin, and the mutants supported normal cell cycle progression and regulation. Therefore, it is not a requirement for control of the yeast cell cycle that
Cdc28p
be cyclically phosphorylated and dephosphorylated. These CDC28 mutants allow viability in the absence of
Cak1p
, the essential kinase that phosphorylates
Cdc28p
-T169, demonstrating that T169 phosphorylation is the only essential function of
Cak1p
. Some growth defects remain in suppressed cak1 cdc28 strains carrying the mutant CDC28 genes, consistent with additional nonessential roles for
CAK1
.
...
PMID:Molecular evolution allows bypass of the requirement for activation loop phosphorylation of the Cdc28 cyclin-dependent kinase. 956 11
Activating phosphorylation of cyclin-dependent protein kinases (CDKs) is necessary for their kinase activity and cell cycle progression. This phosphorylation is carried out by the Cdk-activating kinase (CAK); in contrast, little is known about the corresponding protein phosphatase. We show that type 2C protein phosphatases (PP2Cs) are responsible for this dephosphorylation of
Cdc28p
, the major budding yeast CDK. Two yeast PP2Cs, Ptc2p and Ptc3p, display
Cdc28p
phosphatase activity in vitro and in vivo, and account for approximately 90% of
Cdc28p
phosphatase activity in yeast extracts. Overexpression of PTC2 or PTC3 results in synthetic lethality in strains temperature-sensitive for yeast
CAK1
, and disruptions of PTC2 and PTC3 suppress the growth defect of a cak1 mutant. Furthermore, PP2C-like enzymes are the predominant phosphatases toward human
Cdk2
in HeLa cell extracts, indicating that the substrate specificity of PP2Cs toward CDKs is evolutionarily conserved.
...
PMID:Dephosphorylation of cyclin-dependent kinases by type 2C protein phosphatases. 1058 2
Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta)-mediated G(1) arrest previously has been shown to specifically target inactivation of cyclin D:cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) 4/6 complexes. We report here that TGF-beta-treated human HepG2 hepatocellular carcinoma cells arrest in G(1), but retain continued cyclin D:Cdk4/6 activity and active, hypophosphorylated retinoblastoma tumor suppressor protein. Consistent with this observation, TGF-beta-treated cells failed to induce p15(INK4b), down-regulate CDC25A, or increase levels of p21(CIP1), p27(KIP1), and p57(KIP2). However, TGF-beta treatment resulted in the specific inactivation of cyclin E:
Cdk2
complexes caused by absence of the activating Thr(160) phosphorylation on
Cdk2
. Whole-cell lysates from TGF-beta-treated cells showed inhibition of
Cdk2
Thr(160) Cdk activating kinase (CAK) activity; however, cyclin H:Cdk7 activity, a previously assumed mammalian CAK, was not altered. Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains a genetically and biochemically proven CAK gene,
CAK1
, that encodes a monomeric 44-kDa
Cak1p
protein unrelated to Cdk7. Anti-
Cak1p
antibodies cross-reacted with a 45-kDa human protein with CAK activity that was specifically down-regulated in response to TGF-beta treatment. Taken together, these observations demonstrate that TGF-beta signaling mediates a G(1) arrest in HepG2 cells by targeting
Cdk2
CAK and suggests the presence of at least two mammalian CAKs: one specific for
Cdk2
and one for Cdk4/6.
...
PMID:Transforming growth factor beta targeted inactivation of cyclin E:cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (Cdk2) complexes by inhibition of Cdk2 activating kinase activity. 1061 20
Activating phosphorylation of cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks) is mediated by at least two structurally distinct types of Cdk-activating kinases (Caks): the trimeric Cdk7-cyclin H-Mat1 complex in metazoans and the single-subunit
Cak1
in budding yeast. Fission yeast has both Cak types: Mcs6 is a Cdk7 ortholog and Csk1 a single-subunit kinase. Both phosphorylate Cdks in vitro and rescue a thermosensitive budding yeast
CAK1
strain. However, this apparent redundancy is not observed in fission yeast in vivo. We have identified mutants that exhibit phenotypes attributable to defects in either Mcs6-activating phosphorylation or in Cdc2-activating phosphorylation. Mcs6, human Cdk7 and budding yeast
Cak1
were all active as Caks for Cdc2 when expressed in fission yeast. Although Csk1 could activate Mcs6, it was unable to activate Cdc2. Biochemical experiments supported these genetic results: budding yeast
Cak1
could bind and phosphorylate Cdc2 from fission yeast lysates, whereas fission yeast Csk1 could not. These results indicate that Mcs6 is the direct activator of Cdc2, and Csk1 only activates Mcs6. This demonstrates in vivo specificity in Cdk activation by Caks.
...
PMID:Specificity of Cdk activation in vivo by the two Caks Mcs6 and Csk1 in fission yeast. 1122 58
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