Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.11.24 (mitogen-activated protein kinase)
95,810 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The enzyme glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) has been implicated in the control of several metabolic enzymes and transcription factors in response to extracellular signals. In the past, the enzyme has been considered to be a protein Ser/Thr kinase although it was recently reported to contain Tyr(P) (Hughes, K., Nikolakaki, E., Plyte, S. E., Totty, N. F., and Woodgett, J. R. (1993) EMBO J. 12, 803-808). A cDNA encoding rabbit skeletal muscle GSK-3 beta was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli as an active protein kinase, with apparent M(r) 46,000, capable of phosphorylating several known GSK-3 substrates. Recombinant GSK-3 beta autophosphorylated on Ser, Thr, and Tyr residues although the enzyme already contained Tyr(P) as judged by its recognition by anti-Tyr(P) antibodies. The net result of the autophosphorylation was a 3-5-fold reduction in enzyme activity. GSK-3 alpha, purified from rabbit muscle, also underwent autophosphorylation but only on Ser and Thr residues. In this case, the autophosphorylation stabilized the enzyme activity compared with the control lacking ATP/Mg2+. Of several phosphatases tested, the lambda-phage phosphatase was the most effective in dephosphorylating at Ser and Thr residues but did not dephosphorylate at Tyr residues. The action of the lambda-phosphatase caused a reactivation of GSK-3 beta to approximately 80% of the starting activity. The protein tyrosine phosphatase PTP1B was able to dephosphorylate at Tyr residues leading to a reduction in enzyme activity. A truncated form of GSK-3 beta, apparent M(r) 40,000, had a significantly higher specific activity, was defective in autophosphorylation, and was not inactivated in the autophosphorylation reaction. We conclude that GSK-3 beta is a dual specificity protein kinase in the same sense as the mitogen-activated protein kinase/ERK family of enzymes. Phosphorylation at different residues differentially controls enzyme activity, Ser/Thr phosphorylation causing inactivation and Tyr phosphorylation resulting in increased activity.
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PMID:Glycogen synthase kinase-3 beta is a dual specificity kinase differentially regulated by tyrosine and serine/threonine phosphorylation. 751 73

The microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) and its juvenile splicing variant MAP2c contain a phosphorylation site at Ser136 which is part of a Ser-Pro motif. This site lies within the N-terminal region common to MAP2b and MAP2c. It has been mapped by site-directed mutagenesis of recombinant MAP2c and by a monoclonal antibody AP18 whose epitope contains the phosphorylated Ser136. In vitro this site is phosphorylated by proline-directed kinases such as MAP kinase, GSK-3, or members of the cdk family, but not by other kinases such as PKA, PKC, or CaMK-II. MAP2a,b or MAP2c isolated from brain is found to be endogenously phosphorylated at Ser136. After microinjection into several cell lines dephosphorylated MAP2 isoforms or recombinant MAP2c become also phosphorylated at Ser136 in vivo. Injection of MAP2a,b or MAP2c into living cells causes reorganization of microtubules, including bundle formation. This effect is independent of the phosphorylation at Ser136. The specificity of the phosphorylation reaction provides a tool for analyzing the role and posttranslational processing of MAP2 in nerve cell development.
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PMID:Phosphorylation of microtubule-associated proteins MAP2a,b and MAP2c at Ser136 by proline-directed kinases in vivo and in vitro. 752 90

We consider the interactions of tau protein with microtubules from two points of view, phosphorylation and domain structure. Tau can be phosphorylated at many sites and by several kinases, notably by proline-directed kinases (MAPK, GSK-3, cdk5) which generate Alzheimer-like antibody epitopes. Other kinases phosphorylate Ser 262, a site that has a particularly pronounced influence on the affinity of tau for microtubules. All of these sites can be cleared by phosphatases PP-2a and calcineurin. The site Ser262 lies within the repeat domain of tau. However, when probing the domains of tau for their effects on microtubule binding, nucleation, assembly, or bundling, the repeat domain has only a weak influence. Whereas the repeat domain of tau binds to microtubules with low affinity, repeat-less tau binds strongly yet unproductively in terms of microtubule assembly. Productive binding of tau to microtubules depends on the combination of (some) repeats with the flanking regions, as if the flanking regions acted as "jaws" for the proper positioning of tau on the microtubule surface.
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PMID:Tau domains, phosphorylation, and interactions with microtubules. 756 45

The role of the C-terminal domain of CTP: phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase (CT) was explored by the creation of a series of deletion mutations in rat liver cDNA, which were expressed in COS cells as a major protein component. Deletion of up to 55 amino acids from the C-terminus had no effect on the activity of the enzyme, its stimulation by lipid vesicles or on its intracellular distribution between soluble and membrane-bound forms. However, deletion of the C-terminal 139 amino acids resulted in a 90% decrease in activity, loss of response to lipid vesicles and a significant decrease in the fraction of membrane-bound enzyme. Identification of the domain that is phosphorylated in vivo was determined by analysis of 32P-labelled CT mutants and by chymotrypsin proteolysis of purified CT that was 32P-labelled in vivo. Phosphorylation was restricted to the C-terminal 52 amino acids (domain P) and occurred on multiple sites. CT phosphorylation in vitro was catalysed by casein kinase II, cell division control 2 kinase (cdc2 kinase), protein kinases C alpha and beta II, and glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3), but not by mitogen-activated kinase (MAP kinase). Casein kinase II phosphorylation was directed exclusively to Ser-362. The sites phosphorylated by cdc2 kinase and GSK-3 were restricted to several serines within three proline-rich motifs of domain P. Sites phosphorylated in vitro by protein kinase C, on the other hand, were distributed over the N-terminal catalytic as well as the C-terminal regulatory domain. The stoichiometry of phosphorylation catalysed by any of these kinases was less than 0.2 mol P/mol CT, and no effects on enzyme activity were detected. This study supports a tripartite structure for CT with an N-terminal catalytic domain and a C-terminal regulatory domain comprised of a membrane-binding domain (domain M) and a phosphorylation domain (domain P). It also identifies three kinases as potential regulators in vivo of CT, casein kinase II, cyclin-dependent kinase and GSK-3.
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PMID:Functions of the C-terminal domain of CTP: phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase. Effects of C-terminal deletions on enzyme activity, intracellular localization and phosphorylation potential. 765 14

The phosphorylation of bovine tau, either by GSK-3 alone or by a combination of GSK-3 and several non-proline-dependent protein kinases (non-PDPKs), was studied. GSK-3 alone catalyzed the incorporation of approximately 3 mol 32P/mol tau at a relatively slow rate. Prephosphorylation of tau by A-kinase, C-kinase, or CK-2 (but not by CK-1, CaM kinase II or Gr kinase) increased both the rate and extent of a subsequent phosphorylation catalyzed by GSK-3 by several-fold. These results suggest that the phosphorylation of tau by PDPKs such as GSK-3 (and possibly MAP kinase, cdk5) may be positively modulated at the substrate level by non-PDPK-catalyzed phosphorylations.
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PMID:Modulation of GSK-3-catalyzed phosphorylation of microtubule-associated protein tau by non-proline-dependent protein kinases. 782 26

The role of the p90 ribosomal protein S6 kinase/mitogen-activated protein kinase (RSK/MAPK) signaling pathway in regulating glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) activity was investigated. In vitro studies showed that GSK-3 was inactivated by 50% upon incubation with RSK purified from epidermal growth factor (EGF)-stimulated NIH/3T3 cells. Subsequently, the effect of EGF on GSK-3 activity was measured in NIH/3T3 cells that stably overexpressed mutated forms of MAPK kinase (MAPKK). The activation of RSK by EGF was markedly decreased in cell lines expressing the dominant negative MAPKK mutants S222A and K97A and was increased in cells expressing the S222E mutant as compared with control cell lines. EGF induced a rapid decrease in GSK-3 beta activity (50%) in control and S222E cells; however, only 25 and 10% inhibition in GSK-3 beta activity was observed in cell lines expressing the dominant negative mutants K97A and S222A, respectively, suggesting that inhibition of GSK-3 was partially blocked in these cells. Taken together, these results suggest that the action of EGF on GSK-3 inactivation is mediated by the RSK/MAPK signaling pathway in NIH/3T3 cells and provide evidence for a mechanism regulating GSK-3 activity in intact cells.
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PMID:Inactivation of glycogen synthase kinase-3 by epidermal growth factor is mediated by mitogen-activated protein kinase/p90 ribosomal protein S6 kinase signaling pathway in NIH/3T3 cells. 783 18

We have previously shown that insulin causes inactivation of glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) in Chinese hamster ovary cells over-expressing the human insulin receptor (CHO.T cells). We now show that serum and phorbol ester also cause rapid inactivation of GSK-3, both in CHO.T cells and in the nontransfected parental cell line, CHO.K1 cells. Rapamycin was without effect on the inactivation of GSK-3 by insulin, serum or phorbol ester, indicating that the p70 S6 kinase pathway is not involved. In contrast, wortmannin, a potent inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, blocked the effects of both insulin and serum on GSK-3 activity, and also substantially reduced the activation of both p90 S6 kinase (by insulin) and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase (by insulin and serum). These findings imply (i) that GSK-3 activity is regulated by a cascade involving MAP kinase and p90 S6 kinase and (ii) that wortmannin affects an early step in the MAP kinase pathway. One can infer from this that GSK-3 may be an important regulatory enzyme for the control of several biosynthetic pathways, key enzymes in which are regulated by GSK-3-mediated phosphorylation. Wortmannin had a smaller effect on the activation of MAP kinase by phorbol ester, indicating that phorbol esters may stimulate MAP kinase by a different or additional mechanism to that employed by insulin or serum. Wortmannin had very little effect on the inactivation of GSK-3 by phorbol ester: possible reasons for this are discussed.
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PMID:Wortmannin inhibits the effects of insulin and serum on the activities of glycogen synthase kinase-3 and mitogen-activated protein kinase. 794 34

To identify consensus sequence motif for a new family of protein kinase termed autophosphorylation-dependent protein serine/threonine kinase (auto-kinase), we have tested several synthetic peptides. The well established protein serine/threonine kinases such as cAMP-dependent protein kinase, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM-kinase), and protein kinase C were found to be inactive toward phosphorylation of syntide-3 (RPRPASVPPSPSLSRHA), which turned out to be an excellent substrate only for auto-kinase, indicating that syntide-3 is a specific substrate for auto-kinase. Modification of syntide-3 to become RPRPASVPPS/T did not affect the activity of auto-kinase. By contrast, autokinase became rather or almost inactive when the peptide was modified to become RPRPASVPPA/G/F/K/R/D/E/Y, indicating that amino acid number 10 in syntide-3 is crucial to the sequence motif recognized by auto-kinase. Phosphorylation of myelin basic protein (MBP) by autokinase revealed that auto-kinase predominantly phosphorylates MBP on one particular site with RT-T(p)HYGS as the phosphorylation site sequence, which could not be phosphorylated by any other reported MBP kinases including cAMP-dependent protein kinase, CaM-kinase, protein kinase C, mitogen-activated protein kinase, and kinase FA/GSK-3. Taken together, the results provide initial evidence that -Arg-X-(X)-Ser/Thr-X3-Ser/Thr- may represent a unique consensus sequence motif specifically recognized by autophosphorylation-dependent protein kinase, a new family of multi-substrate/multifunctional protein serine/threonine kinase.
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PMID:Identification of -R-X-(X)-S/T-X3-S/T- as consensus sequence motif for autophosphorylation-dependent protein kinase. 785 32

We have shown earlier that certain proline-directed kinases such as MAP kinase or GSK-3 can phosphorylate tau protein in an abnormal manner reminiscent of tau from Alzheimer paired helical filaments [Drewes et al. (1992); Mandelkow et al. (1992)]. Both kinases are abundant in brain tissue and associate physically with microtubules through several cycles of assembly and disassembly. In this report we show that cdk2/cyclin A incorporates = 5 Pi into recombinant tau, and that it also induces the MR shift and antibody reactivity typical of Alzheimer tau. However, since there is no cdk2 in brain [Meyerson et al. (1992)] we looked for other members of this family of kinases. Using an antibody against the conserved N-terminus we isolated a cdk-like kinase from brain which was capable of inducing the Alzheimer-like characteristics in tau by phosphorylation. Its size (31 kDa), target specificity (proline-directed), chromatographic behavior, and abundance in brain suggest that this kinase is similar or identical to the neuronal cdc2-like kinase nclk alias PSSARLE or cdk5 [Hellmich et al. (1992); Meyerson et al. (1992); Xiong et al. (1992); Tsai et al. (1993)]. This was confirmed by an antibody specific for cdk5. Like MAP kinase and GSK-3, this kinase is physically associated with microtubules and can be enriched by cycles of microtubule assembly and disassembly. Thus, cdk5 should be regarded as another kinase that could be held responsible for the changes in tau protein during Alzheimer disease progression.
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PMID:Abnormal Alzheimer-like phosphorylation of tau-protein by cyclin-dependent kinases cdk2 and cdk5. 828 4

We have shown previously that brain tissue contains protein kinases which can phosphorylate tau protein to a state reminiscent of the pathological state of Alzheimer paired helical filaments (PHFs); these include proline-directed kinases which phosphorylate SP or TP motifs (such as MAP kinase and GSK-3) [Drewes et al. (1992); Mandelkow et al. (1992)], as well as a novel kinase which phosphorylates S262 of tau protein and thereby strongly reduces the binding of tau to microtubules [Biernat et al. (1993)]. Here we report on the corresponding phosphatases in brain which normally keep the 'pathological' sites free of phosphate. The major phosphatases acting on tau are calcineurin and PP-2A, but not PP-1. Both are present and active in brain extracts, they can dephosphorylate recombinant tau after prior phosphorylation with either MAP kinase, GSK-3, or brain extract, and the course of dephosphorylation can be monitored with antibodies diagnostic of the pathological state of tau. Both phosphatases also act directly on PHF tau isolated from Alzheimer brains.
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PMID:Dephosphorylation of tau protein and Alzheimer paired helical filaments by calcineurin and phosphatase-2A. 828 5


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