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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ras proteins are members of a superfamily of small GTPases that are involved in many aspects of cell growth control. The ras p21 protooncogene products, H-ras, K-ras, and N-ras, transmit signals from growth factor receptors to a cascade of protein kinases that begins with the Raf protooncogene product, and leads to alterations in transcription factors and cell cycle proteins in the nucleus. This cascade is controlled at several points: Ras p21 proteins are regulated by GAPs and by exchange factors, whose activities are altered by growth factor receptor activation (Boguski and McCormick, 1993: Nature 366:643-654). Transmission of signals from Ras to Raf is regulated by the Ras-related protein Rap1 (a protein capable of reverting cell transformation) and by cAMP. Other aspects of Ras p21 regulation will be discussed, including the existence of RasGDl proteins that inhibit GDP dissociation from Ras, and may thus regulate the level of active Ras in the cell. The role of Ras in activation of Raf kinase appears to be limited to the recruitment of Raf to the plasma membrane, at which time Raf becomes stably modified to render it active (Leevers et al., 1994: Nature 369:411-414; Stokoe et al., 1994: Science 264:1463-1467). The nature of these modifications is unclear. Raf in the plasma membrane becomes associated with insoluble structural cell components that may be part of the activation. Furthermore, Raf is associated with proteins of the
14-3-3
family that appear necessary for kinase activation. The
14-3-3
proteins interact with all three conserved regions of Raf, including the kinase domain. In addition to Raf, Ras proteins interact with two known classes of proteins in a manner consistent with effector functions: these are the GAPs and regulators of the Ras-related protein Ral referred to as RalGDS. These biochemical data suggest that other functional pathways are regulated by Ras, including, perhaps, pathways involved in regulating cell shape and motility. The protein R-Ras p21 is about 50% identical to the Ras p21 protooncogene product. This protein is incapable of transforming cells, even though it interacts with Raf and other putative Ras effectors (Fernandez-Sarabia and Bischoff, 1993: Nature 366:274-275). On the other hand, it has recently been shown that R-Ras binds to the protooncogene product Bcl-2, a protein that transforms B cells by blocking apoptosis. R-Ras is regulated by the same GAP molecules as H-Ras and the other Ras protooncogene products, and may therefore be activated in a manner co-ordinate with these growth-promoting proteins. The possible connection between R-Ras and apoptosis will be discussed.
Mol
Reprod Dev 1995 Dec
PMID:Ras-related proteins in signal transduction and growth control. 860 82
Raf-1 is a key protein involved in the transmission of developmental and proliferative signals generated by receptor and nonreceptor tyrosine kinases. Biochemical and genetic studies have demonstrated that Raf-1 functions downstream of activated tyrosine kinases and Ras and upstream of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and MAPK kinase (MKK or MEK) in many signaling pathways. A major objective of our laboratory has been to determine how Raf-1 becomes activated in response to signaling events. Using mammalian, baculovirus, and Xenopus systems, we have examined the roles that phosphorylation and protein-protein interactions play in regulating the biological and biochemical activity of Raf-1. Our studies have provided evidence that the activity of Raf-1 can be modulated by both Ras-dependent and Ras-independent pathways. Recently, we reported that Arg89 of Raf-1 is a residue required for the association of Raf-1 and Ras. Mutation of this residue disrupted interaction with Ras and prevented Ras-mediated, but not protein kinase C-or tyrosine kinase-mediated, enzymatic activation of Raf-1 in the baculovirus expression system. Further analysis of this mutant demonstrated that kinase-defective Raf-1 proteins interfere with the propagation of proliferative and developmental signals by binding to Ras and blocking Ras function. Our findings have also shown that phosphorylation events play a role in regulating Raf-1. We have identified sites of in vivo phosphorylation that positively and negatively alter the biological and enzymatic activity of Raf-1. In addition, we have found that some of these phosphorylation sites are involved in mediating the interaction of Raf-1 with potential activators (Fyn and Src) and with other cellular proteins (
14-3-3
). Results from our work suggest that Raf-1 is regulated at multiple levels by several distinct mechanisms.
Mol
Reprod Dev 1995 Dec
PMID:Mechanisms regulating Raf-1 activity in signal transduction pathways. 860 83
Although Rafs play a central role in signal transduction, the mechanism(s) by which they become activated is poorly understood. Raf-1 activation is dependent on the protein's ability to bind Ras, but Ras binding is insufficient to activate Raf-1 tyrosine phosphorylation to this Ras-induced activation, in the absence of an over-expressed tyrosine kinase. We demonstrate that Raf-1 purified form Sf9 cells coinfected with baculovirus Ras but not Src could be inactivated by protein tyrosine phosphatase PTP-1B.
14-3-3
and Hsp90 proteins blocked both the tyrosine dephosphorylation and inactivation of Raf-1, suggesting that Raf-1 activity is phosphotyrosine dependent. In Ras-transformed NIH 3T3 cells, a minority of Raf-1 protein was membrane associated, but essentially all Raf-1 activity and Raf-1 phosphotyrosine fractionated with plasma membranes. Thus, the tyrosine-phosphorylated and active pool of Raf-1 constitute a membrane-localized subfraction which could also be inactivated with PTP-1B. By contrast, B-Raf has aspartic acid residues at positions homologous to those of the phosphorylated tyrosines (at 340 and 341) of Raf-1 and displays a high basal level of activity. B-Raf was not detectably tyrosine phosphorylated, membrane localized, or further activated upon Ras transformation, even though B-Raf has been shown to bind to Ras in vitro. We conclude that tyrosine phosphorylation is an essential component of the mechanism by which Ras activates Raf-1 kinase activity and that steady-state activated Ras is insufficient to activate B-Raf in vivo.
Mol
Cell Biol 1996 Mar
PMID:Ras-induced activation of Raf-1 is dependent on tyrosine phosphorylation. 862 47
Microtubule associated
protein tau
promotes the assembly of microtubules by binding to microtubules and stabilizing their structure. In Alzheimer disease brain, tau is abnormally hyperphosphorylated and the altered tau is unable to promote the in vitro assembly of microtubules. In the present study, we found that dephosphorylation of abnormally phosphorylated tau by protein phosphatase-2A1, -2B or -1 restored its biological activity both in the nucleation and in the assembly of microtubules. Both the amount of phosphate released and the rate of restoration of microtubule assembly promoting activity of the abnormal tau were greater on dephosphorylation by protein phosphatase-2A1 than -2B or -1. During 90 min incubation at 37 degrees C protein phosphatase-2A1, -2B and -1 released respectively approximately 57%, approximately 36% and approximately 30% of tau phosphate. Association of the restoration of the biological activity of the abnormal tau dephosphorylated by different phosphatases and the immunochemical identification of the dephosphorylated sites revealed that Ser-235 is not critical in tau function, and that the Thr-231 is probably involved in the regulation of the nucleation and not the assembly of microtubules. These studies indicate that the phosphorylation of tau in situ might be regulated by protein phosphatase-2A, -2B and -1 and activation of these enzyme activities might arrest the Alzheimer neurofibrillary degeneration.
Brain Res
Mol
Brain Res 1996 Jun
PMID:Restoration of biological activity of Alzheimer abnormally phosphorylated tau by dephosphorylation with protein phosphatase-2A, -2B and -1. 879 8
Members of the highly conserved and ubiquitous 14-3-3 protein family modulate a wide variety of cellular processes. To determine the evolutionary relationships among specific
14-3-3
proteins in different plant, animal, and fungal species and to initiate a predictive analysis of isoform-specific differences in light of the latest functional and structural studies of
14-3-3
, multiple alignments were constructed from forty-six
14-3-3
sequences retrieved from the GenBank and SwissProt databases and a newly identified second
14-3-3
gene from Caenorhabditis elegans. The alignment revealed five highly conserved sequence blocks. Blocks 2-5 correlate well with the alpha helices 3, 5, 7, and 9 which form the proposed internal binding domain in the three-dimensional structure model of the functioning dimer. Amino acid differences within the functional and structural domains of plant and animal
14-3-3
proteins were identified which may account for functional diversity amongst isoforms. Protein phylogenic trees were constructed using both the maximum parsimony and neighbor joining methods of the PHYLIP(3.5c) package;
14-3-3
proteins from Entamoeba histolytica, an amitochondrial protozoa, were employed as an outgroup in our analysis. Epsilon isoforms from the animal lineage form a distinct grouping in both trees, which suggests an early divergence from the other animal isoforms. Epsilons were found to be more similar to yeast and plant isoforms than other animal isoforms at numerous amino acid positions, and thus epsilon may have retained functional characteristics of the ancestral protein. The known invertebrate proteins group with the nonepsilon mammalian isoforms. Most of the current
14-3-3
isoform diversity probably arose through independent duplication events after the divergence of the major eukaryotic kingdoms. Divergence of the seven mammalian isoforms beta, zeta, gamma, eta, epsilon, tau, and sigma (stratifin/HME1) occurred before the divergence of mammalian and perhaps before the divergence of vertebrate species. A possible ancestral
14-3-3
sequence is proposed.
J
Mol
Evol 1996 Oct
PMID:Molecular evolution of the 14-3-3 protein family. 879 43
Recent studies have documented direct interactions between
14-3-3
proteins and several oncogene and proto-oncogene products involved in signal transduction pathways. Studies on the effects of
14-3-3
proteins on protein kinase C (PKC) activity in vitro have reported conflicting results, and previous attempts to demonstrate a direct association between PKC and
14-3-3
were unsuccessful. Here, we examined potential physical and functional interactions between PKC theta, a Ca(2+)-independent PKC enzyme which is expressed selectively in T lymphocytes, and the
14-3-3
tau isoform in vitro and in intact T cells. PKC theta and
14-3-3
tau coimmunoprecipitated from Jurkat T cells, and recombinant
14-3-3
tau interacted directly with purified PKC theta in vitro. Transient overexpression of
14-3-3
tau suppressed stimulation of the interleukin 2 (IL-2) promoter mediated by cotransfected wild-type or constitutively active PKC theta, as well as by endogenous PKC in ionomycin- and/or phorbol ester-stimulated cells. This did not represent a general inhibition of activation events, since PKC-independent (but Ca(2+)-dependent) activation of an IL-4 promoter element was not inhibited by
14-3-3
tau under similar conditions. Overexpression of wild-type
14-3-3
tau also inhibited phorbol ester-induced PKC theta translocation from the cytosol to the membrane in Jurkat cells, while a membrane-targeted form of
14-3-3
tau caused increased localization of PKC theta in the particulate fraction in unstimulated cells. Membrane-targeted
14-3-3
tau was more effective than wild-type
14-3-3
tau in suppressing PKC theta-dependent IL-2 promoter activity, suggesting that
14-3-3
tau inhibits the function of PKC theta not only by preventing its translocation to the membrane but also by associating with it. The interaction between
14-3-3
and PKC theta may represent an important general mechanism for regulating PKC-dependent signals and, more specifically, PKC theta-mediated functions during T-cell activation.
Mol
Cell Biol 1996 Oct
PMID:Direct interaction between protein kinase C theta (PKC theta) and 14-3-3 tau in T cells: 14-3-3 overexpression results in inhibition of PKC theta translocation and function. 881 92
Retinal cytosolic Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM KII) was isolated from hatched 6-wk chicken retinae by ultracentrifugation and affinity chromatography using calmodulin (CaM) and anti-CaM KII-alpha columns. Samples from different fractions were examined with SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and silver staining or immunoblotting. Comparisons were made between the final antibody affinity eluates from retina and forebrain. Silver-stained gels showed that multiple proteins were present in the antibody affinity eluates from retina, including major proteins of 178, 56, and 45 kDa and several minor proteins. Immunoblots revealed that CaM KII-alpha was present in eluates from the retina and forebrain. CaM KII-beta was present in the antibody eluate from forebrain but not retina. The latter subunit was present in the crude homogenates of the retina. Regarding the antibody eluate from retina, the possibility that the major 56 kDa protein was tubulin was ruled out, but
protein tau
(tau) and synapsin I were present. The presence of multiple proteins in the antibody affinity eluate indicates that these proteins were coisolated in a CaM KII-alpha-associated protein complex. The finding that
protein tau
and synapsin I are associated with retinal CaM KII provides further insight into the mechanisms underlying the function of the kinase in this tissue. The lack of cytosolic CaM KII-beta subunit in the antibody affinity eluate from retina is indicative of a brain region-specificity in subunit composition of the kinase.
J
Mol
Neurosci 1996
PMID:The Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II-associated protein complex isolated from chicken retina. 883 78
Neospora caninum is a recently described apicomplexan parasite which causes neuromuscular disease in dogs, and abortion and neonatal morbidity in cattle, sheep and horses. Morphological similarities and serological cross-reactivity between N. caninum and the closely related parasite Toxoplasma gondii, have resulted in the frequent misdiagnosis of neosporosis as toxoplasmosis. This report describes the isolation and characterization of an N. caninum cDNA clone encoding a 14-3-3 protein homologue. The
14-3-3
proteins are a class of proteins which show a high degree of amino acid sequence conservation across several eukaryotic taxa. Using less conserved regions of the N. caninum cDNA clone, nested primers were designed for the amplification of a 614-bp N. caninum DNA fragment by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The DNA fragment was amplified from N. caninum genomic DNA, but not from T. gondii, Sarcocystis muris, Sarcocystis tenella, or Sarcocystis cruzi genomic DNA. Additionally, the fragment was amplified from DNA prepared from the brains of N. caninum-infected mice, but not from the brain of a mouse infected with T. gondii. These results suggest that this PCR assay may be useful for the diagnosis of neosporosis.
Mol
Biochem Parasitol 1996 Jan
PMID:Development of a polymerase chain reaction assay for the diagnosis of neosporosis using the Neospora caninum 14-3-3 gene. 899 15
The
14-3-3
proteins are involved in diverse signal transduction pathways and interact physically with a wide variety of proteins. Here, we report the partial sequence analysis of a human spleen 14-3-3 protein, which was identified as a variant form of the epsilon isoform. A peptide antibody generated to the variant
14-3-3
localizes in the centrosome and spindle apparatus of mouse leukemic FDCP cells by immunofluorescence microscopy. Immunoblots of centrosomes isolated by sucrose density gradient centrifugation of cell lysates disclose only the epsilon and gamma isoforms, while total cellular lysates contain the epsilon, gamma, beta and zeta isoforms of
14-3-3
. These data suggest that a subset of total cellular
14-3-3
proteins are localized in the centrosomes and spindle apparatus. A differential localization of the centrosomal
14-3-3
was observed in mouse 3T3 cells. Serum-starved (quiescent) cells lack the centrosomal
14-3-3
, but upon serum-stimulation of these quiescent cells, the centrosomal
14-3-3
reappears. We propose that a subset of intracellular
14-3-3
proteins are localized in the centrosome and spindle apparatus, and may in fact, link mitogenic signaling, the cell cycle, and perhaps the centrosome duplication cycle as well.
Blood Cells
Mol
Dis 1996
PMID:Association of 14-3-3 proteins with centrosomes. 907 73
A wide diversity of biological functions have been attributed to the highly conserved and ubiquitous 14-3-3 protein family. Yet how much of this diversity is inherent in the basic structure of
14-3-3
and how much is due to isoform specific functions is not yet fully understood. Here, two Caenorhabditis elegans
14-3-3
isoforms whose protein sequences are 90% similar were found to differ significantly in both their genomic structure and expression patterns. The two genes, ftt-1 (IV) (fourteen-three-three) and ftt-2 (X), differ in both the position and sequence of their introns. Since the various intron/exon boundaries respect neither functional nor structural protein motifs, the introns appear to be relatively recent evolutionary additions. ftt-1(IV) encodes three germline enhanced transcripts, two of which are related through the differential use of alternative poly(A) addition sites. RNA in situ hybridization studies reveal high levels of ftt-1 throughout the gonad with particularly high levels in the distal arm. In contrast, ftt-2 (X) encodes a single transcript which is expressed somatically. In embryos, high levels of ftt-1 transcripts appear to be maternally supplied, whereas ftt-2 is expressed as an early zygotic transcript whose expression pattern later localizes to the posterior region of post-proliferative embryos. These expression pattern differences between ftt-1 and ftt-2 suggest that these two
14-3-3
isoforms perform distinct biological roles within the worm.
J
Mol
Biol 1997 May 09
PMID:Expression patterns and transcript processing of ftt-1 and ftt-2, two C. elegans 14-3-3 homologues. 917 Dec 85
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