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1.
Xenopus MAP kinase activator, a 45 kDa protein, has been shown to function as a direct upstream factor sufficient for full activation and both tyrosine and serine/threonine phosphorylation of inactive MAP kinase. We have now shown by using an anti-MAP kinase activator antiserum that MAP kinase activator is ubiquitous in tissues and is regulated post-translationally. Activation of MAP kinase activator is correlated precisely with its threonine phosphorylation during the oocyte maturation process. It is a key question whether MAP kinase activator is a kinase or not. We have shown that Xenopus MAP kinase activator purified from mature oocytes is capable of undergoing autophosphorylation on serine, threonine and tyrosine residues. Dephosphorylation of purified activator by protein phosphatase 2A treatment inactivates its autophosphorylation activity as well as its activator activity. Thus, Xenopus MAP kinase activator is a protein kinase with specificity for both serine/threonine and tyrosine. Partial protein sequencing of purified activator indicates that it contains a sequence homologous to kinase subdomains VI and VII of two yeast protein kinases, STE7 and byrl.  相似文献   

2.
MAP kinase is thought to play a pivotal role not only in the growth factor-stimulated signalling pathway but also in the M phase phosphorylation cascade downstream of MPF. MAP kinase is fully active only when both tyrosine and threonine/serine residues are phosphorylated. We have now identified and purified a Xenopus MAP kinase activator from mature oocytes that is able to induce activation and phosphorylation on tyrosine and threonine/serine residues of an inactive form of Xenopus MAP kinase. The Xenopus MAP kinase activator itself is a 45 kDa phosphoprotein and is inactivated by protein phosphatase 2A treatment in vitro. Microinjection of the purified activator into immature oocytes results in immediate activation of MAP kinase. Further experiments using microinjection as well as cell free extracts have shown that Xenopus MAP kinase activator is an intermediate between MPF and MAP kinase. Thus, MAP kinase activator plays a key role in the phosphorylation cascade.  相似文献   

3.
H Kosako  E Nishida    Y Gotoh 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(2):787-794
A Xenopus 45 kDa protein has been identified as an immediate upstream factor sufficient for full activation of MAP kinase, and is shown to be capable of undergoing autophosphorylation on serine, threonine and tyrosine residues. In this study, we show that purified 45 kDa protein can phosphorylate a kinase-negative mutant of Xenopus MAP kinase on tyrosine and threonine residues, suggesting that the 45 kDa protein functions as a MAP kinase kinase to activate MAP kinase. We then report the cloning and sequencing of a full-length cDNA encoding this 45 kDa MAP kinase kinase, and show that it is highly homologous to four protein kinases in fission and budding yeasts: byr1, wis1, PBS2 and STE7. These yeast kinases are therefore suggested to function as a direct upstream activator for a presumed MAP kinase homolog in each signal transduction pathway involved in the regulation of cell cycle progression or cellular responses to extracellular signals. Finally, we report bacterial expression of recombinant MAP kinase kinase that can be phosphorylated and activated by Xenopus egg extracts.  相似文献   

4.
MAP kinases (MAPK) are serine/threonine kinases which are activated by a dual phosphorylation on threonine and tyrosine residues. Their specific upstream activators, called MAP kinase kinases (MAPKK), constitute a new family of dual-specific threonine/tyrosine kinases, which in turn are activated by upstream MAP kinase kinase kinases (MAPKKK). These three kinase families are successively stimulated in a cascade of activation described in various species such as mammals, frog, fly, worm or yeast.In mammals, the MAP kinase module lies on the signaling pathway triggered by numerous agonists such as growth factors, hormones, lymphokines, tumor promoters, stress factors, etc. Targets of MAP kinase have been characterize tin all subcellular compartments. In yeast, genetic epistasis helped to characterize the presence of several MAP kinase modules in the same system. By complementation tests, the relationships existing between phylogenetically distant members of each kinase family have been described. The roles of the MAP kinase cascade have been analyzed by engineering various mutations in the kinases of the module. The MAP kinase cascade has thus been implicated in higher eukaryotes in cell growth, cell fate and differentiation, and in low eukaryotes, in conjugation, osmotic stress, cell wall constrct and mitosis.  相似文献   

5.
MAP kinase kinase (MAPKK) was purified 30,000-fold to homogeneity from extracts of rabbit skeletal muscle and shown to be a monomeric protein of apparent molecular mass 44 kDa. MAPKK activated the 42 kDa isoform of MAP kinase by phosphorylation of Thr-183 and Tyr-185, and phosphorylated itself slowly on tyrosine, threonine and serine residues, establishing that it is a 'dual specificity' protein kinase. Peptide sequences from MAPKK were homologous to other protein serine/threonine kinases, especially to the subfamily that includes yeast protein kinases that lie upstream of yeast MAP kinase homologues in the pheromone-dependent mating pathways.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Using anti-phosphotyrosine immunoaffinity chromatography, we have searched for serine/threonine kinases that are directly regulated by tyrosine phosphorylation in v-src-transformed rat 3Y1 fibroblasts. Tyrosine phosphoprotein preparations from v-src-transformed cells contain a kinase activity that phosphorylates histone H1 in vitro on serine residues and this activity is present at a 20-fold greater level than that in parental cell preparations. This activity elutes from a MonoQ FPLC column as a single peak and gel filtration chromatography suggests that the kinase has a molecular mass of approximately 55 kDa. Tyrosine phosphatase treatment inactivates the histone H1 kinase and this result indicates that the specific activity of the kinase is regulated by tyrosine phosphorylation. Experiments with cells transformed with a temperature-sensitive mutant of the v-src oncogene demonstrate that the tyrosine phosphorylation of the histone H1 kinase is an early event in v-src transformation. The kinase is distinct from known cdc2 family members that contain the PSTAIR motif, because the kinase can be separated almost completely from these proteins by immunoprecipitation with an antibody against p34cdc2. The profile of antibody reactivity and sensitivity to modulators of protein kinases suggests that this activity is distinct from known second messenger-regulated kinases and from previously characterized MAP kinases.  相似文献   

8.
A synthetic peptide modeled after the major threonine (T669) phosphorylation site of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor was an efficient substrate (apparent Km approximately 0.45 mM) for phosphorylation by purified p44mpk, a MAP kinase from sea star oocytes. The peptide was also phosphorylated by a related human MAP kinase, which was identified by immunological criteria as p42mapk. Within 5 min of treatment of human cervical carcinoma A431 cells with EGF or phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), a greater than 3-fold activation of p42mapk was measured. However, Mono Q chromatography of A431 cells extracts afforded the resolution of at least three additional T669 peptide kinases, some of which may be new members of the MAP kinase family. One of these (peak I), which weakly adsorbed to Mono Q, phosphorylated myelin basic protein (MBP) and other MAP kinase substrates, immunoreacted as a 42 kDa protein on Western blots with four different MAP kinase antibodies, and behaved as a approximately 45 kDa protein upon Superose 6 gel filtration. Another T669 peptide kinase (peak IV), which bound more tightly to Mono Q than p42mapk (peak II), exhibited a nearly identical substrate specificity profile to that of p42mapk, but it immunoreacted as a 40 kDa protein only with anti-p44mpk antibody on Western blots, and eluted from Superose 6 in a high molecular mass complex of greater than 400 kDa. By immunological criteria, the T669 peptide kinase in Mono Q peak III was tentatively identified as an active form of p34cdc2 associated with cyclin A. The Mono Q peaks III and IV kinases were modestly stimulated following either EGF or PMA treatments of A431 cells, and they exhibited a greater T669 peptide/MBP ratio than p42mapk. These findings indicated that multiple proline-directed kinases may mediate phosphorylation of the EGF receptor.  相似文献   

9.
Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases are serine/threonine protein kinases activated by dual phosphorylation on threonine and tyrosine residues. A MAP kinase kinase (MKK1 or MEK1) has been identified as a dual-specificity protein kinase that is sufficient to phosphorylate MAP kinases p42mapk and p44mapk on the regulatory threonine and tyrosine residues. Because of the multiplicity of MAP kinase isoforms and the diverse circumstances and agonists leading to their activation, we thought it unlikely that a single MKK could accommodate this complexity. Indeed, two protein bands with MKK activity have previously been identified after renaturation following sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We now report the molecular cloning and characterization of a second rat MAP kinase kinase cDNA, MKK2. MKK2 cDNA contains an open reading frame encoding a protein of 400 amino acids, 7 residues longer than MKK1 (MEK1). The amino acid sequence of MKK2 is 81% identical to that of MKK1, but nucleotide sequence differences occur throughout the aligned MKK2 and MKK1 cDNAs, indicating that MKK2 is the product of a distinct gene. MKK1 and MKK2 mRNAs are expressed differently in rat tissues. Both cDNAs when expressed in COS cells displayed the ability to phosphorylate and activate p42mapk and p44mapk, both MKK1 and MKK2 were activated in vivo in response to serum, and both could be phosphorylated and activated by the v-Raf protein in vitro. However, differences between MKK1 and MKK2 in sites of phosphorylation by proline-directed protein kinases predict differences in feedback regulation.  相似文献   

10.
Rat brain plasma membranes were solubilized in detergent and a glycoprotein-enriched fraction was obtained by lectin affinity chromatography. This glycoprotein fraction contained insulin receptors, as well as protein kinases capable of phosphorylating some exogenously added substrates such as MAP2 (microtubule associated protein 2) and MBP (myelin basic protein), but not ribosomal protein S6. Phosphoamino acid analysis of MAP2 and MBP showed that phosphotyrosine residues, as well as phosphoserine/phosphotheronine residues, were present in both proteins under basal conditions. Whereas the addition of insulin to the rat brain membrane glycoprotein fraction in vitro had no effect on MAP2 phosphorylation, MBP phosphorylation was stimulated 2.7-fold in response to insulin. This phenomenon was dose-dependent, with half-maximal stimulation of MBP phosphorylation observed with 2 nM insulin. Phosphoamino acid analysis of MBP indicated that insulin stimulated the phosphorylation of tyrosine residues nearly three-fold, whereas the phosphorylation of serine or threonine residues was not increased. These results identify MBP as a substrate for the rat brain insulin receptor tyrosine-specific protein kinase in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
Previously it has been shown that acute 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate treatment of intact U937 cells results in activation of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase and a MAP kinase activator. MAP kinase activator induces phosphorylation of MAP kinase on tyrosine and threonine residues, thereby activating MAP kinase. Here, experiments with the irreversible kinase inhibitor, 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine (FSBA), show that MAP kinase activator is in fact a MAP kinase-kinase. Treatment of MAP kinase activator with FSBA results in complete inactivation. This inactivation is prevented by a 10-fold excess of ATP. Inactivation of MAP kinase by FSBA does not affect the extent of threonine/tyrosine phosphorylation induced by MAP kinase-kinase.  相似文献   

12.
Microtubule-associated protein (MAP) kinases form a group of serine/threonine kinases stimulated by various growth factors such as nerve growth factor (NGF) and hormones such as insulin. Interestingly, MAP kinases are thought to participate in a protein kinase cascade leading to cell growth as they have been shown to phosphorylate and activate ribosomal protein S6 kinase. To further evaluate the interactions between the different components of this cascade, we looked at the possible coprecipitation of MAP kinase activator(s) or MAP kinase substrate(s) with MAP kinase. Using antipeptides to the C terminus of the M(r) 44,000 MAP kinase, ERK1, and cell extracts from unstimulated or NGF-treated PC12 cells, we obtained in addition to MAP kinase itself coprecipitation of a protein with a M(r) in the 90,000 range. We further show that this protein is a protein kinase since it becomes phosphorylated on serine residues, after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and transfer to a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane. In vitro phosphorylation performed before sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrates NGF-sensitive phosphorylation of this 90-kDa protein on both serine and threonine; the serine phosphorylation is likely to be due to autophosphorylation, and the threonine phosphorylation due to phosphorylation by the copurifying MAP kinase. Furthermore, immunoprecipitation of this 90-kDa protein was obtained with antibodies to S6 kinase II. Finally, using in situ chemical cross-linking, we were able to demonstrate in intact cells the occurrence of an anti-ERK1 immunoreactive species with a molecular mass of approximately 125,000 compatible with a complex between ERK1 and a 90-kDa S6 kinase. Taken together, our observations demonstrate that the 44-kDa MAP kinase is associated, in intact PC12 cells, with a protein kinase which is very likely to be S6 kinase II. In conclusion, our data represent strong evidence for a physiological role of the MAP kinase-S6 kinase cascade in PC12 cells. Finally, our antipeptides provide us with a powerful tool to search for additional physiologically relevant substrates for MAP kinase, a key integrator enzyme for growth factors and hormones.  相似文献   

13.
High resolution two-dimensional gel electrophoresis was used to analyze the signal transduction pathways of tumor necrosis factor (TNF-alpha) and interleukin 1 (IL-1 alpha and -beta) in human fibroblasts. Approximately 450 discrete radioactive spots were electrophoretically resolved from cytosolic extracts of cells prelabeled with 32P. At least 63 of these polypeptides exhibited significant and concordant phosphorylation or dephosphorylation in response to TNF or IL-1, despite the fact that different receptors are involved. Most of these changes concerned serine/threonine residues although enhanced tyrosine phosphorylation of several polypeptides was also observed. Phosphorylation patterns induced by a number of other agonists were compared with the patterns induced by IL-1 and TNF. These included activators of protein kinases C and A, bradykinin (a stimulator of inositol phospholipid hydrolysis), epidermal growth factor, heatshock, and mellitin (an activator of phospholipase A2). Although each of these agonists induced changes resulting in a distinct pattern of protein phosphorylation, none of these patterns had significant homology with that induced by IL-1 and TNF. Other assays were performed to verify the involvement of specific kinases. Collectively, these data indicate that IL-1 and TNF activate multiple protein kinases viz. a kinase(s) which activates microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP-2) kinase, a kinase that phosphorylates the cap-binding protein, and a possibly novel serine/threonine protein kinase.  相似文献   

14.
Treatment of PC12 pheochromocytoma cells with nerve growth factor (NGF) or bradykinin leads to the activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases ERK1 and ERK2, two isozymes of microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP) kinase that are present in numerous cell lines and regulated by diverse extracellular signals. The activation of MAP kinase is associated with its phosphorylation on tyrosine and threonine residues, both of which are required for activity. In the present studies, we have identified a factor in extracts of PC12 cells treated with NGF or bradykinin, named MAP kinase activator, that, when reconstituted with inactive MAP kinase from untreated cells, dramatically increased MAP kinase activity. Activation of MAP kinase in vitro by this factor required MgATP and was associated with the phosphorylation of a 42- (ERK1) and 44-kDa (ERK2) polypeptide. Incorporation of 32P into ERK1 and ERK2 occurred primarily on tyrosine and threonine residues and was associated with a single tryptic peptide, which is identical to one whose phosphorylation is increased by treatment of intact PC12 cells with NGF. Thus, the MAP kinase activator identified in PC12 cells is likely to be a physiologically important intermediate in the signaling pathways activated by NGF and bradykinin. Moreover, stimulation of the activator by NGF and bradykinin suggests that tyrosine kinase receptors and guanine nucleotide-binding protein-coupled receptors are both capable of regulating these pathways.  相似文献   

15.
C F Zheng  K L Guan 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(5):1123-1131
MEK is a family of dual specific protein kinases which activate the extracellular signal-regulated kinases by phosphorylation of threonine and tyrosine residues. MEK itself is activated via serine phosphorylation by upstream activator kinases, including c-raf, mos and MEK kinase. Here, we report the activation phosphorylation sites of human MEK1 and yeast STE7 kinase as determined by a combination of biochemical and genetic approaches. In human MEK1, substitution of either serine residue 218 or 222 with alanine completely abolished its activation by epidermal growth factor-stimulated Swiss 3T3 cell lysates or immunoprecipitated c-raf, suggesting that both serine residues are required for MEK1 activation. Phosphopeptide analysis demonstrated that serine residues 218 and 222 of human MEK1 are the primary sites for phosphorylation by c-raf. These two serine residues are highly conserved in all members of the MEK family, including the yeast STE7 gene product, a MEK homolog in the yeast mating pheromone response pathway. Mutation of the corresponding residues in STE7 completely abolished the biological functions of this gene. These data demonstrate that MEK is activated by phosphorylation of two adjacent serine/threonine residues and this activation mechanism is conserved in the MEK family kinases.  相似文献   

16.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,122(5):1079-1088
Mitogen-activated protein kinases (p42mapk and p44mapk) are serine/threonine kinases that are activated rapidly in cells stimulated with various extracellular signals. This activation is mediated via MAP kinase kinase (p45mapkk), a dual specificity kinase which phosphorylates two key regulatory threonine and tyrosine residues of MAP kinases. We reported previously that the persistent phase of MAP kinase activation is essential for mitogenically stimulated cells to pass the "restriction point" of the cell cycle. Here, using specific polyclonal antibodies and transfection of epitope-tagged recombinant MAP kinases we demonstrate that these signaling protein kinases undergo distinct spatio-temporal localization in growth factor-stimulated cells. In G0-arrested hamster fibroblasts the activator p45mapkk and MAP kinases (p42mapk, p44mapk) are mainly cytoplasmic. Subsequent to mitogenic stimulation by serum or alpha-thrombin both MAP kinase isoforms translocate into the nucleus. This translocation is rapid (seen in 15 min), persistent (at least during the entire G1 period up to 6 h), reversible (by removal of the mitogenic stimulus) and apparently 'coupled' to the mitogenic potential; it does not occur in response to nonmitogenic agents such as alpha-thrombin-receptor synthetic peptides and phorbol esters that fail to activate MAP kinases persistently. When p42mapk and p44mapk are expressed stably at high levels, they are found in the nucleus of resting cells; this nuclear localization is also apparent with kinase-deficient mutants (p44mapk T192A or Y194F). In marked contrast the p45mapkk activator remains cytoplasmic even during prolonged growth factor stimulation and even after high expression levels achieved by transfection. We propose that the rapid and persistent nuclear transfer of p42mapk and p44mapk during the entire G0-G1 period is crucial for the function of these kinases in mediating the growth response.  相似文献   

17.
Yamagata H  Saka K  Tanaka T  Aizono Y 《FEBS letters》2001,494(1-2):24-29
Light induced rapid and transient activation of a 46-kDa protein kinase in soybean photomixotrophic cell culture. This kinase was designated as LAP kinase (light signal-activated protein kinase). Activation of LAP kinase in response to light was associated with tyrosine phosphorylation of the kinase, and treatment of the kinase with protein tyrosine phosphatase abolished its activity. The LAP kinase efficiently phosphorylated myelin basic protein and histone, but did not phosphorylate casein. Phospho-amino acid analysis indicated that the LAP kinase was a serine/threonine protein kinase. These results indicated that the LAP kinase is related to the MAP kinase family of protein kinases.  相似文献   

18.
A protein kinase characterized by its ability to phosphorylate microtubule-associated protein-2 (MAP2) and myelin basic protein (MBP) is thought to play a pivotal role in the transduction of signals from many receptors in response to their ligands. A kinase with such activity, named extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 (ERK1), is activated rapidly by numerous extracellular signals, requires phosphorylation on tyrosine to be fully active, and in vitro can activate a kinase (a ribosomal S6 protein kinase) that is downstream in phosphorylation cascades. From the protein sequence predicted by the rat ERK1 cDNA, peptides were synthesized and used to elicit antibodies. The antibodies recognize both ERK1; a closely related kinase, ERK2; and a third novel ERK-related protein. Using these antibodies we have determined that ERK1 and ERK2 are ubiquitously distributed in rat tissues. Both enzymes are expressed most highly in brain and spinal cord as are their mRNAs. The third ERK protein was found in spinal cord and in testes. The antibodies detect ERKs in cell lines from multiple species, including human, mouse, dog, chicken, and frog, in addition to rat, indicating that the kinases are conserved across species. ERK1 and ERK2 have been separated by chromatography on Mono Q. Stimulation by insulin increases the phosphorylation of both kinases on tyrosine residues, as assessed by immunoblotting with phosphotyrosine antibodies, and retards their elution from Mono Q. Each of these ERKs appears to account for a distinct peak of MBP kinase activity. The activity in each peak is diminished by incubation with either phosphatase 2a or CD45. Therefore, both enzymes have similar modes of regulation and appear to contribute to the growth factor-stimulated MAP2/MBP kinase activity measured in cell extracts.  相似文献   

19.
A new kind of prokaryotic protein tyrosine kinase was recently discovered, utilizing a guanidino-phosphotransferase domain for its kinase activity. Guanidino kinase domains originate from eukaryotic phosphagen kinases, a family of phosphoryl transfer enzymes with no homology to the serine/threonine and tyrosine kinase superfamily. Nevertheless, this kinase, McsB, exhibits the main structural and functional properties of prokaryotic tyrosine kinases. Tyrosine phosphorylation in bacteria is predominantly described to be involved in the regulation of exopolysaccharide synthesis and is therefore required for biofilm formation and virulence. McsB on the other hand modulates together with its activator protein, McsA, the activity of the repressor of the class III heat shock genes in B. subtilis. The analogy of the kinase mechanism of McsB to tyrosine kinases implicates that tyrosine kinases may harbor various and independently evolved domains for ATP-binding/hydrolysis and the transfer of the gamma-phosphate of ATP onto tyrosine residues.  相似文献   

20.
The mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases, a family of 40-45-kDa kinases whose activation requires both tyrosine and threonine/serine phosphorylations, are suggested to play key roles in various phosphorylation cascades. A previous study of Krebs and co-workers (Ahn, N. G., Seger, R., Bratlien, R. L., Diltz, C. D., Tonks, N. K., and Krebs, E. G. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 4220-4227) detected an activity in epidermal growth factor (EGF)-stimulated 3T3 cells that can stimulate inactive MAP kinases. We observed this activity in rat 3Y1 cells treated with various mitogenic factors and in PC12 cells treated with nerve growth factor (NGF). Its kinetics of activation and deactivation following EGF or NGF stimulation roughly paralleled that of MAP kinase. The MAP kinase activator required the presence of ATP and a divalent cation such as Mn2+ and Mg2+ and was inactivated by phosphatase 2A treatment in vitro. This activator has been isolated from EGF-stimulated 3Y1 cells by sequential chromatography and identified as a 45-kDa monomeric protein. It was able to activate mammalian and Xenopus MAP kinases in vitro and was very similar to Xenopus M phase MAP kinase activating factor, which was purified previously from mature oocytes (Matsuda, S., Kosako, H., Takenaka, K., Moriyama, K., Sakai, H., Akiyama, T., Gotoh, Y., and Nishida, E. (1992) EMBO J. 11, 973-982), in terms of its functional, immunological, and physicochemical properties. Thus, the same or a similar upstream activating factor may function in mitogen-induced and M phase-promoting factor-induced MAP kinase activation pathways.  相似文献   

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