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1.
Wang ZX  Zhou B  Wang QM  Zhang ZY 《Biochemistry》2002,41(24):7849-7857
The activities of many protein kinases are regulated by phosphorylation. The phosphorylated protein kinases thus represent an important class of substrates for protein phosphatases. However, our ability to study the phosphatase-catalyzed substrate dephosphorylation has been limited in many cases by the difficulty in preparing sufficient amount of stoichiometrically phosphorylated kinases. We have applied the kinetic theory of substrate reaction during irreversible modification of enzyme activity to the study of phosphatase-catalyzed regulation of kinase activity. As an example, we measured the effect of the hematopoietic protein-tyrosine phosphatase (HePTP) on the reaction catalyzed by the fully activated, bisphosphorylated extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase 2 (ERK2/pTpY). Because only a catalytic amount of ERK2/pTpY is required, this method alleviates the need for large quantities of phospho-ERK2. Kinetic analysis of the ERK2/pTpY-catalyzed substrate reaction in the presence of HePTP leads to the determination of the rate constants for the HePTP-catalyzed dephosphorylation of free ERK2/pTpY and ERK2/pTpY*substrate(s) complexes. The data indicate that ERK2/pTpY is a highly efficient substrate for HePTP (k(cat)/K(m) = 3.05 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1)). The data also show that binding of ATP to ERK2/pTpY has no effect on ERK2/pTpY dephosphorylation by HePTP. In contrast, binding of an Elk-1 peptide substrate to ERK2/pTpY completely blocks the HePTP action. This result indicates that phosphorylation of Tyr185 is important for ERK2 substrate recognition and that binding of the Elk-1 peptide substrate to ERK2/pTpY blocks the accessibility of pTyr185 to HePTP for dephosphorylation. Collectively, the results establish that the kinetic theory of irreversible enzyme modification can be applied to study the phosphatase catalyzed regulation of kinase activity.  相似文献   

2.
Hematopoietic tyrosine phosphatase (HePTP) is a 38kDa class I non-receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) that is strongly expressed in T cells. It is composed of a C-terminal classical PTP domain (residues 44-339) and a short N-terminal extension (residues 1-43) that functions to direct HePTP to its physiological substrates. Moreover, HePTP is a member of a recently identified family of PTPs that has a major role in regulating the activity and translocation of the MAP kinases Erk and p38. HePTP binds Erk and p38 via a short, highly conserved motif in its N terminus, termed the kinase interaction motif (KIM). Association of HePTP with Erk via the KIM results in an unusual, reciprocal interaction between the two proteins. First, Erk phosphorylates HePTP at residues Thr45 and Ser72. Second, HePTP dephosphorylates Erk at PTyr185. In order to gain further insight into the interaction of HePTP with Erk, we determined the structure of the PTP catalytic domain of HePTP, residues 44-339. The HePTP catalytic phosphatase domain displays the classical PTP1B fold and superimposes well with PTP-SL, the first KIM-containing phosphatase solved to high resolution. In contrast to the PTP-SL structure, however, HePTP crystallized with a well-ordered phosphate ion bound at the active site. This resulted in the closure of the catalytically important WPD loop, and thus, HePTP represents the first KIM-containing phosphatase solved in the closed conformation. Finally, using this structure of the HePTP catalytic domain, we show that both the phosphorylation of HePTP at Thr45 and Ser72 by Erk2 and the dephosphorylation of Erk2 at Tyr185 by HePTP require significant conformational changes in both proteins.  相似文献   

3.
The extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase 2 (ERK2) is the founding member of a family of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) that are central components of signal transduction pathways for cell proliferation, stress responses, and differentiation. The MAPKs are unique among the Ser/Thr protein kinases in that they require both Thr and Tyr phosphorylation for full activation. The dual phosphorylation of Thr-183 and Tyr-185 in ERK2 is catalyzed by MAPK/ERK kinase 1 (MEK1). However, the identity and relative activity of protein phosphatases that inactivate ERK2 are less well established. In this study, we performed a kinetic analysis of ERK2 dephosphorylation by protein phosphatases using a continuous spectrophotometric enzyme-coupled assay that measures the inorganic phosphate produced in the reaction. Eleven different protein phosphatases, many previously suggested to be involved in ERK2 regulation, were compared, including tyrosine-specific phosphatases (PTP1B, CD45, and HePTP), dual specificity MAPK phosphatases (VHR, MKP3, and MKP5), and Ser/Thr protein phosphatases (PP1, PP2A, PP2B, PP2C alpha, and lambda PP). The results provide biochemical evidence that protein phosphatases display exquisite specificity in their substrate recognition and implicate HePTP, MKP3, and PP2A as ERK2 phosphatases. The fact that ERK2 inactivation could be carried out by multiple specific phosphatases shows that signals can be integrated into the pathway at the phosphatase level to determine the cellular response to external stimuli. Important insights into the roles of various protein phosphatases in ERK2 kinase signaling are obtained, and further analysis of the mechanism by which different protein phosphatases recognize and inactivate MAPKs will increase our understanding of how this kinase family is regulated.  相似文献   

4.
The mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase phosphatase-3 (MKP3) is a dual specificity phosphatase that specifically inactivates one subfamily of MAP kinases, the extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs). Inactivation of MAP kinases occurs by dephosphorylation of Thr(P) and Tyr(P) in the TXY kinase activation motif. To gain insight into the mechanism of ERK2 inactivation by MKP3, we have carried out an analysis of the MKP3-catalyzed dephosphorylation of the phosphorylated ERK2. We find that ERK2/pTpY dephosphorylation by MKP3 involves an ordered, distributive mechanism in which MKP3 binds the bisphosphorylated ERK2/pTpY, dephosphorylates Tyr(P) first, dissociates and releases the monophosphorylated ERK2/pT, which is then subjected to dephosphorylation by a second MKP3, yielding the fully dephosphorylated ERK2. The bisphosphorylated ERK2 is a highly specific substrate for MKP3 with a k(cat)/K(m) of 3.8 x 10(6) m(-1) s(-1), which is more than 6 orders of magnitude higher than that for small molecule aryl phosphates and an ERK2-derived phosphopeptide encompassing the pTEpY motif. This strikingly high substrate specificity displayed by MKP3 may result from a combination of high affinity binding interactions between the N-terminal domain of MKP3 and ERK2 and specific ERK2-induced allosteric activation of the MKP3 C-terminal phosphatase domain.  相似文献   

5.
The mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase ERK2 is an essential signal transduction molecule that mediates extracellular signaling by all polypeptide growth factors. Full activation of ERK2 requires phosphorylation at both a threonine residue (Thr(183)) conserved in most protein kinases as well as a tyrosine residue (Tyr(185)) unique to members of the mitogen-activated protein kinase family. We have characterized the kinetic role of phosphorylation at each site with respect to the overall activation mechanism, providing a complete picture of the reaction steps involved. Phosphorylation at Tyr(185) serves to configure the ATP binding site, while phosphorylation at both residues is required to stabilize binding of the protein substrate, myelin basic protein. Similar control mechanisms are employed to stabilize ATP and myelin basic protein in the phosphoryl group transfer reaction, accounting for the enormous increase in turnover rate. The mechanism of ERK2 activation is kinetically similar to that of the cell cycle control protein, cdk2/cyclinA. Phosphorylation of Tyr(185) in ERK2 and association of cyclinA with cdk2 both serve to stabilize ATP binding. Subsequent phosphorylation of both enzymes on threonine serves to stabilize binding of the phosphoacceptor substrate.  相似文献   

6.
7.
ERK2, a prototypic member of the MAPK family, plays a central role in regulating cell growth and differentiation. MKP3, an ERK2-specific phosphatase, terminates ERK2 signaling. To understand the molecular basis of ERK2 recognition by MKP3, we carried out hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry experiments to map the interaction surfaces between the two proteins. The results show that the exquisite specificity of MKP3 for ERK2 is governed by two distinctive protein-protein interactions. To increase the "effective concentration" of the interacting molecules, the kinase interaction motif in MKP3 ((64)RRLQKGNLPVR(74)) and an MKP3-specific segment ((101)NSSDWNE(107)) bind the common docking site in ERK2 defined by residues in L(16), L(5), beta(7)-beta(8), and alpha(d)-L(8)-alpha(e), located opposite the kinase active site. In addition to this "tethering" effect, additional interactions between the (364)FTAP(367) sequence in MKP3 and the ERK2 substrate-binding site, formed by residues in the activation lip and the P+1 site (beta(9)-alpha(f) loop), L(13) (alpha(f)-alpha(g) loop), and the MAPK insert (L(14)-alpha(1L14)-alpha(2L14)), are essential for allosteric activation of MKP3 and formation of a productive complex whereby the MKP3 catalytic site is correctly juxtaposed to carry out the dephosphorylation of phospho-Thr(183)/phospho-Tyr(185) in ERK2. This bipartite protein-protein interaction model may be applicable to the recognition of other MAPKs by their cognate regulators and substrates.  相似文献   

8.
Ligand stimulation of PDGF beta-receptors leads to autophosphorylation of the regulatory tyrosine 857 and of tyrosine residues that in their phosphorylated form serve as docking sites for Src homology 2 domain-containing proteins. Regulation of the PDGF beta-receptor by protein-tyrosine phosphatases is poorly understood. We have investigated PDGF beta-receptor dephosphorylation by receptor-like protein-tyrosine phosphatase DEP-1 using a cell line with inducible DEP-1 expression and by characterizing in vitro dephosphorylation of the PDGF beta-receptor and of receptor-derived phosphopeptides by DEP-1. After DEP-1 induction PDGF beta-receptor.DEP-1 complexes and reduced receptor tyrosine phosphorylation were observed. Phosphopeptide analysis of the PDGF beta-receptors from DEP-1-expressing cells and of the receptors dephosphorylated in vitro by DEP-1 demonstrated that dephosphorylation of autophosphorylation sites of the receptor differed and revealed that the regulatory Tyr(P)(857) was not a preferred site for DEP-1 dephosphorylation. When dephosphorylation of synthetic receptor-derived peptides was analyzed, the selectivity was reproduced, indicating that amino acid sequence surrounding the phosphorylation sites is the major determinant of selectivity. This notion is supported by the observation that the poorly dephosphorylated Tyr(P)(562) and Tyr(P)(857), in contrast to other analyzed phosphorylation sites, are surrounded by basic amino acid residues at positions -4 and +3 relative to the tyrosine residue. Our study demonstrates that DEP-1 dephosphorylation of the PDGF beta-receptor is site-selective and may lead to modulation, rather than general attenuation, of signaling.  相似文献   

9.
Protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP)-PEST is a cytoplasmic tyrosine phosphatase that can bind and dephosphorylate the focal adhesion-associated proteins p130(CAS) and paxillin. Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and cell adhesion kinase beta (CAKbeta)/PYK2/CADTK/RAFTK are protein-tyrosine kinases that can colocalize with, bind to, and induce tyrosine phosphorylation of p130(CAS) and paxillin. Thus, we considered the possibility that these kinases might be substrates for PTP-PEST. Using a combination of substrate-trapping assays and overexpression of PTP-PEST in mammalian cells, CAKbeta was found to be a substrate for PTP-PEST. Both the major autophosphorylation site of CAKbeta (Tyr(402)) and activation loop tyrosine residues, Tyr(579) and Tyr(580), were targeted for dephosphorylation by PTP-PEST. Dephosphorylation of CAKbeta by PTP-PEST dramatically inhibited CAKbeta kinase activity. In contrast, FAK was a poor substrate for PTP-PEST, and treatment with PTP-PEST had no effect on FAK kinase activity. Tyrosine phosphorylation of paxillin, which is greatly enhanced by CAKbeta overexpression, was dramatically reduced upon coexpression of PTP-PEST. Finally, endogenous PTP-PEST and endogenous CAKbeta were found to localize to similar cellular compartments in epithelial and smooth muscle cells. These results suggest that CAKbeta is a substrate of PTP-PEST and that FAK is a poor PTP-PEST substrate. Further, PTP-PEST can negatively regulate CAKbeta signaling by inhibiting the catalytic activity of the kinase.  相似文献   

10.
Ordered phosphorylation of p42mapk by MAP kinase kinase.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Preparation of milligram amounts of [32P]p42mapk, phosphorylated at Tyr185 or diphosphorylated at Tyr185/Thr183, for use as specific protein phosphatase substrates is described. Tyr- but not Thr-phosphorylated p42mapk, accumulates when ATP is limiting. Furthermore, Tyr185-phosphorylated p42mapk exhibits an apparent 10-fold decrease in apparent Km (46.6 +/- 6.6 nM) for MAP kinase kinase compared to that for the dephospho form (approximately 476 nM). We conclude that Tyr185 precedes Thr183 phosphorylation, and that this is prerequisite, dramatically increasing the affinity of p42mapk for MAP kinase kinase.  相似文献   

11.
The dual specificity mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase MKP3 has been shown to down-regulate mitogenic signaling through dephosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). Camps et al. (Camps, M., Nichols, A., Gillieron, C., Antonsson, B., Muda, M., Chabert, C., Boschert, U., and Arkinstall, S. (1998) Science 280, 1262-1265) had demonstrated that ERK binding to the noncatalytic amino-terminal domain of MKP3 can dramatically activate the phosphatase catalytic domain. The physical basis for this activation has not been established. Here, we provide detailed biochemical evidence that ERK activates MKP3 through the stabilization of the active phosphatase conformation, inducing closure of the catalytic "general acid" loop. In the closed conformation, this loop structure can participate efficiently in general acid/base catalysis, substrate binding, and transition-state stabilization. The pH activity profiles of ERK-activated MKP3 clearly indicated the involvement of general acid catalysis, a hallmark of protein-tyrosine phosphatase catalysis. In contrast, unactivated MKP3 did not display this enzymatic group as critical for the low activity form of the enzyme. Using a combination of Br?nsted analyses, pre-steady-state and steady-state kinetics, we have isolated all catalytic steps in the reaction and have quantified the specific rate enhancement. Through protonation of the leaving group and transition-state stabilization, activated MKP3 catalyzes formation of the phosphoenzyme intermediate approximately 100-fold faster than unactivated enzyme. In addition, ERK-activated MKP3 catalyzes intermediate hydrolysis 5-6-fold more efficiently and binds ligands up to 19-fold more tightly. Consistent with ERK stabilizing the active conformation of MKP3, the chemical chaperone dimethyl sulfoxide was able to mimic this activation. A general protein-tyrosine phosphatase regulatory mechanism involving the flexible general acid loop is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Mammalian brain phosphoproteins as substrates for calcineurin   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Calcineurin, a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent phosphoprotein phosphatase found in several tissues, is highly concentrated in mammalian brain. In an attempt to identify endogenous brain substrates for calcineurin, kinetic analyses of the dephosphorylation of several well-characterized phosphoproteins purified from brain were performed. The proteins studied were: G-substrate, a substrate for cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase; DARPP-32, a substrate for cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase; Protein K.-F., a substrate for a cyclic nucleotide- and Ca2+-independent protein kinase; and synapsin I, a substrate for cyclic AMP-dependent (site I) and a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (site II). Calcineurin dephosphorylated each of these proteins in a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent manner. Similar Km values were obtained for each substrate: G-substrate, 3.8 microM; DARPP-32, 1.6 microM; Protein K.-F., approximately 3 microM (S0.5); synapsin I (site I), 7.0 microM; synapsin I (site II), 4.4 microM. However, significant differences were obtained for the maximal rates of dephosphorylation. The kcat values were: G-substrate, 0.41 s-1; DARPP-32, 0.20 s-1; Protein K.-F., 0.7 s-1; synapsin I (site I), 0.053 s-1; synapsin I (site II), 0.040 s-1. Comparisons of the catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) for each substrate indicated that DARPP-32, G-substrate, and Protein K.-F. are all potential substrates for calcineurin in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
The mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases are essential signaling molecules that mediate many cellular effects of growth factors, cytokines, and stress stimuli. Full activation of the MAP kinases requires dual phosphorylation of the Thr and Tyr residues in the TXY motif of the activation loop by MAP kinase kinases. Down-regulation of MAP kinase activity can be initiated by multiple serine/threonine phosphatases, tyrosine-specific phosphatases, and dual specificity phosphatases (MAP kinase phosphatases). This would inevitably lead to the formation of monophosphorylated MAP kinases. However, the biological functions of these monophosphorylated MAP kinases are currently not clear. In this study, we have prepared MAP kinase p38alpha, a member of the MAP kinase family, in all phosphorylated forms and characterized their biochemical properties. Our results indicated the following: (i) p38alpha phosphorylated at both Thr-180 and Tyr-182 was 10-20-fold more active than p38alpha phosphorylated at Thr-180 only, whereas p38alpha phosphorylated at Tyr-182 alone was inactive; (ii) the dual-specific MKP5, the tyrosine-specific hematopoietic protein-tyrosine phosphatase, and the serine/threonine-specific PP2Calpha are all highly specific for the dephosphorylation of p38alpha, and the dephosphorylation rates were significantly affected by different phosphorylated states of p38alpha; (iii) the N-terminal domain of MPK5 has no effect on enzyme catalysis, whereas deletion of the MAP kinase-binding domain in MKP5 leads to a 370-fold decrease in k(cat)/K(m) for the dephosphorylation of p38alpha. This study has thus revealed the quantitative contributions of phosphorylation of Thr, Tyr, or both to the activation of p38alpha and to the substrate specificity for various phosphatases.  相似文献   

14.
Thirty-nine mutant tryptophan synthase alpha subunits have been purified and analyzed (in the presence of the beta 2-subunit) for their enzymatic (kcat, Km) behavior in the reactions catalyzed by the alpha 2.beta 2 complex, the fully constituted form of this enzyme. The mutant alpha subunits, obtained by in vitro random, saturation mutagenesis of the encoding trpA gene, contain single amino acid substitutions at sites within the first 121 residues of the alpha polypeptide. Four categories of altered residues have been tentatively assigned roles in the catalytic functions of this enzyme: 1) catalytic residues (Glu49 and Asp60); 2) residues involved in substrate binding or orientation (Phe22, Thr63, Gln65, Tyr102, and Leu105); 3) residues involved in alpha.beta subunit interactions (Gly51, Pro53, Asp56, Asp60, Pro62, Ala67, Phe72, Thr77, Pro78, Tyr102, Asn104, Leu105, and Asn108); and 4) residues with no apparent catalytic roles. Catalytic residue alterations result in no detectable activity in the alpha-subunit specific reactions. Substrate binding/orientation roles are detected enzymatically primarily as rate defects; alterations only at Tyr102 result in apparent Km effects. alpha.beta interaction roles are detected as rate defects in all tryptophan synthase reactions plus Km increases for the alpha-subunit substrate, indole-3-glycerol phosphate, only when L-serine is present at the beta 2-subunit active site. A substitution at only one site, Asn104, appears to be unique in its potential effect on intersubunit channeling of indole, the product of the alpha-subunit specific reaction, to the beta 2-subunit active site.  相似文献   

15.
R Schinzel  D Palm 《Biochemistry》1990,29(42):9956-9962
The role of Escherichia coli maltodextrin phosphorylase (EC 2.4.1.1) active site residues Glu637 and Tyr538 which line the sugar-phosphate contact region of the enzyme was investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Substitution of Glu637 by an Asp or Gln residue reduced kcat to approximately 0.2% of wild-type activity, while the Km values were affected to a minor extent. This indicated participation of Glu637 in transition-state binding rather than in ground-state binding. 31P NMR analysis of the ionization state of enzyme-bound pyridoxal phosphate suggested that Glu637 is also involved in modulation of the protonation state of the coenzyme phosphate observed during catalysis. Despite loss of proposed hydrogen-bonded substrate contacts, the Tyr538Phe mutant enzyme retained more than 10% activity; the apparent affinity of all substrates was slightly decreased. Mutations at either site affected the error rate of the enzyme (ratio of hydrolysis/phosphorolysis). Besides a role in substrate binding, the hydrogen-bond network of Tyr538 supports the exclusion of water from the active site.  相似文献   

16.
Protein phosphatase activity specific for Tyr(P) (phosphotyrosine) residues (PTP-phosphatase) was found in the cytosol and particulate fractions of human placenta. In the particulate fraction, half of the PTP-phosphatase activity could be extracted with 1% Triton X-100. The PTP-phosphatase remaining in the Triton-insoluble residue was solubilized with 0.6 M-KCl plus 1% CHAPS (3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)-dimethylammonio]propane-1-sulphonate) and was purified 1850-fold by adsorption to DEAE-Sepharose, affinity chromatography on Zn2+-iminodiacetate-agarose, phosphocellulose adsorption, Fractogel filtration and Mono Q chromatography. The cytoskeleton-associated PTP-phosphatase was distinguished from acid, alkaline and other protein Ser(P) (phosphoserine)/Thr(P) (phosphothreonine) phosphatases by its neutral pH optimum, activity in the presence of EDTA, inhibition by Zn2+, vanadate, or molybdate, and low activity with either [Ser(P)]phosphorylase a or p-nitrophenyl phosphate. The PTP-phosphate displayed a Km of 0.15 microM with [Tyr(P)]serum albumin as substrate, 10-100-fold lower than the Km for previously described protein phosphatases. The cytoskeleton-associated PTP-phosphatase catalysed the dephosphorylation of receptors for insulin, insulin-like growth factor-1 and epidermal growth factor labelled by autophosphorylation. The properties of this PTP-phosphatase suggest that it plays a role in the regulation of hormone receptors and cytoskeleton proteins by reversible phosphorylation on tyrosine residues.  相似文献   

17.
The enzyme thymidylate synthase (TS) catalyzes the reductive methylation of 2'-deoxyuridine 5'-monophosphate (dUMP) to 2'-deoxythymidine 5'-monophosphate. Using kinetic and X-ray crystallography experiments, we have examined the role of the highly conserved Tyr-261 in the catalytic mechanism of TS. While Tyr-261 is distant from the site of methyl transfer, mutants at this position show a marked decrease in enzymatic activity. Given that Tyr-261 forms a hydrogen bond with the dUMP 3'-O, we hypothesized that this interaction would be important for substrate binding, orientation, and specificity. Our results, surprisingly, show that Tyr-261 contributes little to these features of the mechanism of TS. However, the residue is part of the structural core of closed ternary complexes of TS, and conservation of the size and shape of the Tyr side chain is essential for maintaining wild-type values of kcat/Km. Moderate increases in Km values for both the substrate and cofactor upon mutation of Tyr-261 arise mainly from destabilization of the active conformation of a loop containing a dUMP-binding arginine. Besides binding dUMP, this loop has a key role in stabilizing the closed conformation of the enzyme and in shielding the active site from the bulk solvent during catalysis. Changes to atomic vibrations in crystals of a ternary complex of Escherichia coli Tyr261Trp are associated with a greater than 2000-fold drop in kcat/Km. These results underline the important contribution of dynamics to catalysis in TS.  相似文献   

18.
Pawlowski M  Ragab A  Rosa JP  Bryckaert M 《FEBS letters》2002,521(1-3):145-151
Thrombin-induced extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2 (ERK2) activation is negatively regulated in conditions of all bP3 integrin engagement and platelet aggregation. Here we show by Western blotting with antibodies against mono- and biphosphorylated forms of ERK2 that the dephosphorylation of ERK2 by alpha llb beta 3 engagement affects threonine183 and not tyrosine185. Addition of a potent serine/threonine phosphatase inhibitor, okadaic acid (OA), restored thrombin-induced threonine phosphorylation of ERK2 in conditions of platelet aggregation, whereas OA had no effect in the absence of alpha llb beta 3 engagement. These observations are consistent with alpha llb beta 3 engagement acting via at least one serine/threonine phosphatase,which dephosphorylates the phosphothreonine183 residue of ERK2. Moreover, a small amount (14%) of ERK2 was translocated to the alpha llb beta 3-dependent cytoskeleton, mostly ina monophosphorylated (i.e. inactive) form, suggesting that cytoskeleton-associated ERK2 plays only a minor role, if any. Finally, we show that negative regulation (i.e. dephosphorylation)occurs primarily or totally in the cytosol and that the alpha llb beta 3-dependent ERK2 Thr183-specific phosphatase is different from phosphatase 1 (PP1) or PP2A. We conclude that all alpha llb beta 3 engagement down-regulates ERK2 through selective dephosphorylation of the phosphothreonine183 residue by a cytosolic serine/threonine phosphatase different from known platelet phosphatases.  相似文献   

19.
Schizosaccharomyces pombe Fcp1 is an essential protein serine phosphatase that preferentially dephosphorylates Ser(2) of the RNA polymerase II C-terminal domain (CTD) heptad repeat Y(1)S(2)P(3)T(4)S(5)P(6)S(7). Here we show that: (i) Fcp1 acts distributively during the hydrolysis of substrates containing tandem Ser(2)-PO(4) heptads; (ii) the minimal optimal CTD substrate for Fcp1 is a single heptad of phasing S(5)P(6)S(7)Y(1)S(2)P(3)T(4); and (iii) single alanine mutations of flanking residues Tyr(1) or Pro(3) result in 6-fold decrements in CTD phosphatase activity. Fcp1 belongs to the DXDX(T/V) family of phosphotransferases that act via an acyl-phosphoenzyme intermediate. An alanine scan of 11 conserved positions of S. pombe Fcp1 identifies Thr(174), Tyr(237), Thr(243), and Tyr(249) as important for phosphatase activity. Structure-activity relationships at these positions were determined by introducing conservative substitutions. Our results, together with previous mutational studies, highlight a constellation of 11 amino acids that are conserved in all Fcp1 orthologs and likely comprise the active site.  相似文献   

20.
The substrate specificity of the different forms of the polycation-stimulated (PCS, type 2A) protein phosphatases and of the active catalytic subunit of the ATP, Mg-dependent (type 1) phosphatase (AMDC) was investigated, using synthetic peptides phosphorylated by either cyclic-AMP-dependent protein kinase or by casein kinase-2. The PCS phosphatases are very efficient toward the Thr(P) peptides RRAT(P)VA and RRREEET(P)EEE when compared with the Ser(P) analogues RRAS(P)VA and RRREEES(P)EEEAA. Despite their distinct sequence, both Thr(P) peptides are excellent substrates for the PCSM and PCSH1 phosphatases, being dephosphorylated faster than phosphorylase a. The slow dephosphorylation of RRAS(P)VA by the PCS phosphatases could be increased substantially by the insertion of N-terminal (Arg) basic residues. In contrast with the latter, the AMDC phosphatase shows very poor activity toward all the phosphopeptides tested, without preference for either Ser(P) or Thr(P) peptides. However, N-terminal basic residues also favor the dephosphorylation of otherwise almost inert substrates by the AMDC phosphatase. Hence, while the dephosphorylation of Thr(P) substrates by the PCS phosphatases is highly favored by the nature of the phosphorylated amino acid, phosphatase activity toward Ser(P)-containing peptides may require specific determinants in the primary structure of the phosphorylation site.  相似文献   

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