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1.
Phosphorylation of casein kinase II   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
E Palen  J A Traugh 《Biochemistry》1991,30(22):5586-5590
Casein kinase II from rabbit reticulocytes is a tetramer with an alpha,alpha' beta 2 or alpha 2 beta 2 structure; the alpha subunits contain the catalytic activity, and the beta subunits are regulatory in nature [Traugh, J.A., Lin, W. J., Takada-Axelrod, F., & Tuazon, P. T. (1990) Adv. Second Messenger Phosphoprotein Res. 24, 224-229]. When casein kinase II is isolated from rabbit reticulocytes by a rapid two-step purification of the enzyme, both the alpha and beta subunits are phosphorylated to a significant extent. In vitro, purified casein kinase II undergoes autophosphorylation on the beta subunit. In the presence of polylysine and polyarginine, phosphorylation of the beta subunits is inhibited, and the alpha subunits (alpha and alpha') become autophosphorylated. The effectiveness of polylysine coincides with the molecular weight. With basic proteins, including a number of histones and protamine, autophosphorylation of both subunits is observed. With histones, autophosphorylation of each subunit can be greater than that observed with the autophosphorylated enzyme alone or with a basic polypeptide. Thus, the potential exists for modulatory proteins to alter the autophosphorylation state of casein kinase II. Taken together, the data suggest that phosphorylation of the alpha subunit of casein kinase II in vivo may be due to an unidentified protein kinase or due to autophosphorylation. In the latter instance, casein kinase II could be transiently associated with specific intracellular compounds, such as basic proteins, with a resultant stimulation of autophosphorylation.  相似文献   

2.
A type-2 casein kinase (YCK-2), lacking the 25-kDa autophosphorylatable beta subunit characteristic of animal casein kinases-2, has been obtained in a nearly pure form from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and was compared with liver casein kinase-2 (LCK-2). A 22-kDa phosphorylatable protein, copurifying with YCK-2, can be removed by ultracentrifugation at low ionic strength and is shown by several criteria to be unrelated to the beta subunit of LCK-2. The native Mr of YCK-2, deprived of the 22-kDa phosphoprotein, is about 150 000. Limited proteolysis experiments show that YCK-2 included 37-kDa catalytic subunits, which can be converted into still active 35-kDa proteolytic derivatives. These data are consistent with a homotetrameric quaternary structure as opposed to the heterotetrameric subunit composition alpha 2 beta 2 of LCK-2 and other animal casein kinases-2. Although many properties of YCK-2 and LCK-2, including substrate specificity, inhibition by heparin, polyglutamic acid and quercetin and stimulation by polyamines, are similar; their stability under denaturing and dissociating conditions and their response to polybasic peptides are quite different. In particular YCK-2 is more readily denatured than LCK-2 by heating and exposure to urea, sodium dodecylsulphate and deoxycholate while its activity is inhibited by 100-150 mM NaCl, which conversely stimulates LCK-2 activity 2-3-fold. The Km value of the synthetic peptide substrate Ser-(Glu)5 for YCK-2 is not significantly changed by the addition of polylysine. On the contrary the Km value of the same peptide substrate for LCK-2 decreases approximately tenfold upon addition of polylysine, which also prevents the fast autophosphorylation of the kinase at its beta subunit. These data suggest that the beta subunit of animal CK-2 may play a role in determining both the stability of the enzyme and its regulation and that, consequently, the different properties of YCK-2 may be at least in part accounted for by its lack of beta subunits.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Type-2 casein kinase-TS (Ck-TS) purified to homogeneity from rat liver cytosol exhibits a molecular mass of 130000 daltons in non-denaturating media and a subunit composition consistent with an alpha 2 beta 2 heterotetramer. The quaternary structure of Ck-TS is not compromised by limited proteolysis with trypsin which converts the 38-kDa alpha subunit into 36-kDa (alpha') and 34-kDa (alpha") derivatives, inducing a parallel decrease of enzymatic activity. Since the 25-kDa beta subunit is unaffected under comparable conditions, the catalytic activity seemingly resides in the alpha subunits. The beta subunit, on the other hand, undergoes a very rapid phosphorylation upon incubation of Ck-TS with ATP/Mg2+: 0.8-1.5 mol P/mol Ck-TS are incorporated within 30 s. Such a fast autophosphorylation is neither prevented nor slowed down by the addition of a large excess of phosphorylatable substrates and takes place through an intra-molecular rather than inter-molecular process. This conclusion is supported by the following data. (a) The autophosphorylation rate is linearly proportional to the concentration of Ck-TS. (b) Thermally inactivated Ck-TS is not phosphorylated by catalytic amounts of active enzyme. (c) Basic polypeptides like protamine and polylysine stimulate the activity of Ck-TS toward phosphorylatable substrates while preventing the autophosphorylation reaction. Since the effectors that inhibit autophosphorylation also induce a remarkable decrease of the Km values for the protein substrates, the possibility is discussed that autophosphorylation might represent a regulatory device by which Ck-TS could be converted into a partially inactivated form exhibiting reduced affinity toward its endogenous targets.  相似文献   

5.
Beta-conglycinin consisting of six major isomers (designated B1- to B6-conglycinin) was dissociated and fractionated on columns of DEAE- and CM-Sephadex in buffers containing 6 M urea. Three major (alpha, alpha' and beta) and one minor (gamma) subunits were isolated and further characterized by gel electrophoresis and gel electrofocusing. Gel electrophoresis in urea and in sodium dodecyl sulfate, and gel filtration in 6 M guanidine hydrochloride gave a molecular weight of 57 000 for alpha, alpha' subunits; and 42 000 for beta and gamma subunits. The isoelectric points of the isolated subunits, measured by disc gel electrofocusing, were as follows: alpha, 4.90; alpha', 5.18; beta, 5.66-6.00. On gel electrofocusing, beta subunit showed four microheterogeneous components; three of them comprised 95% of the total beta subunit. Leucine and valine were the N-terminal amino acids of beta and alpha alpha' subunits, respectively. The isolated subunits contained mannose and glucosamine in varying quantities. Two carbohydrate moieties were calculated for one mole of alpha, alpha' subunits; and one carbohydrate moiety for the beta subunit. Considerable similarity in the amino acid composition of alpha and alpha' subunits was observed. The beta subunit was devoid of cysteine and methionine; and in comparison with alpha, alpha' subunits, had a higher content of hydrophobic amino acids. The isolated subunits exhibited antigen-antibody reaction with antisera to the native beta-conglycinin. Each of them was partglycinins. The alpha and alpha' subunits were in addition identical with each other and with B5-, B6-conglycinins. They were immunologically unrelated with beta subunit. The recovery of immuno-properties from the individual subunits may be attributed to the reconstruction of the three-dimensional structure upon removal of denaturing reagents.  相似文献   

6.
A new approach to studying the arrangement of subunits in the multienzyme complex tryptophan synthase is reported. Comparative studies of limited tryptic proteolysis of the alpha2beta2 complex and of the separate beta2 and alpha subunits show that subunit association inhibits two types of proteolysis which occur with the separate subunits: (i) cleavage of the beta2 subunit to two fragments with consequent loss of activity and (ii) complete degradation of the alpha subunit with loss of activity. Trypsin treatment of the alpha2beta complex does, however, result in at least one cleavage of the alpha subunit and yields an active alpha'2beta2 complex. The alpha'2beta2 complex can be resolved into an active beta2 subunit and an active alpha derivative termed alpha'. These two species can reassociate into the active alpha'2beta2 complex. alpha' derivative can be separated into a large fragment of Mr approximately 20,000 to 23,000 and a small peptide by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions.  相似文献   

7.
Casein kinase II (CKII) is composed of a catalytic (alpha) and a regulatory (beta) subunit which unite to form an alpha 2 beta 2 holoenzyme. Saccharomyces cerevisiae CKII consists of two distinct catalytic (Sc alpha and Sc alpha') and regulatory (Sc beta and Sc beta') subunits. Simultaneous disruption of the CKA1 and CKA2 genes (encoding the alpha and alpha' subunits, respectively) is lethal. Such double disruptions can be rescued by GAL1, 10-induced expression of the Drosophila alpha and beta subunits (Dm alpha+beta) together or by GAL10-induced expression of the Drosophila alpha subunit (Dm alpha) alone (Padmanabha, R., Chen-Wu, J. L.-P., Hanna, D. E., and Glover, C. V. C. (1990) Mol. Cell. Biol. 10, 4089-4099). Here we report quantitation, purification, and characterization of casein kinase II activity from such rescued strains. Casein kinase II activity from a strain rescued by Dm alpha alone purifies as a free, catalytically active alpha subunit monomer, whereas that from a strain rescued by Dm alpha/beta purifies as a mixture of tetrameric holoenzyme and monomeric alpha subunit. Interestingly, neither Sc beta nor Sc beta' is present at detectable levels in the enzyme obtained from either strain, raising the possibility that rescue by Dm alpha alone may be mediated via the free, monomeric catalytic subunit. Overexpression of total casein kinase II activity from 6- to 18-fold is not toxic and indeed has no overt phenotypic consequences. Production of large amounts of free catalytic subunit also appears to be without effect, even though free catalytic subunit is normally undetectable in S. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

8.
Altogether 2 holoenzymes and 4 catalytic CK2 constructs were expressed and characterized i.e. CK2alpha (2) (1-335) beta(2); CK2alpha'-derived holoenzyme; CK2alpha(1-335); MBP-CK2alpha'; His-tagged CK2alpha and His-tagged CK2alpha'. The two His-tagged catalytic subunits were expressed in insect cells, all others in Escherichia coli. IC(50) studies involving the established CK2 inhibitors DMAT, TBBt, TBBz, apigenin and emodin were carried out and the K(i) values calculated. Although the differences in the K(i) values found were modest, there was a general tendency showing that the CK2 holoenzymes were more sensitive towards the inhibitors than the free catalytic subunits. Thermal inactivation experiments involving the individual catalytic subunits showed an almost complete loss of activity after only 2 min at 45 degrees C. In the case of the two holoenzymes, the CK2alpha'-derived holoenzyme lost ca. 90% of its activity after 14 min, whereas CK2alpha (2) (1-335) beta(2) only showed a loss of ca. 40% by this time of incubation. Gel filtration analyses were performed at high (500 mM) and low (150 mM) monovalent salt concentrations in the absence or presence of ATP. At 500 mM NaCl the CK2alpha'-derived holoenzyme eluted at a position corresponding to a molecular mass of 105 kDa which is significantly below the elution of the CK2alpha (2) (1-335) beta(2) holoenzyme (145 kDa). Calmodulin was not phosphorylated by either CK2alpha (2) (1-335) beta(2) or the CK2alpha'-derived holoenzyme. However, in the presence of polylysine only the CK2alpha (2) (1-335) beta(2) holoenzyme could use calmodulin as a substrate such as the catalytic subunits, in contrast to the CK2alpha'-derived holoenzyme which only phosphorylated calmodulin weakly. This attenuation may be owing to a different structural interaction between the catalytic CK2alpha' subunit and non-catalytic CK2beta subunit.  相似文献   

9.
The relationship between the alpha and alpha' subunits of casein kinase II was studied. For this study, a rapid scheme for the purification of the enzyme from bovine testis was developed. Using a combination of chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, phosphocellulose, hydroxylapatite, gel filtration on Sephacryl S-300 and heparin-agarose, the enzyme was purified approximately 7,000-fold. The purification scheme was completed within 48 h and resulted in the purification of milligram quantities of casein kinase II from 1 kg of fresh bovine testis. The purified enzyme had high specific activity (3,000-5,000 nmol of phosphate transferred per min/mg protein) when assayed at 30 degrees C with ATP and the synthetic peptide RRRDDDSDDD as substrates. The isolated enzyme was a phosphoprotein with an alkali-labile phosphate content exceeding 2 mol/mol protein. By sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis three polypeptides were apparent: alpha (Mr 45,000), alpha' (Mr 40,000), and beta (Mr 26,000). Several lines of evidence conclusively demonstrated that the alpha and alpha' subunits are distinct polypeptides. Two-dimensional maps of 125I-tryptic peptides derived from the two proteins were related, but distinct. An antipeptide antibody was raised in rabbits which reacted only with the alpha subunit on immunoblots and failed to react with either the alpha' or beta subunits. Direct comparison of peptide sequences obtained from the alpha and alpha' subunits revealed differences between the two polypeptides. The results of this study clearly demonstrate that the alpha and alpha' subunits of casein kinase II are not related by post-translational modification and are probably encoded by different genes.  相似文献   

10.
To clarify the control mechanism of the catalytic activity of casein kinase 2 (CK2) during early embryonic development in the silkworm, Bombyx mori, we attempted an in-vitro functional analysis by using the recombinant alpha and beta subunits of B. mori CK2 (rBmCK2alpha and rBmCK2beta) produced in a bacterial system. The renatured rBmCK2alpha possessed protein kinase activity. When rBmCK2alpha and rBmCK2beta were reconstituted in an approximate 1:1 molar ratio, the catalytic activity was almost the same as that of rBmCK2alpha alone. The catalytic activity of rBmCK2alpha was inhibited by polylysine, which is one of the activators of CK2 activity. However, when using the reconstituted rBmCK2alpha and rBmCK2beta (rBmCK2), activation by polylysine was observed. We examined the influence of sorbitol and 3-hydroxykynurenine (3-OHK), which are contained mainly in diapause eggs, on the phosphorylation activity of rBmCK2. Three-OHK inhibited rBmCK2 activity, but sorbitol had no effect on it. Furthermore, a functional analysis using rBmCK2alpha and beta subunits of Drosophila melanogaster CK2 revealed that a difference in the C-terminal amino acid of the CK2beta subunit influenced the phosphorylation activity of rBmCK2alpha. These results may provide new insights for clarifying the control mechanism of B. mori casein kinase 2 in eggs.  相似文献   

11.
Protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) activity may be differentially regulated by the expression of proteins containing a related amino acid sequence motif such as the casein kinase 2alpha (CK2alpha) subunit or SV40 small t antigen (SVt). Expression of CK2alpha increases PP2A activity whereas SVt decreases its activity. In this work we have tested for the effect of the expression of a third protein containing a similar motif that could be involved in PP2A regulation, the catalytic casein kinase 2alpha' subunit. Our results show that despite the structural similarity of this protein with the other CK2 catalytic (alpha) subunit, the function of the two subunits with respect to the modulation of PP2A activity is quite different: CK2alpha increases whereas CK2alpha' slightly decreases PP2A activity.  相似文献   

12.
Protein kinase CK2 is a tetrameric enzyme composed of two catalytic (alpha and/or alpha') subunits and two regulatory (beta) subunits. Because CK2beta is synthesized in excess of CK2alpha, we hypothesized that formation of CK2beta homodimers precedes the incorporation of the catalytic subunits of CK2 into complexes. To test this hypothesis, we cotransfected cells with two epitope-tagged variants of CK2beta. The results of these cotransfection studies demonstrate that interactions between two CK2beta subunits take place in the absence of CK2alpha. Together with results from previous biosynthetic labeling studies, these results suggest that formation of CK2beta homodimers occurs before incorporation of catalytic subunits of CK2 into CK2 complexes. We also cotransfected Cos-7 cells with a deletion fragment of CK2beta (i.e. Myc-beta1-166) together with full-length hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged CK2beta and/or CK2alpha'. Although complexes between Myc-beta1-166 and HA-beta were readily detected, we obtained no evidence of direct interactions between Myc-beta1-166 and HA-CK2alpha'. These results suggest that residues within the N-terminal 166 amino acids of CK2beta are sufficient for interactions between CK2beta subunits, whereas the C-terminal domain of CK2beta is required for complex formation with the catalytic subunits of CK2. Finally, we observed that expression of full-length HA-beta promotes phosphorylation of Myc-beta1-166 by HA-CK2alpha'.  相似文献   

13.
An earlier described CK2(beta)tes gene of Drosophila melanogaster is shown to encode a male germline specific isoform of regulatory beta subunit of casein kinase 2. Western-analysis using anti-CK2(beta)tes Ig revealed CK2(beta)tes protein in Drosophila testes extract. Expression of a CK2(beta)tes-beta-galactosidase fusion protein driven by the CK2(beta)tes promoter was found in transgenic flies at postmitotic stages of spermatogenesis. Examination of biochemical characteristics of a recombinant CK2(beta)tes protein expressed in Escherichia coli revealed properties similar to those of CK2beta: (a) CK2(beta)tes protein stimulates CK2alpha catalytic activity toward synthetic peptide; (b) it inhibits phosphorylation of calmodulin and mediates stimulation of CK2alpha by polylysine; (c) it is able to form (CK2(beta)tes)2 dimers, as well as (CK2alpha)2(CK2(beta)tes)2 tetramers. Using the yeast two-hybrid system and coimmunoprecipitation analysis of protein extract from Drosophila testes, we demonstrated an association between CK2(beta)tes and CK2alpha. Northern-analysis has shown that another regulatory (beta') subunit found recently in D. melanogaster genome is also testis-specific. Thus, we describe the first example of two tissue-specific regulatory subunits of CK2 which might serve to provide CK2 substrate recognition during spermatogenesis.  相似文献   

14.
A Salzman  C F Wan  C S Rubin 《Biochemistry》1984,23(26):6555-6565
The biogenesis, intracellular transport, and functional properties of the insulin proreceptor and modified insulin receptors were studied in hormone-responsive 3T3-L1 adipocytes. After control cells were labeled with [35S]Met for 7 min, the principal polypeptide that was precipitated by anti-insulin receptor antibodies had a molecular weight (Mr) of 180 000. This initial precursor was rapidly converted (t1/2 = 35 min) to a 200-kilodalton (kDa) polypeptide, designated the insulin proreceptor, by the apparent posttranslational addition of N-linked, high mannose core oligosaccharide units. Mature alpha (Mr 130 000) and beta (Mr 90 000) subunits were derived from sequences within the proreceptor by proteolytic cleavage and late processing steps, and these subunits appeared on the cell surface 2-3 h after synthesis of the 180-kDa precursor. The cation ionophore monensin was used in combination with metabolic labeling, affinity cross-linking, and external proteolysis to probe aspects of proreceptor function, transit, and the development of insulin sensitivity at the target cell surface. At 5 micrograms/mL, monensin potently inhibited the proteolytic cleavage step, and the 200-kDa polypeptide accumulated. Lower concentrations of the ionophore selectively blocked late processing steps in 3T3-L1 adipocytes so that apparently smaller alpha' (Mr 120 000) and beta' (Mr 85 000) subunits were produced. Proreceptor and alpha' and beta' subunits were translocated to the cell surface, indicating that the signal for intracellular transit occurs in the 200-kDa polypeptide and is independent of the posttranslational proteolysis and late processing steps. The alpha' subunit bound insulin both at the surface of intact cells and after solubilization with Triton X-100; the beta' subunit was phosphorylated in an insulin-stimulated manner. The detergent-solubilized 200-kDa proreceptor also exhibited both functional properties. However, the proreceptor that was transported to and exposed on the cell surface was incapable of binding insulin in intact adipocytes. Thus, late processing is not essential for the expression of functions associated with mature alpha and beta subunits. In contrast, it appears that the proteolytic generation of subunits is required for the correct orientation of the hormone binding site in the plasma membrane bilayer and the development of insulin responsiveness in 3T3-L1 adipocytes.  相似文献   

15.
Phosvitin/casein type II kinase was purified from HeLa cell extracts to homogeneity and characterized. The kinase prefers phosvitin over casein (Vmax phosvitin greater than Vmax casein; apparent Km 0.5 microM phosvitin and 3.3 microM casein) and utilizes as cosubstrate ATP (apparent Km 3-4 microM), GTP (apparent Km 4-5 microM) and other purine nucleoside triphosphates, including dATP and dGTP but not pyrimidine nucleoside triphosphates. Enzyme reaction is optimal at pH 6-8 and at 10-25 mM Mg2+.Mg2+ cannot be replaced by, but is antagonized by other divalent metal ions. The kinase is stimulated by polycations (spermine) and monovalent cations (Na+,K+), and is inhibited by fluoride, 2,3-diphosphoglycerate, and low levels of heparin (50% inhibition at 0.1 microgram/ml). The HeLa enzyme is composed of three subunits with Mr of approximately 43,000 (alpha), 38,000 (alpha'), and 28,000 (beta) forming alpha alpha'beta 2 and alpha'2 beta 2 structures with obvious sequence homology of alpha with alpha' but not with beta. Photoaffinity labeling with [alpha-32P]- and [gamma-32P]8-azido-ATP revealed high affinity binding sites on subunits alpha and alpha' but not on subunit beta. The kinase autophosphorylates subunit beta and, much weaker, subunits alpha and alpha'. Ecto protein kinase, detectable only by its enzyme activity but not yet as a protein (J. Biol. Chem. 257, 322-329), was characterized in cell-bound form and in released form, and the released form both with and without prior separation from phosvitin which was employed to induce the kinase release from intact HeLa cells (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 80, 4021-4025). Ratios of phosvitin/casein phosphorylation (greater than 2) and of ATP/GTP utilization (1.5-2.1), inhibition by heparin (50% inhibition at 0.1 microgram/ml), and amino-acid side chains phosphorylated in phosvitin and casein (serine, threonine) are comparable for cell-bound and released form. These properties resemble those of type II kinase as does Mr of released ecto kinase (120-150,000). Consistently, a protein with Mr 125,000 in calf serum and a protein (possibly two) with Mr greater than 300,000 in calf plasma which are selectively phosphorylated by the ecto kinase are also substrates of the type II kinase. Thus, nearly all properties examined of the ecto kinase are characteristic for a type II kinase.  相似文献   

16.
Casein kinase type II were isolated by the same procedure, from rat liver, human placenta, Querin carcinoma and yeast, and characterized. The mammalian enzymes were composed of three subunits alpha, alpha' and beta, whereas yeast kinase was composed of two subunits alpha and alpha'. It was shown that the catalytic activity, substrate and phosphate donor specificity, sensitivity to heparin and spermine were the same for all the kinases tested. The results give additional support to the suggestion [1] that the beta subunit is not required for optimal activity and specificity of yeast casein kinase II. The quaternary structure of the yeast enzyme of a molecular weight of approximately 150 000 is proposed as alpha2 alpha'2.  相似文献   

17.
Protein kinase CK2 is a pleiotropic Ser/Thr kinase occurring as alpha2beta2, alpha'2beta2, or alphaalpha'beta2 tetramers. A requirement in serum-stimulated cell cycle entry in both the cytoplasm and the nucleus of human fibroblasts for phosphorylation(s) by CK2 has been concluded from stimulation inhibition by microinjected antibodies against the regulatory subunit (beta). We have now examined this idea more directly by microinjection-mediated perturbation of phosphorylation and non-phosphorylation interactions of the catalytic subunits (alpha and alpha'), and by verifying the supposed matching of the cellular partition of CK2 subunits in the fibroblasts employed. While immunostaining and cell fractionation indicate that the partitions of subunits indeed match each other (with their predominant location in the nucleus in both quiescent and serum-stimulated cells), microinjection of substrate or pseudosubstrate peptides competing for the CK2-mediated phosphorylation in vitro resulted in significant inhibition of serum stimulation when placed into the nucleus but not when placed into the cytoplasm. Also inhibitory were nuclear but not cytoplasmic injections of antibodies against alpha and alpha' that affect neither their kinase activity in vitro nor their complexing to beta. The data indicate that the role played by CK2 in serum-stimulated cell cycle entry is predominantly nuclear and more complex than previously assumed, involving not only phosphorylation but also experimentally separable non-phosphorylation interactions by the catalytic subunits.  相似文献   

18.
Protein kinase CK2 is a multifunctional enzyme which has long been described as a stable heterotetrameric complex resulting from the association of two catalytic (alpha or alpha') and two regulatory (beta) subunits. To track the spatiotemporal dynamics of CK2 in living cells, we fused its catalytic alpha and regulatory beta subunits with green fluorescent protein (GFP). Both CK2 subunits contain nuclear localization domains that target them independently to the nucleus. Imaging of stable cell lines expressing low levels of GFP-CK2alpha or GFP-CK2beta revealed the existence of CK2 subunit subpopulations exhibiting differential dynamics. Once in the nucleus, they diffuse randomly at different rates. Unlike CK2beta, CK2alpha can shuttle, showing the dynamic nature of the nucleocytoplasmic trafficking of the kinase. When microinjected in the cytoplasm, the isolated CK2 subunits are rapidly translocated into the nucleus, whereas the holoenzyme complex remains in this cell compartment, suggesting an intramolecular masking of the nuclear localization sequences that suppresses nuclear accumulation. However, binding of FGF-2 to the holoenzyme triggers its nuclear translocation. Since the substrate specificity of CK2alpha is dramatically changed by its association with CK2beta, the control of the nucleocytoplasmic distribution of each subunit may represent a unique potential regulatory mechanism for CK2 activity.  相似文献   

19.
Protein kinase CK2 (formerly casein kinase II) exhibits elevated expression in a variety of cancers, induces lymphocyte transformation in transgenic mice, and collaborates with Ha-Ras in fibroblast transformation. To systematically examine the cellular functions of CK2, human osteosarcoma U2-OS cells constitutively expressing a tetracycline-regulated transactivator were stably transfected with a bidirectional plasmid encoding either catalytic isoform of CK2 (i.e. CK2alpha or CK2alpha') together with the regulatory CK2beta subunit in order to increase the cellular levels of either CK2 isoform. To interfere with either CK2 isoform, cells were also transfected with kinase-inactive CK2alpha or CK2alpha' (i. e. GK2alpha (K68M) or CK2alpha'(K69M)) together with CK2beta. In these cells, removal of tetracycline from the growth medium stimulated coordinate expression of catalytic and regulatory CK2 subunits. Increased expression of active forms of CK2alpha or CK2alpha' resulted in modest decreases in cell proliferation, suggesting that optimal levels of CK2 are required for optimal proliferation. By comparison, the effects of induced expression of kinase-inactive CK2alpha differed significantly from the effects of induced expression of kinase-inactive CK2alpha'. Of particular interest is the dramatic attenuation of proliferation that is observed following induction of CK2alpha'(K69M), but not following induction of CK2alpha(K68M). These results provide evidence for functional specialization of CK2 isoforms in mammalian cells. Moreover, cell lines exhibiting regulatable expression of CK2 will facilitate efforts to systematically elucidate its cellular functions.  相似文献   

20.
Casein kinase II is a widely distributed protein serine/threonine kinase. The holoenzyme appears to be a tetramer, containing two alpha or alpha' subunits (or one of each) and two beta subunits. Complementary DNA clones encoding the subunits of casein kinase II were isolated from a human T-cell lambda gt10 library using cDNA clones isolated from Drosophila melanogaster [Saxena et al. (1987) Mol. Cell. Biol. 7, 3409-3417]. One of the human cDNA clones (hT4.1) was 2.2 kb long, including a coding region of 1176 bp preceded by 156 bp (5' untranslated region) and followed by 871 bp (3' untranslated region). The hT4.1 clone was nearly identical in size and sequence with a cDNA clone from HepG2 human hepatoma cultured cells [Meisner et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 4072-4076]. Another of the human T-cell cDNA clones (hT9.1) was 1.8 kb long, containing a coding region of 1053 bp preceded by 171 bp (5' untranslated region) and followed by 550 bp (3' untranslated region). Amino acid sequences deduced from these two cDNA clones were about 85% identical. Most of the difference between the two encoded polypeptides was in the carboxy-terminal region, but heterogeneity was distributed throughout the molecules. Partial amino acid sequence was determined in a mixture of alpha and alpha' subunits from bovine lung casein kinase II. The bovine sequences aligned with the 2 human cDNA-encoded polypeptides with only 2 discrepancies out of 535 amino acid positions. This confirmed that the two human T-cell cDNA clones encoded the alpha and alpha' subunits of casein kinase II. Microsequence data determined from separated preparations of bovine casein kinase II alpha subunit and alpha' subunit [Litchfield et al. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 7638-7644] confirmed that hT4.1 encoded the alpha subunit and hT9.1 encoded the alpha' subunit. These studies show that there are two distinct catalytic subunits for casein kinase II (alpha and alpha') and that the sequence of these subunits is largely conserved between the bovine and the human.  相似文献   

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