PKC maturation is promoted by nucleotide pocket occupation independently of intrinsic kinase activity

Angus J. M. Cameron, Cristina Escribano, Adrian T. Saurin, Brenda Kostelecky, Peter J. Parker (Lead / Corresponding author)

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    109 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The protein kinase C (PKC) Ser/Thr kinases account for similar to 2% of the human kinome and regulate diverse cellular behaviors. PKC catalytic activity requires priming phosphorylations at three conserved sites within the kinase domain. Here we demonstrate that priming of PKC is dependent on the conformation of the nucleotide binding pocket but not on its intrinsic kinase activity. Inactive ATP binding site mutants are unprimed, but they become phosphorylated upon occupancy of the ATP binding pocket with inhibitors of PKC. We have exploited this property to screen for PKC inhibitors in vivo. Further, we generated a distinct class of kinase-inactive mutants that maintain the integrity of the ATP binding pocket; such mutants are constitutively primed and functionally distinct from ATP binding site mutants. These data demonstrate that autophosphorylation is not required for PKC priming and show how ATP pocket occupation can enable a kinase to mature as well as function.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)624-630
    Number of pages8
    JournalNature Structural & Molecular Biology
    Volume16
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jun 2009

    Keywords

    • ACTIVATION
    • INHIBITOR
    • AGC KINASES
    • MECHANISM
    • C-EPSILON
    • TURN MOTIF PHOSPHORYLATION
    • CRYSTAL-STRUCTURE
    • DEPHOSPHORYLATION
    • CATALYTIC DOMAIN
    • PROTEIN-KINASE

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