Engineering allosteric regulation in protein kinases.
David PincusJai P PandeyZoë A FederPau CreixellOrna ResnekovKimberly A ReynoldsPublished in: Science signaling (2018)
Phosphoregulation, in which the addition of a negatively charged phosphate group modulates protein activity, enables dynamic cellular responses. To understand how new phosphoregulation might be acquired, we mutationally scanned the surface of a prototypical yeast kinase (Kss1) to identify potential regulatory sites. The data revealed a set of spatially distributed "hotspots" that might have coevolved with the active site and preferentially modulated kinase activity. By engineering simple consensus phosphorylation sites at these hotspots, we rewired cell signaling in yeast. Using the same approach with a homolog yeast mitogen-activated protein kinase, Hog1, we introduced new phosphoregulation that modified its localization and signaling dynamics. Beyond revealing potential use in synthetic biology, our findings suggest that the identified hotspots contribute to the diversity of natural allosteric regulatory mechanisms in the eukaryotic kinome and, given that some are mutated in cancers, understanding these hotspots may have clinical relevance to human disease.
Keyphrases
- protein kinase
- saccharomyces cerevisiae
- small molecule
- protein protein
- tyrosine kinase
- single cell
- transcription factor
- cell wall
- binding protein
- human health
- amino acid
- cell therapy
- electronic health record
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- risk assessment
- young adults
- clinical practice
- structural basis