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Complex effects of kinase localization revealed by compartment-specific regulation of protein kinase A activity.

Rebecca LaCroixBenjamin LinTae-Yun KangAndre Levchenko
Published in: eLife (2022)
Kinase activity in signaling networks frequently depends on regulatory subunits that can both inhibit activity by interacting with the catalytic subunits and target the kinase to distinct molecular partners and subcellular compartments. Here, using a new synthetic molecular interaction system, we show that translocation of a regulatory subunit of the protein kinase A (PKA-R) to the plasma membrane has a paradoxical effect on the membrane kinase activity. It can both enhance it at lower translocation levels, even in the absence of signaling inputs, and inhibit it at higher translocation levels, suggesting its role as a linker that can both couple and decouple signaling processes in a concentration-dependent manner. We further demonstrate that superposition of gradients of PKA-R abundance across single cells can control the directionality of cell migration, reversing it at high enough input levels. Thus, complex in vivo patterns of PKA-R localization can drive complex phenotypes, including cell migration.
Keyphrases
  • protein kinase
  • cell migration
  • transcription factor
  • tyrosine kinase
  • hepatitis c virus
  • hiv infected
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • antibiotic resistance genes