A biochemical genomics screen for substrates of Ste20p kinase enables the in silico prediction of novel substrates.

The Ste20/PAK family is involved in many cellular processes, including the regulation of actin-based cytoskeletal dynamics and the activation of MAPK signaling pathways. Despite its numerous roles, few of its substrates have been identified. To better characterize the roles of the yeast Ste20p kinas...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Robert B Annan, Anna Y Lee, Ian D Reid, Azin Sayad, Malcolm Whiteway, Michael Hallett, David Y Thomas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-12-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2791418?pdf=render
id doaj-d98f1f83604d45c89fdeaad80e00d050
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d98f1f83604d45c89fdeaad80e00d0502020-11-25T01:48:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-12-01412e827910.1371/journal.pone.0008279A biochemical genomics screen for substrates of Ste20p kinase enables the in silico prediction of novel substrates.Robert B AnnanAnna Y LeeIan D ReidAzin SayadMalcolm WhitewayMichael HallettDavid Y ThomasThe Ste20/PAK family is involved in many cellular processes, including the regulation of actin-based cytoskeletal dynamics and the activation of MAPK signaling pathways. Despite its numerous roles, few of its substrates have been identified. To better characterize the roles of the yeast Ste20p kinase, we developed an in vitro biochemical genomics screen to identify its substrates. When applied to 539 purified yeast proteins, the screen reported 14 targets of Ste20p phosphorylation. We used the data resulting from our screen to build an in silico predictor to identify Ste20p substrates on a proteome-wide basis. Since kinase-substrate specificity is often mediated by additional binding events at sites distal to the phosphorylation site, the predictor uses the presence/absence of multiple sequence motifs to evaluate potential substrates. Statistical validation estimates a threefold improvement in substrate recovery over random predictions, despite the lack of a single dominant motif that can characterize Ste20p phosphorylation. The set of predicted substrates significantly overrepresents elements of the genetic and physical interaction networks surrounding Ste20p, suggesting that some of the predicted substrates are in vivo targets. We validated this combined experimental and computational approach for identifying kinase substrates by confirming the in vitro phosphorylation of polarisome components Bni1p and Bud6p, thus suggesting a mechanism by which Ste20p effects polarized growth.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2791418?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert B Annan
Anna Y Lee
Ian D Reid
Azin Sayad
Malcolm Whiteway
Michael Hallett
David Y Thomas
spellingShingle Robert B Annan
Anna Y Lee
Ian D Reid
Azin Sayad
Malcolm Whiteway
Michael Hallett
David Y Thomas
A biochemical genomics screen for substrates of Ste20p kinase enables the in silico prediction of novel substrates.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Robert B Annan
Anna Y Lee
Ian D Reid
Azin Sayad
Malcolm Whiteway
Michael Hallett
David Y Thomas
author_sort Robert B Annan
title A biochemical genomics screen for substrates of Ste20p kinase enables the in silico prediction of novel substrates.
title_short A biochemical genomics screen for substrates of Ste20p kinase enables the in silico prediction of novel substrates.
title_full A biochemical genomics screen for substrates of Ste20p kinase enables the in silico prediction of novel substrates.
title_fullStr A biochemical genomics screen for substrates of Ste20p kinase enables the in silico prediction of novel substrates.
title_full_unstemmed A biochemical genomics screen for substrates of Ste20p kinase enables the in silico prediction of novel substrates.
title_sort biochemical genomics screen for substrates of ste20p kinase enables the in silico prediction of novel substrates.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2009-12-01
description The Ste20/PAK family is involved in many cellular processes, including the regulation of actin-based cytoskeletal dynamics and the activation of MAPK signaling pathways. Despite its numerous roles, few of its substrates have been identified. To better characterize the roles of the yeast Ste20p kinase, we developed an in vitro biochemical genomics screen to identify its substrates. When applied to 539 purified yeast proteins, the screen reported 14 targets of Ste20p phosphorylation. We used the data resulting from our screen to build an in silico predictor to identify Ste20p substrates on a proteome-wide basis. Since kinase-substrate specificity is often mediated by additional binding events at sites distal to the phosphorylation site, the predictor uses the presence/absence of multiple sequence motifs to evaluate potential substrates. Statistical validation estimates a threefold improvement in substrate recovery over random predictions, despite the lack of a single dominant motif that can characterize Ste20p phosphorylation. The set of predicted substrates significantly overrepresents elements of the genetic and physical interaction networks surrounding Ste20p, suggesting that some of the predicted substrates are in vivo targets. We validated this combined experimental and computational approach for identifying kinase substrates by confirming the in vitro phosphorylation of polarisome components Bni1p and Bud6p, thus suggesting a mechanism by which Ste20p effects polarized growth.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2791418?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT robertbannan abiochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT annaylee abiochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT iandreid abiochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT azinsayad abiochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT malcolmwhiteway abiochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT michaelhallett abiochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT davidythomas abiochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT robertbannan biochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT annaylee biochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT iandreid biochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT azinsayad biochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT malcolmwhiteway biochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT michaelhallett biochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
AT davidythomas biochemicalgenomicsscreenforsubstratesofste20pkinaseenablestheinsilicopredictionofnovelsubstrates
_version_ 1725012987805171712