Regulation of S6K1 Protein Kinae Activation by its C-Terminal Autoinhibitory Domain
Signal transduction kinases lie at the heart of the cell's ability to respond to environmental cues. These kinases are typically controlled by post-translational modification, most commonly by phosphorylation. S6K1alphaII is a member of the AGC subfamily of serine-threonine protein kinases, wh...
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ndltd-UMIAMI-oai-scholarlyrepository.miami.edu-oa_dissertations-11242011-12-13T15:38:55Z Regulation of S6K1 Protein Kinae Activation by its C-Terminal Autoinhibitory Domain Ragan, Timothy James Signal transduction kinases lie at the heart of the cell's ability to respond to environmental cues. These kinases are typically controlled by post-translational modification, most commonly by phosphorylation. S6K1alphaII is a member of the AGC subfamily of serine-threonine protein kinases, whereby catalytic activation requires phosphorylation of critical residues in the conserved T-loop (T229) and hydrophobic motif (T389) regions of its catalytic kinase domain. In addition to its kinase domain, S6K1 contains a C-terminal autoinhibitory domain (AID, residues 399-502), which inhibits T-loop and hydrophobic motif phosphorylation. Autoinhibition is relieved upon multi-site Ser-Thr phosphorylation of the AID by MAP kinase(s). We developed an optimized PCR-based gene synthesis method, which I utilized to build expression constructs for the AID alone as well as the kinase domain and full length S6K1alphaII. A fully activated form of S6K1alphaII was purified from Sf9 cells by co-expression with PDK1, and was used for in vitro analysis of the signaling pathway. AID was successfully purified in a soluble form from E. coli despite the fact that PONDR analysis predicted a highly disordered structure. Aberrant mobilities in both SDS-PAGE and size-exclusion chromatography, as well as low chemical shift dispersion in 1H-15N HSQC spectra and far UV CD data showing a lack of secondary structure, confirmed that purified recombinant AID is largely unfolded. Despite this, addition of purified AID effectively inhibited PDK1-catalyzed T-loop phosphorylation of a catalytic kinase domain construct of S6K1 and inhibition was decreased when the tetraphospho-mimic mutant AID(D2ED) was used. These studies, along with the reagents produced by them, will allow for further exploration of the emerging field of disordered regulatory domains. 2008-06-20 text application/pdf http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/125 Open Access Dissertations Scholarly Repository CD NMR |
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CD NMR Ragan, Timothy James Regulation of S6K1 Protein Kinae Activation by its C-Terminal Autoinhibitory Domain |
description |
Signal transduction kinases lie at the heart of the cell's ability to respond to environmental cues. These kinases are typically controlled by post-translational modification, most commonly by phosphorylation. S6K1alphaII is a member of the AGC subfamily of serine-threonine protein kinases, whereby catalytic activation requires phosphorylation of critical residues in the conserved T-loop (T229) and hydrophobic motif (T389) regions of its catalytic kinase domain. In addition to its kinase domain, S6K1 contains a C-terminal autoinhibitory domain (AID, residues 399-502), which inhibits T-loop and hydrophobic motif phosphorylation. Autoinhibition is relieved upon multi-site Ser-Thr phosphorylation of the AID by MAP kinase(s). We developed an optimized PCR-based gene synthesis method, which I utilized to build expression constructs for the AID alone as well as the kinase domain and full length S6K1alphaII. A fully activated form of S6K1alphaII was purified from Sf9 cells by co-expression with PDK1, and was used for in vitro analysis of the signaling pathway. AID was successfully purified in a soluble form from E. coli despite the fact that PONDR analysis predicted a highly disordered structure. Aberrant mobilities in both SDS-PAGE and size-exclusion chromatography, as well as low chemical shift dispersion in 1H-15N HSQC spectra and far UV CD data showing a lack of secondary structure, confirmed that purified recombinant AID is largely unfolded. Despite this, addition of purified AID effectively inhibited PDK1-catalyzed T-loop phosphorylation of a catalytic kinase domain construct of S6K1 and inhibition was decreased when the tetraphospho-mimic mutant AID(D2ED) was used. These studies, along with the reagents produced by them, will allow for further exploration of the emerging field of disordered regulatory domains. |
author |
Ragan, Timothy James |
author_facet |
Ragan, Timothy James |
author_sort |
Ragan, Timothy James |
title |
Regulation of S6K1 Protein Kinae Activation by its C-Terminal Autoinhibitory Domain |
title_short |
Regulation of S6K1 Protein Kinae Activation by its C-Terminal Autoinhibitory Domain |
title_full |
Regulation of S6K1 Protein Kinae Activation by its C-Terminal Autoinhibitory Domain |
title_fullStr |
Regulation of S6K1 Protein Kinae Activation by its C-Terminal Autoinhibitory Domain |
title_full_unstemmed |
Regulation of S6K1 Protein Kinae Activation by its C-Terminal Autoinhibitory Domain |
title_sort |
regulation of s6k1 protein kinae activation by its c-terminal autoinhibitory domain |
publisher |
Scholarly Repository |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_dissertations/125 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ragantimothyjames regulationofs6k1proteinkinaeactivationbyitscterminalautoinhibitorydomain |
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1716389505907294208 |