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MAP kinase activator from insulin‐stimulated skeletal muscle is a protein threonine/tyrosine kinase.
Author(s) -
Nakielny S.,
Cohen P.,
Wu J.,
Sturgill T.
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
the embo journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.484
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1460-2075
pISSN - 0261-4189
DOI - 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1992.tb05271.x
Subject(s) - mitogen activated protein kinase kinase , map2k7 , biology , map kinase kinase kinase , cyclin dependent kinase 9 , autophosphorylation , ask1 , mapk14 , cyclin dependent kinase 2 , biochemistry , c raf , protein tyrosine phosphatase , protein kinase a , microbiology and biotechnology , phosphorylation
A ‘MAP kinase activator’ was purified several thousand‐fold from insulin‐stimulated rabbit skeletal muscle, which resembled the ‘activator’ from nerve growth factor‐stimulated PC12 cells in that it could be inactivated by incubation with protein phosphatase 2A, but not by protein tyrosine phosphatases and its apparent molecular mass was 45–50 kDa. In the presence of MgATP, ‘MAP kinase activator’ converted the normal ‘wild‐type’ 42 kDa MAP kinase from an inactive dephosphorylated form to the fully active diphosphorylated species. Phosphorylation occurred on the same threonine and tyrosine residues which are phosphorylated in vivo in response to growth factors or phorbol esters. A mutant MAP kinase produced by changing a lysine at the active centre to arginine was phosphorylated in an identical manner by the ‘MAP kinase activator’, but no activity was generated. The results demonstrate that ‘MAP kinase activator’ is a protein kinase (MAP kinase kinase) and not a protein that stimulates the autophosphorylation of MAP kinase. MAP kinase kinase is the first established example of a protein kinase that can phosphorylate an exogenous protein on threonine as well as tyrosine residues.