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S100B(ββ) inhibits the protein kinase C‐dependent phosphorylation of a peptide derived from p53 in a Ca 2+ ‐dependent manner
Author(s) -
Wilder Paul T.,
Rustandi Richard R.,
Drohat Alexander C.,
Weber David J.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
protein science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.353
H-Index - 175
eISSN - 1469-896X
pISSN - 0961-8368
DOI - 10.1002/pro.5560070330
Subject(s) - phosphorylation , protein kinase c , peptide , kinase , chemistry , biochemistry , ic50 , binding site , microbiology and biotechnology , biophysics , biology , in vitro
S100B(ββ) is a dimeric Ca 2+ ‐binding protein that is known to inhibit the protein kinase C (PKC)‐dependent phosphorylation of several proteins. To further characterize this inhibition, we synthesized peptides based on the PKC phosphorylation domains of p53 (residues 367‐388), neuromodulin (residues 37‐53), and the regulatory domain of PKC (residues 19‐31), and tested them as substrates for PKC. All three peptides were shown to be good substrates for the catalytic domain of PKC. As for full‐length p53 (Baudier J, Delphin C, Grunwald D, Khochbin S, Lawrence JJ. 1992. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 89 :11627‐11631), S100B(ββ) binds the p53 peptide and inhibits its PKC‐dependent phosphorylation (IC 50 = 10 ± 7μM) in a Ca 2+ ‐dependent manner. Similarly, phosphorylation of the neuromodulin peptide and the PKC regulatory domain peptide were inhibited by S100B(ββ) in the presence of Ca 2+ (IC 50 = 17 ± 5 μM; IC 50 = 1 ± 0.5 μM, respectively). At a minimum, the C‐terminal EF‐hand Ca 2+ ‐binding domain (residues 61‐72) of each S100β subunit must be saturated to inhibit phosphorylation of the p53 peptide as determined by comparing the Ca 2+ dependence of inhibition ( Ca IC 50 = 29.3 ± 17.6 μM) to the dissociation of Ca 2+ from the C‐terminal EF‐hand Ca 2+ ‐ binding domain of S100B(ββ).