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PKD autoinhibition in trans regulates activation loop autophosphorylation in cis.


ABSTRACT: Phosphorylation is a ubiquitous mechanism by which signals are transduced in cells. Protein kinases, enzymes that catalyze the phosphotransfer reaction are, themselves, often regulated by phosphorylation. Paradoxically, however, a substantial fraction of more than 500 human protein kinases are capable of catalyzing their own activation loop phosphorylation. Commonly, these kinases perform this autophosphorylation reaction in trans, whereby transient dimerization leads to the mutual phosphorylation of the activation loop of the opposing protomer. In this study, we demonstrate that protein kinase D (PKD) is regulated by the inverse mechanism of dimerization-mediated trans-autoinhibition, followed by activation loop autophosphorylation in cis. We show that PKD forms a stable face-to-face homodimer that is incapable of either autophosphorylation or substrate phosphorylation. Dissociation of this trans-autoinhibited dimer results in activation loop autophosphorylation, which occurs exclusively in cis. Phosphorylation serves to increase PKD activity and prevent trans-autoinhibition, thereby switching PKD on. Our findings not only reveal the mechanism of PKD regulation but also have profound implications for the regulation of many other eukaryotic kinases.

SUBMITTER: Reinhardt R 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9962925 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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PKD autoinhibition in <i>trans</i> regulates activation loop autophosphorylation in <i>cis</i>.

Reinhardt Ronja R   Hirzel Kai K   Link Gisela G   Eisler Stephan A SA   Hägele Tanja T   Parson Matthew A H MAH   Burke John E JE   Hausser Angelika A   Leonard Thomas A TA  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20230206 7


Phosphorylation is a ubiquitous mechanism by which signals are transduced in cells. Protein kinases, enzymes that catalyze the phosphotransfer reaction are, themselves, often regulated by phosphorylation. Paradoxically, however, a substantial fraction of more than 500 human protein kinases are capable of catalyzing their own activation loop phosphorylation. Commonly, these kinases perform this autophosphorylation reaction in <i>trans</i>, whereby transient dimerization leads to the mutual phosph  ...[more]

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