Protein Kinase C Phosphorylates Protein Kinase D Activation Loop Ser744 and Ser748 and Releases Autoinhibition by the Pleckstrin Homology Domain
0303 health sciences
Protein Conformation
Recombinant Fusion Proteins
Molecular Sequence Data
Blood Proteins
Phosphoproteins
Protein Structure, Tertiary
Enzyme Activation
Isoenzymes
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
Catalytic Domain
COS Cells
Mutation
Serine
Animals
Humans
Amino Acid Sequence
Phosphorylation
Peptides
Protein Kinase C
Signal Transduction
DOI:
10.1074/jbc.m208075200
Publication Date:
2002-12-28T16:56:15Z
AUTHORS (2)
ABSTRACT
Persistent activation of protein kinase D (PKD) via protein kinase C (PKC)-mediated signal transduction is accompanied by phosphorylation at Ser(744) and Ser(748) located in the catalytic domain activation loop, but whether PKC isoforms directly phosphorylate these residues, induce PKD autophosphorylation, or recruit intermediate upstream kinase(s) is unclear. Here, we explore the mechanism whereby PKC activates PKD in response to cellular stimuli. We first assessed in vitro PKC-PKD transphosphorylation and PKD activation. A PKD738-753 activation loop peptide was well phosphorylated by immunoprecipitated PKC isoforms, consistent with similarities between the loop and their known substrate specificities. A similar peptide with glutamic acid replacing Ser(748) was preferentially phosphorylated by PKCepsilon, suggesting that PKD containing phosphate at Ser(748) is rapidly targeted by this isoform at Ser(744). When incubated in the presence of phosphatidylserine, phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate and ATP, intact PKD slowly autophosphorylated in the activation loop but only at Ser(748). In contrast, addition of purified PKCepsilon to the incubation mixture induced rapid Ser(744) and Ser(748) phosphorylation, concomitant with persistent 2-3-fold increases in PKD activity, measured using reimmunoprecipitated PKD to phosphorylate an exogenous peptide, syntide-2. We also further examined pleckstrin homology domain-mediated PKD regulation to determine its relationship with activation loop phosphorylation. The high constitutive activity of the pleckstrin homology (PH) domain deletion mutant PKD-deltaPH was not abrogated by mutation of Ser(744) and Ser(748) to alanines, suggesting that one function of activation loop phosphorylation in the PKD activation mechanism is to relieve autoinhibition by the PH domain. These studies provide evidence of a direct PKCepsilon-PKD phosphorylation cascade and provide additional insight into the activation mechanism.
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CITATIONS (170)
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