Literature DB >> 10627033

Sequences and evolutionary analyses of eukaryotic-type protein kinases from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2).

H Ogawara1, N Aoyagi, M Watanabe, H Urabe.   

Abstract

Four eukaryotic-type protein serine/threonine kinases from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2) were cloned and sequenced. To explore evolutionary relationships between these and other protein kinases, the distribution of protein serine/threonine kinase genes in prokaryotes was examined with the TFASTA program. Genes of this type were detected in only a few species of prokaryotes and their distribution was uneven; Streptomyces, Mycobacterium, Synechocystis and Myxococcus each contained more than three such genes. Homology analyses by GAP and Rdf2 programs suggested that some kinases from one species were closely related, whilst others were only remotely related. This was confirmed by examining phylogenetic trees constructed by the neighbour-joining and other methods. For each species, analysis of the coding regions indicated that the G+C content of protein kinase genes was similar to that of other genes. Considered with the fact that in phylogenetic trees the amino acid sequences of STPK from Aquifex aeolicus and some other eukaryotic-type protein kinases in prokaryotes form a cluster with protein kinases from eukaryotes, this suggests that the eukaryotic-type protein kinases were present originally in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, but that most of these genes have been lost during the evolutionary process in prokaryotes because they are not needed. This conclusion is supported by the observation that the prokaryotes retaining several of these kinases undergo complicated morphological and/or biochemical differentiation.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10627033     DOI: 10.1099/00221287-145-12-3343

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Microbiology        ISSN: 1350-0872            Impact factor:   2.777


  6 in total

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Review 3.  Aspects of eukaryotic-like signaling in Gram-positive cocci: a focus on virulence.

Authors:  Kellie Burnside; Lakshmi Rajagopal
Journal:  Future Microbiol       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 3.165

4.  Autophosphorylation of a bacterial serine/threonine kinase, AfsK, is inhibited by KbpA, an AfsK-binding protein.

Authors:  T Umeyama; S Horinouchi
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 3.490

5.  Effect of protein kinase inhibitors on protein phosphorylation and germination of aerial spores from Streptomyces coelicolor.

Authors:  P Palecková; F Kontrová; O Kofronová; J Bobek; O Benada; K Mikulík
Journal:  Folia Microbiol (Praha)       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 2.629

6.  Nitropropenyl benzodioxole, an anti-infective agent with action as a protein tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor.

Authors:  Kylie S White; Gina Nicoletti; Robert Borland
Journal:  Open Med Chem J       Date:  2014-05-30
  6 in total

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