Literature DB >> 24531485

The structures of the kinase domain and UBA domain of MPK38 suggest the activation mechanism for kinase activity.

Yong-Soon Cho1, Jiho Yoo1, Soomin Park1, Hyun-Soo Cho1.   

Abstract

Murine protein serine/threonine kinase 38 (MPK38) is the murine orthologue of human maternal embryonic leucine-zipper kinase (MELK), which belongs to the SNF1/AMPK family. MELK is considered to be a promising drug target for anticancer therapy because overexpression and hyperactivation of MELK is correlated with several human cancers. Activation of MPK38 requires the extended sequence (ExS) containing the ubiquitin-associated (UBA) linker and UBA domain and phosphorylation of the activation loop. However, the activation mechanism of MPK38 is unknown. This paper reports the crystal structure of MPK38 (T167E), which mimics a phosphorylated state of the activation loop, in complex with AMP-PNP. In the MPK38 structure, the UBA linker forces an inward movement of the αC helix. Phosphorylation of the activation loop then induces movement of the activation loop towards the C-lobe and results in interlobar cleft closure. These processes generate a fully active state of MPK38. This structure suggests that MPK38 has a similar molecular mechanism regulating activation as in other kinases of the SNF1/AMPK family.

Entities:  

Keywords:  MELK; MPK38; UBA linker; activation-loop phosphorylation; two-step activation model

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24531485      PMCID: PMC3940201          DOI: 10.1107/S1399004713027806

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr        ISSN: 0907-4449


Introduction

Murine protein serine/threonine kinase 38 (MPK38), also known as maternal embryonic leucine-zipper kinase (MELK), was initially identified as a murine orthologue of human HPK38/hMELK/KIAA175 (Gil et al., 1997 ▶). MELK, the human orthologue of MPK38, is involved in the cell cycle (Davezac et al., 2002 ▶), cell proliferation (Nakano et al., 2005 ▶), apoptosis (Jung et al., 2008 ▶; Lin et al., 2007 ▶) and spliceosome assembly (Vulsteke et al., 2004 ▶). Overexpression and hyperactivation of MELK are involved in initiation of the cell cycle but are barely detectable during cell differentiation (Badouel et al., 2010 ▶). Recent research shows that MELK expression is correlated with malignancy in a broad spectrum of cancers (Gray et al., 2005 ▶; Marie et al., 2008 ▶; Nakano et al., 2008 ▶; Pickard et al., 2009 ▶; Ku et al., 2010 ▶). Overexpression of MELK is associated with a poor prognosis in breast cancer and glioblastoma patients. MELK is hyperactivated in cell lines derived from a colorectal carcinoma (Pickard et al., 2009 ▶; Nakano et al., 2008 ▶; Ku et al., 2010 ▶). MELK plays a critical role in the formation or maintenance of cancer stem cells (Sutter et al., 2007 ▶; Hebbard et al., 2010 ▶). Therefore, MELK is recognized as an emerging target for anticancer drug therapy. MPK38 is a serine/threonine kinase that belongs to the SNF1/AMPK family, which contains yeast sucrose-non-fermenting-1 (Snf1), two isoforms of AMP-activating protein kinase (AMPKα1 and AMPKα2) and 12 AMPK-related kinases (Beullens et al., 2005 ▶; Bright et al., 2009 ▶; Manning et al., 2002 ▶). All kinases in this family have a conserved threonine residue (Thr172 in AMPKα1 and AMPKα2 and Thr167 in MPK38) in their activation loop (Beullens et al., 2005 ▶; Bright et al., 2009 ▶; Woods et al., 2003 ▶). Phosphorylation of the threonine residue in the activation loop of AMPKα1 and AMPKα2 is triggered by the upstream kinase LKB1, while phosphorylation of the activation loop of MPK38 occurs by autophos­phorylation (Bright et al., 2009 ▶; Lizcano et al., 2004 ▶; Woods et al., 2003 ▶). Substitution of Thr with a negative charged amino acid in the activation loop of MPK38 induces constitutive activation (Beullens et al., 2005 ▶). MPK38 consecutively comprises a kinase domain (KD), a ubiquitin-associated (UBA) domain, a TP dipeptide-rich domain and a kinase-associated 1 (KA1) domain. A C-terminal fragment of MPK38 containing the TP dipeptide-rich domain and the KA1 domain functions as an autoinhibitory domain. Ten AMPK-related kinases, including MPK38, contain a UBA domain, which is a specific feature that only occurs in the mammalian genome (Bright et al., 2009 ▶; Jaleel et al., 2006 ▶). The UBA domain binds to polyubiquitinated proteins, which inhibits further ubiquitination and attenuates proteosomal degradation of the target protein (Buchberger, 2002 ▶; Davies et al., 2004 ▶; Hartmann-Petersen et al., 2003 ▶; Mueller et al., 2004 ▶). The UBA domain is also involved in protein–protein interactions such as protein dimerization (Bertolaet et al., 2001 ▶). The extended sequence (ExS) containing the UBA linker is involved in regulation of activity in AMPK-related kinases (Beullens et al., 2005 ▶; Jaleel et al., 2006 ▶). The kinase domain (KD) and the UBA domain are connected by the UBA linker, which has a length of approximately 20 amino acids. The ExS consists of the UBA linker and UBA domain. The activity of protein kinases depends on the correct positioning of the active-site residues (Huse & Kuriyan, 2002 ▶; Nolen et al., 2004 ▶). Most kinases are activated by phosphorylation of a Ser/Thr or a Tyr residue in the activation loop (Canagarajah et al., 1997 ▶; Krupa et al., 2004 ▶). However, some kinases have an alternative activation mechanism, such as those observed in the platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) and AGC kinase families. The juxtamembrane domain of the PDGFR family is released from the KD for activation (Griffith et al., 2004 ▶; Irusta et al., 2002 ▶). Intermolecular interactions are formed between CDKs and cyclins before phosphorylation of CDKs (Jeffrey et al., 1995 ▶; Johnson & O’Reilly, 1996 ▶; Pavletich, 1999 ▶; Russo et al., 1996 ▶). In the AGC family, intramolecular interactions between the KD and the C-terminal flanking sequence are required for activation (Gold et al., 2006 ▶; Knighton et al., 1991 ▶; Yang, Cron, Good et al., 2002 ▶; Yang, Cron, Thompson et al., 2002 ▶). The activation mechanism of UBA-containing kinases has not yet been identified. Previous work indicated that MPK38 was not activated without the UBA linker and the UBA domain (Beullens et al., 2005 ▶). Other AMPK-related kinases containing ExS show a similar activation mechanism to that of MPK38 (Jaleel et al., 2006 ▶). The structures of UBA-containing kinases such as MARK1, MARK2 and MARK3 have been determined (Marx et al., 2006 ▶; Murphy et al., 2007 ▶; Nešić et al., 2010 ▶; Panneerselvam et al., 2006 ▶). Although an active conformation of MARK2 has been reported in the presence of an inhibitory peptide from Helicobacter pylori, there is no active structure in the absence of peptide. Therefore, the structures do not disclose the structural role of the factors that induce or stabilize the active conformation in the absence of peptide (such as the UBA linker, the UBA domain and activation loop phosphorylation; Marx et al., 2006 ▶; Murphy et al., 2007 ▶; Nešić et al., 2010 ▶; Panneerselvam et al., 2006 ▶). This study identified the activation mechanism of MPK38. We determined the structure of MPK38 (T167E) including the KD and the ExS, which mimics the activated state of MPK38. Our results revealed that the positioning of residues in the active site was induced by the UBA linker in the ExS, which restrained the movement of the αC helix. Additionally, the phosphorylation-mimic mutation in the activation loop triggered reorganization of the activation loop and the interlobar cleft into a more closed conformation. The structure of MPK38 (T167E) suggests that there is a common activation mechanism among kinases of the SNF1/AMPK family.

Materials and methods

Protein expression and purification

Residues 1–326 of MPK38 were subcloned into the pET-21b vector (Novagen). The MPK38 (T167E) mutant, which mimics a constitutively phosphorylated state, was generated using the QuikChange kit (Stratagene). The MPK38 (T167E) construct was transformed into Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) cells. The expression of MPK38 (T167E) was induced by 0.5 mM IPTG at 18°C for 16 h. The cells were harvested and suspended in cell-lysis buffer (20 mM TrisHCl pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCl). The cells were lysed by sonication and the supernatant was separated by centrifugation. The cell supernatant was applied onto a HisTrap HP column (GE Healthcare) and washed with washing buffer (20 mM TrisHCl pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCl, 50 mM imidazole). MPK38 (T167E) was eluted with elution buffer (20 mM TrisHCl pH 7.5, 500 mM NaCl, 200 mM imidazole). MPK38 (T167E) was purified using a HiTrap Q anion-exchange column (GE Healthcare). Finally, MPK38 (T167E) was eluted by gel-filtration chromatography (HiLoad 16/60 200 pg, GE Healthcare) in size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) buffer (20 mM TrisHCl pH 7.5, 300 mM NaCl, 5 mM DTT).

Crystallization, data collection and structure determination

MPK38 (T167E) was concentrated to 15 mg ml−1 for crystallization screening using a commercial screening kit (Hampton Research). MPK38 (T167E) was mixed with 1 mM AMP-PNP and a complex crystal was grown at 293 K by the vapour-diffusion method using 1.7 M ammonium sulfate, 50 mM CAPSO pH 9.8 in two weeks. The complex crystal was soaked in crystallization buffer with 20% ethylene glycol before cooling. X-­ray diffraction data were collected from the crystals on the BL-17A beamline at the Photon Factory, Japan. The MPK38 (T167E) crystal belonged to space group P212121, with unit-cell parameters a = 35.799, b = 75.711, c = 128.088 Å. The initial phase of MPK38 (T167E) was obtained by molecular replacement using MOLREP (Vagin & Teplyakov, 2010 ▶) with the human MELK structure (PDB entry 3zgw; G. Canevari, S. Re-Depaolini, U. Cucchi, B. Forte, P. Carpinelli & J. A. Bertrand, unpublished work) as a search model. The model of MPK38 (T167E) was built using Coot (Emsley et al., 2010 ▶), and PHENIX was used for structure refinement (Adams et al., 2010 ▶). The statistics of data collection and refinement are presented in Table 1 ▶.
Table 1

X-ray data-collection and refinement statistics

Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell.

Data collection
 Space group P212121
 Unit-cell parameters (Å, °) a = 35.759, b = 75.711, c = 128.088, α = β = γ = 90
 Resolution (Å) 50–2.35
R merge 0.101 (0.355)
 Average I/σ(I)35.78 (6.21)
 Completeness (%) 99.8 (99.1)
 Multiplicity10.8 (7.0)
Refinement
 Resolution (Å)48.90–2.35
 No. of reflections 15156
R work/R free 0.17/0.20
 No. of atoms
  Protein 2267
  Water 21
B factors (Å2)
  Protein 93.52
  Water 86.40
 R.m.s. deviations
  Bond lengths (Å) 0.012
  Bond angles (°)1.242

Results and discussion

Overall structure of the MPK38 constitutively active mutant

The overall structure of MPK38 (T167E) shows the KD and ExS, which contain the UBA linker and the UBA domain (Beullens et al., 2005 ▶). In MPK38, Thr167 is substituted by Glu to mimic the phosphorylated state of the activation loop. The KD of MPK38 (T167E) adopts the classical bilobar protein kinase fold, which consists of an N-terminal lobe (N-lobe; residues 1–91) and a C-terminal lobe (C-lobe; residues 94–263) (Huse & Kuriyan, 2002 ▶; Knighton et al., 1991 ▶; Nolen et al., 2004 ▶; Fig. 1 ▶). The ATP-binding pocket is located between the N- and C-lobes. The N-­lobe, which contains six antiparallel β-sheets and the regulatory αC helix, is involved in ATP binding and in inter­action with the UBA domain (residues 284–326). The C-lobe consists predominantly of α-­helices and serves as a docking site for substrates. It includes the catalytic loop (residues 132–137), the DFG motif (the magnesium-binding loop) and the activation loop (residues 150–176) that participates in the transfer of phosphate to substrates. The N-­lobe exhibits the αC-in and DFG-in conformations, which are conserved throughout all active protein kinases (Figs. 2 ▶ b and 2 ▶ c). The activation loop is localized in the C-lobe of the KD (Fig. 2 ▶ d), although 11 residues (residues 158–168) in the activation loop are not visible in the electron-density map. The AMP-PNP, which is an analogue of ATP, is positioned in the ATP-binding pocket (Fig. 1 ▶).
Figure 1

Overview of the structure of MPK38 (T167E): stereo image of the MPK38 (T167E) structure. The UBA domain is shown in yellow, the UBA linker in green, the activation loop in red, the αC helix in blue and AMP-PNP in cyan.

Figure 2

Conformation of the active-state kinase domain (KD) in MPK38 (T167E). The UBA domain is shown in yellow, the UBA linker in green, the activation loop in red and the αC helix in blue. (a) Overview of the MPK38 (T167E) structure. (b) Close-up view of the αC-in conformation. The ion pair between Lys40 and Glu57 is marked as a red dashed line. (c) Close-up view of the DFG-in conformation.

The UBA domain of MPK38 is a small globular domain that contains three short helices (α1–α3) and binds to the back of the N-lobe (Fig. 1 ▶). Helices α1 and α3 are approximately antiparallel in conformation, as observed for those in the MARKs (MARK1, MARK2 and MARK3; Marx et al., 2006 ▶; Murphy et al., 2007 ▶; Panneerselvam et al., 2006 ▶). The UBA domain is linked to the KD by the UBA linker residues 264–­283. The UBA domain is conserved among UBA-containing kinases. The UBA domain of MPK38 shows a similar conformation as in the MARKs. The UBA linker is not conserved; the MPK38 linker exhibits a unique conformation unlike that in the MARKs (Fig. 3 ▶ and Supporting Fig. S11).
Figure 3

Activation of MPK38 by the UBA linker. (a) Superposition of the MPK38 (T167E) N-lobe (blue) and the MARK1 N-lobe (white). (b, c) Detailed interactions are shown among the KD αC helix, KD β4 and the UBA linker. The key residues that show conformational differences in the KDs of MPK38 and MARK1 are labelled. The distance between Glu in αC and Lys in β4 is shown. (d) Structures of MARK1 (left, white) and MPK38 (T167E) (right, blue) presented in different views to those in (b). The distance between Glu in αC and Lys in β4 is shown for both proteins (6.1 Å in MARK1 and 3.0 Å in MPK38). The ion pairs are displayed as red dashed lines.

Structural comparison between MPK38 and MARK1

The role of ExS in MPK38

Protein kinases are generally activated by phosphorylation of their activation loop. However, a few kinases are activated by alternative mechanisms. The AGC-family kinases are a typical example, in which the C-terminal hydrophobic motif is required for protein stability and kinase activity (Gold et al., 2006 ▶). Similarly, the activation of MPK38 requires phosphorylation of the activation loop and the C-terminal ExS (Beullens et al., 2005 ▶; Jaleel et al., 2006 ▶). The structures of three UBA-containing kinases that contain an ExS, including MARK1, MARK2 and MARK3, have been determined in the inactive state (Marx et al., 2006 ▶; Murphy et al., 2007 ▶; Nešić et al., 2010 ▶; Panneerselvam et al., 2006 ▶). The structural conformation of MPK38 (T167E) is quite different from the structures of the three MARKs. The MARK structures display the canonical inactive αC-out, DFG-out conformation and a severely disordered activation loop (Marx et al., 2006 ▶; Murphy et al., 2007 ▶; Panneerselvam et al., 2006 ▶). Our MPK38 (T167E) structure reflects an active conformation with an αC-in, DFG-­in conformation and the activation loop localized at the C-­lobe (Figs. 2 ▶ b, 2 ▶ c and 4 ▶ a). A comparison of the MPK38 (T167E) and MARK structures reveals that the ExS affects the KD conformation and indicates the conformational changes that occur during activation of the UBA-containing kinases. The MARKs have ∼90% sequence identity and their structures are conserved; therefore, the human MARK1 structure was used in comparative studies with MPK38 (T167E).
Figure 4

Activation of MPK38 by phosphorylation of the activation loop. (a) The activation loop of MARK1 (white) and MPK38 (T167E) (blue) are shown as boxed regions. (b) The interlobar cleft in MARK1 has a more open conformation compared with that of MPK38 (T167E). MARK1 (white) and MPK38 (T167E) (blue) are superposed and the N-lobes and C-lobes of their KDs are highlighted by ellipses. The N-lobe of MARK1 is shown in the grey ellipse, the N-lobe of MPK38 (T167E) is shown in the blue ellipse and the C-lobes of both proteins are shown in the green ellipse.

The structures of MPK38 and MARK1 were separately aligned for the N-lobe and the C-lobe, with r.m.s.d.s of 0.58 and 0.82 Å, respectively. In the N-lobe, there is an obvious difference at the end of αC in the hinge region (Figs. 3 ▶ a and 3 ▶ b). In MPK38, the UBA linker and the N-lobe make extensive contacts through strong van der Waals interactions and a hydrogen bond (Supporting Figs. S2 and S3). In contrast, the UBA linker and the N-lobe are far apart at the end of αC in MARK1, so there is only one van der Waals contact (Figs. 3 ▶ b and 3 ▶ c). This unambiguous structural difference clearly shows that rearrangement of the UBA linker causes a conformational change of the KD N-lobe from an inactive to an active state. In MPK38, Thr277 and Leu279 of the UBA linker modulate the αC helix from the ‘out’ to the ‘in’ position via a strong van der Waals interaction with Arg65 of the αC helix and an additional hydrogen bond in the vicinity (Supporting Figs. S2 and S3); in detail, the O atom of the hydroxyl group of Thr277 interacts with the Cγ and N∊ atoms of Arg65 at distances of 3.4 and 3.6 Å, respectively. The Cδ atom of Leu279 makes contacts with the Nη and C atoms of the guanidinium moiety of Arg65 at distances of 3.5–3.6 Å. In MARK1, Glu318 of the UBA linker keeps the αC helix in the ‘out’ position via a relatively weak van der Waals interaction with Asn108 (4.0 Å; Fig. 3 ▶ c). Thus, extensive hydrophobic inter­actions in MPK38 between Arg65 in KD and Leu279 in the UBA linker function as a clip that restrains the motion of the regulatory αC helix (Fig. 3 ▶ c). This arrangement leads to the following interactions: Glu57 in the αC helix engages in favourable electrostatic interactions with Lys40 (Fig. 3 ▶ c), while hydrophobic interactions between Leu61 and Phe151 in the DFG motif and a water-mediated hydrogen bond between Arg53 in the αC helix and Asp150 of the DFG motif induce the DFG-in conformation (Fig. 3 ▶ d). Thr277 and Leu279, which are the key residues for the clipping function of the UBA linker, are fixed in position by the following interactions. Firstly, the C-­terminal residue, Leu279, is stabilized by van der Waals contacts with Trp308 from the UBA domain (Supporting Fig. S4a). Secondly, the N-­terminal residue, Ser275, is located in the vicinity of the αC helix by a hydrogen bond to the main-chain O atom of Arg65 (Supporting Fig. S4b). Thirdly, most of the N-terminal residues are fixed at the C-lobe of KD by multiple van der Waals interactions. In detail, Trp262, Val263, Tyr267, Val271 and Trp273 of the UBA linker pack against the C-lobe surface lined by Arg110, Val111, Arg114, Leu117, Ser118 and Ser125 (Supporting Fig. S4c). Additionally, the recently deposited human MELK structure (PDB entry 3zgw; G. Canevari, S. Re-Depaolini, U. Cucchi, B. Forte, P. Carpinelli & J. A. Bertrand, unpublished work) is very similar to that of MPK38, with an r.m.s.d. of 0.453 Å over 253 amino-acid residues. The αC-in and DFG-in conformation in KD and the interactions between the UBA linker and αC are found in both structures. In particular, although the key residues in the UBA linker are different (the corresponding residues to Thr277 and Leu279 in MPK38 are Asn277 and Phe279 in human MELK), the UBA linker also restrains αC via strong van der Waals inter­actions in the human enzyme, showing the conserved role of the UBA linker. In detail, the O atom of the side chain of Asn277 interacts with the N∊ atom of Arg65 at a distance of 3.8 Å. The phenyl ring of Phe279 makes a contact with the N∊ and Cδ atoms of Arg65 at a distance of 3.5–3.6 Å. Moreover, the additional hydrogen bonding between the carbonyl group of the main chain of Arg65 and the hydroxyl group of Ser275 is also conserved (Supporting Fig. S5). This function of the UBA linker is reminiscent of cyclins, which interact with and activate their cognate CDKs. Cyclins also restrain the movement of the αC helix, which promotes the interaction between a Glu in the αC helix and a Lys in the N-lobe. This interaction holds the phosphate of ATP in the correct position (Pavletich, 1999 ▶).

The role of phosphorylated Thr167 in MPK38

The MPK38 and MARK1 structures show significant differences in the conformational change of the activation loop and the opening/closing of the interlobar cleft. The substitution of Thr167 by Glu in MPK38 causes the activation loop to move towards the C-lobe of KD compared with that in MARK1, in which the activation loop moves towards the N-lobe (Fig. 4 ▶ a). Although our structure of MPK38 does not identify 11 residues in the activation loop, including Glu167 that mimics the structure of phosphorylated Thr167, it shows that the activation loop is relatively stabilized in the C-lobe (Fig. 4 ▶ a). The activation loop in our MPK38 structure is partially stabilized because the glutamate does not completely mimic a phosphorylated state and the interactions with the surrounding residues (such as Arg131 of the catalytic loop) are not stable. This observation is consistent with a previous study of a MELK mutant that had a negatively charged amino acid substituted for the activation-loop Thr; this mutant appeared to have a lower activity than that of the autophosphorylated wild-type kinase (Beullens et al., 2005 ▶). The conformational shift of the activation loop decreases the restriction of the rotation of the N-­lobe towards the C-­lobe, thus inducing the interlobar cleft to move from the open to the relatively closed conformation (Fig. 4 ▶ b).

Structural insights into regulation of the activity of MPK38 and the SNF1/AMPK family

The SNF1/AMPK family contains yeast Snf1, AMPKα1, AMPKα2 and 12 AMPK-related kinases including ten UBA-containing kinases (Bright et al., 2009 ▶; Manning et al., 2002 ▶). The SNF1/AMPK-family KDs are conserved; however, there is significant divergence among the sequences that encode the remaining regions of the proteins (Bright et al., 2009 ▶). Structural studies of Snf1, which is the yeast orthologue of mammalian AMPK, report that the autoinhibition of AMPKs is regulated by interactions between the KD and an autoinhibitory domain (AID; Chen et al., 2009 ▶). Our structural study of MPK38 reveals that activation occurs via interactions between the KD and the ExS that involve the UBA linker. These interactions commonly restrain the motion of the αC helix and influence kinase activity in both AMPK and MPK38. Although the Snf1 AID binds to the KD using a similar mechanism as that for the binding of the MPK38 UBA linker to the KD, its function in the regulation of activity is different (Chen et al., 2009 ▶). In Schizosaccharomyces pombe Snf1, Leu88 at the end of αC interacts with Met316 on α1 and Leu342 in the AID of α3 (Figs. 5 ▶ a and 5 ▶ b; Chen et al., 2009 ▶). In MPK38, Arg65 at the end of αC interacts with Thr277 and Leu279 in the UBA linker (Figs. 5 ▶ a and 5 ▶ b). AID binding forces the αC helix outwards and inhibits kinase activity, whereas the UBA linker forces the αC helix inwards and induces kinase activation (Fig. 5 ▶ c; Chen et al., 2009 ▶). Taken together, MPK38 and AMPKs regulate the motion of the αC helix via similar binding-mode mechanisms, in which the UBA linker and the AID interact with the hinge region but show completely opposite effects (activation and inhibition, respectively). These effects are owing to different restraints that determine the direction of movement of the αC helix.
Figure 5

Comparison of the activation of MPK38 by ExS and the inhibition of Snf1 (from S. pombe) by AID. (a) Structural comparison of MPK38 (T167E) (blue) with Snf1 (yellow) is shown via an overall view (left) and a close-up view (right) of the boxed region. (b) Each protein in the boxed region of (a) is displayed separately. The structures show the van der Waals contacts at the interface of the KD–UBA linker region of MPK38 and those at the KD–AID interface of Snf1. (c) A close-up view of the region around the αC helix in both proteins shows that the interactions observed in (b) force αC to rotate inwards (MPK38) or outwards (Snf1).

PDB reference: MPK38 (T167E), complex with AMP-PNP, 4bfm Supporting information file. DOI: 10.1107/S1399004713027806/cb5036sup1.pdf
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5.  Maternal Embryonic Leucine Zipper Kinase (MELK) as a Novel Mediator and Biomarker of Radioresistance in Human Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Corey Speers; Shuang G Zhao; Vishal Kothari; Alyssa Santola; Meilan Liu; Kari Wilder-Romans; Joseph Evans; Nidhi Batra; Harry Bartelink; Daniel F Hayes; Theodore S Lawrence; Powel H Brown; Lori J Pierce; Felix Y Feng
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2016-05-25       Impact factor: 12.531

  5 in total

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