| Literature DB >> 25147561 |
Hafumi Nishi1, Alexey Shaytan2, Anna R Panchenko2.
Abstract
Phosphorylation offers a dynamic way to regulate protein activity and subcellular localization, which is achieved through its reversibility and fast kinetics. Adding or removing a dianionic phosphate group somewhere on a protein often changes the protein's structural properties, its stability and dynamics. Moreover, the majority of signaling pathways involve an extensive set of protein-protein interactions, and phosphorylation can be used to regulate and modulate protein-protein binding. Losses of phosphorylation sites, as a result of disease mutations, might disrupt protein binding and deregulate signal transduction. In this paper we focus on the effects of phosphorylation on protein stability, dynamics, and binding. We describe several physico-chemical mechanisms of protein regulation through phosphorylation and pay particular attention to phosphorylation in protein complexes and phosphorylation in the context of disorder-order and order-disorder transitions. Finally we assess the role of multiple phosphorylation sites in a protein molecule, their possible cooperativity and function.Entities:
Keywords: allosteric regulation; multisite phosphorylation; protein disorder; protein phosphorylation; protein–protein interactions
Year: 2014 PMID: 25147561 PMCID: PMC4124799 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2014.00270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Selected examples demonstrating the mechanisms of phosphorylation on protein structure, stability, and dynamics.
| Protein name | Method | Type of induced change upon phosphorylation | Specific outcome of phosphorylation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Short peptide with serine-proline motifs | AMD | Cis/trans isomerization of proline | Favors a helix formation | |
| NFAT regulatory domain | BD, CG AMH | Conformational change | Blocks an access to the nuclear localization signaling sequence | |
| Na+/K+-ATPase | MD, electrophysiology experiments | Conformational change | Affects Na+ binding site and modulates ion pumping | |
| H3 histone tail in complex with HP1 | MD | Binding affinity change | Destabilizes the complex formation | |
| Smooth muscle myosin regulatory light chain | TR-FRET, MD | Conformational change | Shifts conformational equilibrium to an open state | |
| c-Src-kinase | US MD | Conformational change, activity change | Locks protein in an active conformation | |
| Collagen domain protein Shc and Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) | MD, MMPBSA | Conformational rearrangement of domains, binding affinity change | Causes significant rearrangement of protein domains. | |
| Myelin Basic Protein (MBP) | NMR, TFE-titration, MD | Conformational change, binding affinity change | Disfavors formation of amphipathic a-helix, inhibits MBP membrane interactions | |
| H3 histone tail, checkpoint kinase 1 (Chk1), protein kinase C (PKC) | NMR, MD | Binding affinity change, phosphorylation cooperativity and crosstalk | Phosphorylation of H3 tail affects binding of Chk1 and inhibits phosphorylation of neighboring residues | |
| Extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK) | Mutagenesis, experimental catalytic activity measurement, MD, TMD | Influence of phosphomutations on autophosphorylation | Phosphomimic mutations affect activation through autophosphorylation and folding of homodimerization interface |