| Literature DB >> 25171405 |
Mattia R Bordoli1, Jina Yum2, Susanne B Breitkopf3, Jonathan N Thon4, Joseph E Italiano5, Junyu Xiao6, Carolyn Worby6, Swee-Kee Wong1, Grace Lin1, Maja Edenius1, Tracy L Keller1, John M Asara3, Jack E Dixon6, Chang-Yeol Yeo7, Malcolm Whitman8.
Abstract
Although tyrosine phosphorylation of extracellular proteins has been reported to occur extensively in vivo, no secreted protein tyrosine kinase has been identified. As a result, investigation of the potential role of extracellular tyrosine phosphorylation in physiological and pathological tissue regulation has not been possible. Here, we show that VLK, a putative protein kinase previously shown to be essential in embryonic development, is a secreted protein kinase, with preference for tyrosine, that phosphorylates a broad range of secreted and ER-resident substrate proteins. We find that VLK is rapidly and quantitatively secreted from platelets in response to stimuli and can tyrosine phosphorylate coreleased proteins utilizing endogenous as well as exogenous ATP sources. We propose that discovery of VLK activity provides an explanation for the extensive and conserved pattern of extracellular tyrosine phosphophorylation seen in vivo, and extends the importance of regulated tyrosine phosphorylation into the extracellular environment.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25171405 PMCID: PMC4149754 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2014.06.048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582