| Literature DB >> 26945071 |
Catherine Leroy1, Natalya V Belkina2, Thavy Long3, Emeric Deruy3, Colette Dissous3, Stephen Shaw4, David Tulasne1.
Abstract
The lymphocyte-oriented kinase (LOK), also called serine threonine kinase 10 (STK10), is synthesized mainly in lymphocytes. It is involved in lymphocyte migration and polarization and can phosphorylate ezrin, radixin, and moesin (the ERM proteins). In a T lymphocyte cell line and in purified human lymphocytes, we found LOK to be cleaved by caspases during apoptosis. The first cleavage occurs at aspartic residue 332, located between the kinase domain and the coiled-coil regulation domain. This cleavage generates an N-terminal fragment, p50 N-LOK, containing the kinase domain and a C-terminal fragment, which is further cleaved during apoptosis. Although these cleavages preserve the entire kinase domain, p50 N-LOK displays no kinase activity. In apoptotic lymphocytes, caspase cleavages of LOK are concomitant with a decrease in ERM phosphorylation. When non-apoptotic lymphocytes from mice with homozygous and heterozygous LOK knockout were compared, the latter showed a higher level of ERM phosphorylation, but when apoptosis was induced, LOK(-/-) and LOK(+/-) lymphocytes showed the same low level, confirming in vivo that LOK-induced ERM phosphorylation is prevented during lymphocyte apoptosis. Our results demonstrate that cleavage of LOK during apoptosis abolishes its kinase activity, causing a decrease in ERM phosphorylation, crucial to the role of the ERM proteins in linking the plasma membrane to actin filaments.Entities:
Keywords: STK10; apoptosis; caspase; cell signaling; ezrin; lymphocyte-oriented kinase; moesin; protein kinase; radixin
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26945071 PMCID: PMC4858966 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.721365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157