Literature DB >> 32052090

Prevalence and significance of the commonest phosphorylated motifs in the human proteome: a global analysis.

Luca Cesaro1, Lorenzo A Pinna2,3.   

Abstract

Protein phosphorylation is the most frequent post-translational modification by which the properties of eukaryotic proteins can be reversibly modified. In humans, over 500 protein kinases generate a huge phosphoproteome including more than 200,000 individual phosphosites, a figure which is still continuously increasing. The in vivo selectivity of protein kinases is the outcome of a multifaceted and finely tuned process where numerous factors play an integrated role. To gain information about the actual contribution to this process of local features that reflect the interaction of the protein targets with the catalytic site of the kinases, the prevalence of the commonest motifs determining the consensus sequence of Ser/Thr-specific kinases has been examined in the whole human phosphoproteome and in the phosphoproteomes generated by a panel of the 47 most pleiotropic protein kinases. Our analysis shows that: (1) most phosphosites do conform to at least one of the motifs considered, with a substantial proportion conforming to two or more of them; (2) some motifs, with special reference to the one recognized by protein kinase CK2 (pS/pT-x-x-E/D) are very promiscuous, being abundantly represented also at the phosphosites of all the other protein kinases considered; (3) by contrast, other phosphorylated motifs, notably pS/pT-P, pS/pT-Q and pS-x-E, are more discriminatory and selective, being nearly absent in the phosphosites that are not attributable to certain categories of kinases. The information provided will prove helpful to make reliable inferences based on the manual inspection of individual phosphosites.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CK2; Consensus sequences; GSK3; Phosphosites; Protein kinase specificity; Specificity determinants

Year:  2020        PMID: 32052090     DOI: 10.1007/s00018-020-03474-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci        ISSN: 1420-682X            Impact factor:   9.261


  2 in total

1.  Okur-Chung neurodevelopmental syndrome-linked CK2α variants have reduced kinase activity.

Authors:  I Dominguez; J M Cruz-Gamero; V Corasolla; N Dacher; S Rangasamy; A Urbani; V Narayanan; H Rebholz
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  2021-05-04       Impact factor: 4.132

2.  Myeloid Cell CK2 Regulates Inflammation and Resistance to Bacterial Infection.

Authors:  Sandy R Larson; Nikki Bortell; Alysha Illies; William J Crisler; Jennifer L Matsuda; Laurel L Lenz
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2020-12-08       Impact factor: 7.561

  2 in total

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