| Literature DB >> 32719556 |
Jakob Gebel1, Marcel Tuppi2,3, Apirat Chaikuad4, Katharina Hötte5, Martin Schröder4, Laura Schulz6, Frank Löhr1, Niklas Gutfreund1, Franziska Finke1, Erik Henrich1, Julija Mezhyrova1, Ralf Lehnert7, Francesco Pampaloni5, Gerhard Hummer6,8, Ernst H K Stelzer5, Stefan Knapp4, Volker Dötsch9.
Abstract
The p53 homolog TAp63α is the transcriptional key regulator of genome integrity in oocytes. After DNA damage, TAp63α is activated by multistep phosphorylation involving multiple phosphorylation events by the kinase CK1, which triggers the transition from a dimeric and inactive conformation to an open and active tetramer that initiates apoptosis. By measuring activation kinetics in ovaries and single-site phosphorylation kinetics in vitro with peptides and full-length protein, we show that TAp63α phosphorylation follows a biphasic behavior. Although the first two CK1 phosphorylation events are fast, the third one, which constitutes the decisive step to form the active conformation, is slow. Structure determination of CK1 in complex with differently phosphorylated peptides reveals the structural mechanism for the difference in the kinetic behavior based on an unusual CK1/TAp63α substrate interaction in which the product of one phosphorylation step acts as an inhibitor for the following one.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32719556 DOI: 10.1038/s41589-020-0600-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem Biol ISSN: 1552-4450 Impact factor: 15.040