Litcius/Paper detail

Catalytic Subunit of PKA as a Prototype of the Eukaryotic Protein Kinase Family

B. A. Reikhardt, П. Д. Шабанов

2020Biochemistry (Moscow)17 citationsDOI

Abstract

The catalytic subunit of protein kinase A (PKAc) is conserved in all eukaryotic protein kinases. PKAc consists of two lobes that form the catalytic cleft containing the ATP-binding, peptide-binding site, and catalytic sites. During folding, PKAc secondary structures organize so that the non-polar regions form a globular core, while mobile loops and tails are exposed and can act as regulatory elements. De novo synthesized PKAc is phosphorylated at the T-loop, resulting in the formation of the active center capable of high-affinity binding of co-substrates. The ATP-molecule "sticks" the two lobes together, whereas the binding of peptide substrate completes the active center formation. The resulting catalytic triad (γ-phosphate of ATP, hydroxyl of Ser/Thr residue of the protein substrate, and Asp166 carboxyl) occupies a position optimal for catalysis. During the catalytic cycle, dynamic reorganization of polar and hydrophobic interactions ensures PKAc transition from the open to the closed conformation and vice versa. Understanding the structural basis of functioning of eukaryotic protein kinases (ePKs) is essential for successful design of ePK modulators.

Topics & Concepts

Protein subunitProtein kinase AChemistryKinaseCell biologyBiochemistryBiologyGeneProtein Kinase Regulation and GTPase SignalingMicrotubule and mitosis dynamics14-3-3 protein interactions