Protein kinase A opposes the phosphorylation-dependent recruitment of glycogen synthase kinase 3β to A-kinase Anchoring Protein 220
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24798Dato
2015-06-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Whiting, Jennifer L.; Nygren, Patrick J.; Tunquist, Brian J.; Langeberg, Lorene K.; Seternes, Ole Morten; Scott, John D.Sammendrag
The proximity of an enzyme to its substrate can influence rate
and magnitude of catalysis. A-kinase anchoring protein 220
(AKAP220) is a multivalent anchoring protein that can sequester a variety of signal transduction enzymes. These include protein kinase A (PKA) and glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3).
Using a combination of molecular and cellular approaches we
show that GSK3 phosphorylation of Thr-1132 on AKAP220
initiates recruitment of this kinase into the enzyme scaffold. We
also find that AKAP220 anchors GSK3 and its substrate
-catenin in membrane ruffles. Interestingly, GSK3 can be
released from the multienzyme complex in response to PKA
phosphorylation on serine 9, which suppresses GSK3 activity.
The signaling scaffold may enhance this regulatory mechanism,
as AKAP220 has the capacity to anchor two PKA holoenzymes.
Site 1 on AKAP220 (residues 610– 623) preferentially interacts
with RII, whereas site 2 (residues 1633–1646) exhibits a dual
specificity for RI and RII. In vitro affinity measurements
revealed that site 2 on AKAP220 binds RII with 10-fold higher
affinity than site 1. Occupancy of both R subunit binding sites on
AKAP220 could provide a mechanism to amplify local cAMP
responses and enable cross-talk between PKA and GSK3.
Forlag
ElsevierSitering
Whiting, Nygren, Tunquist, Langeberg, Seternes om, Scott JD. Protein kinase A opposes the phosphorylation-dependent recruitment of glycogen synthase kinase 3β to A-kinase Anchoring Protein 220. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2015;290(32):19445-19457Metadata
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