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Author

András Zeke

Other affiliations: Eötvös Loránd University
Bio: András Zeke is an academic researcher from Hungarian Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Short linear motif. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 20 publications receiving 778 citations. Previous affiliations of András Zeke include Eötvös Loránd University.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Because upstream signaling components impact JNK activity, this work critically assessed the involvement of signaling scaffolds and the roles of feedback mechanisms in the JNK pathway.
Abstract: The c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs), as members of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) family, mediate eukaryotic cell responses to a wide range of abiotic and biotic stress insults. JNKs also regulate important physiological processes, including neuronal functions, immunological actions, and embryonic development, via their impact on gene expression, cytoskeletal protein dynamics, and cell death/survival pathways. Although the JNK pathway has been under study for >20 years, its complexity is still perplexing, with multiple protein partners of JNKs underlying the diversity of actions. Here we review the current knowledge of JNK structure and isoforms as well as the partnerships of JNKs with a range of intracellular proteins. Many of these proteins are direct substrates of the JNKs. We analyzed almost 100 of these target proteins in detail within a framework of their classification based on their regulation by JNKs. Examples of these JNK substrates include a diverse assortment of nuclear transcription factors (Jun, ATF2, Myc, Elk1), cytoplasmic proteins involved in cytoskeleton regulation (DCX, Tau, WDR62) or vesicular transport (JIP1, JIP3), cell membrane receptors (BMPR2), and mitochondrial proteins (Mcl1, Bim). In addition, because upstream signaling components impact JNK activity, we critically assessed the involvement of signaling scaffolds and the roles of feedback mechanisms in the JNK pathway. Despite a clarification of many regulatory events in JNK-dependent signaling during the past decade, many other structural and mechanistic insights are just beginning to be revealed. These advances open new opportunities to understand the role of JNK signaling in diverse physiological and pathophysiological states.

316 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The latest additions to the eukaryotic linear motif (ELM) database are presented including 32 new motif classes, and new features including Uniprot and Reactome integration.
Abstract: Short linear motifs (SLiMs) are protein binding modules that play major roles in almost all cellular processes. SLiMs are short, often highly degenerate, difficult to characterize and hard to detect. The eukaryotic linear motif (ELM) resource (elm.eu.org) is dedicated to SLiMs, consisting of a manually curated database of over 275 motif classes and over 3000 motif instances, and a pipeline to discover candidate SLiMs in protein sequences. For 15 years, ELM has been one of the major resources for motif research. In this database update, we present the latest additions to the database including 32 new motif classes, and new features including Uniprot and Reactome integration. Finally, to help provide cellular context, we present some biological insights about SLiMs in the cell cycle, as targets for bacterial pathogenicity and their functionality in the human kinome.

177 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A coherent structural model for MAPK docking specificity is suggested that reveals how short linear motifs binding to a common kinase docking groove can mediate diverse interaction patterns and contribute to correct MAPK partner selection in signaling networks.
Abstract: Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) have a docking groove that interacts with linear "docking" motifs in binding partners. To determine the structural basis of binding specificity between MAPKs and docking motifs, we quantitatively analyzed the ability of 15 docking motifs from diverse MAPK partners to bind to c-Jun amino-terminal kinase 1 (JNK1), p38α, and extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2 (ERK2). Classical docking motifs mediated highly specific binding only to JNK1, and only those motifs with a sequence pattern distinct from the classical MAPK binding docking motif consensus differentiated between the topographically similar docking grooves of ERK and p38α. Crystal structures of four complexes of MAPKs with docking peptides, representing JNK-specific, ERK-specific, or ERK- and p38-selective binding modes, revealed that the regions located between consensus positions in the docking motifs showed conformational diversity. Although the consensus positions in the docking motifs served as anchor points that bound to common MAPK surface features and mostly contributed to docking in a nondiscriminatory fashion, the conformation of the intervening region between the anchor points mostly determined specificity. We designed peptides with tailored MAPK binding profiles by rationally changing the length and amino acid composition of intervening regions located between anchor points. These results suggest a coherent structural model for MAPK docking specificity that reveals how short linear motifs binding to a common kinase docking groove can mediate diverse interaction patterns and contribute to correct MAPK partner selection in signaling networks.

146 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The role of scaffold proteins are discussed as efficient tools for assembling intracellular signalling complexes, both natural and artificial.

140 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Eukaryotic Linear Motif (ELM) as discussed by the authors provides a comprehensive, regularly updated and well-organised repository of manually curated, experimentally validated short linear motifs (SLiMs).
Abstract: Almost twenty years after its initial release, the Eukaryotic Linear Motif (ELM) resource remains an invaluable source of information for the study of motif-mediated protein-protein interactions. ELM provides a comprehensive, regularly updated and well-organised repository of manually curated, experimentally validated short linear motifs (SLiMs). An increasing number of SLiM-mediated interactions are discovered each year and keeping the resource up-to-date continues to be a great challenge. In the current update, 30 novel motif classes have been added and five existing classes have undergone major revisions. The update includes 411 new motif instances mostly focused on cell-cycle regulation, control of the actin cytoskeleton, membrane remodelling and vesicle trafficking pathways, liquid-liquid phase separation and integrin signalling. Many of the newly annotated motif-mediated interactions are targets of pathogenic motif mimicry by viral, bacterial or eukaryotic pathogens, providing invaluable insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying infectious diseases. The current ELM release includes 317 motif classes incorporating 3934 individual motif instances manually curated from 3867 scientific publications. ELM is available at: http://elm.eu.org.

76 citations


Cited by
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Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the coding exons of the family of 518 protein kinases were sequenced in 210 cancers of diverse histological types to explore the nature of the information that will be derived from cancer genome sequencing.
Abstract: AACR Centennial Conference: Translational Cancer Medicine-- Nov 4-8, 2007; Singapore PL02-05 All cancers are due to abnormalities in DNA. The availability of the human genome sequence has led to the proposal that resequencing of cancer genomes will reveal the full complement of somatic mutations and hence all the cancer genes. To explore the nature of the information that will be derived from cancer genome sequencing we have sequenced the coding exons of the family of 518 protein kinases, ~1.3Mb DNA per cancer sample, in 210 cancers of diverse histological types. Despite the screen being directed toward the coding regions of a gene family that has previously been strongly implicated in oncogenesis, the results indicate that the majority of somatic mutations detected are “passengers”. There is considerable variation in the number and pattern of these mutations between individual cancers, indicating substantial diversity of processes of molecular evolution between cancers. The imprints of exogenous mutagenic exposures, mutagenic treatment regimes and DNA repair defects can all be seen in the distinctive mutational signatures of individual cancers. This systematic mutation screen and others have previously yielded a number of cancer genes that are frequently mutated in one or more cancer types and which are now anticancer drug targets (for example BRAF , PIK3CA , and EGFR ). However, detailed analyses of the data from our screen additionally suggest that there exist a large number of additional “driver” mutations which are distributed across a substantial number of genes. It therefore appears that cells may be able to utilise mutations in a large repertoire of potential cancer genes to acquire the neoplastic phenotype. However, many of these genes are employed only infrequently. These findings may have implications for future anticancer drug development.

2,737 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The in vitro substrates recognized by most yeast protein kinases are described, with the use of proteome chip technology, and these results will provide insights into the mechanisms and roles of protein phosphorylation in many eukaryotes.
Abstract: Protein phosphorylation is estimated to affect 30% of the proteome and is a major regulatory mechanism that controls many basic cellular processes. Until recently, our biochemical understanding of protein phosphorylation on a global scale has been extremely limited; only one half of the yeast kinases have known in vivo substrates and the phosphorylating kinase is known for less than 160 phosphoproteins. Here we describe, with the use of proteome chip technology, the in vitro substrates recognized by most yeast protein kinases: we identified over 4,000 phosphorylation events involving 1,325 different proteins. These substrates represent a broad spectrum of different biochemical functions and cellular roles. Distinct sets of substrates were recognized by each protein kinase, including closely related kinases of the protein kinase A family and four cyclin-dependent kinases that vary only in their cyclin subunits. Although many substrates reside in the same cellular compartment or belong to the same functional category as their phosphorylating kinase, many others do not, indicating possible new roles for several kinases. Furthermore, integration of the phosphorylation results with protein-protein interaction and transcription factor binding data revealed novel regulatory modules. Our phosphorylation results have been assembled into a first-generation phosphorylation map for yeast. Because many yeast proteins and pathways are conserved, these results will provide insights into the mechanisms and roles of protein phosphorylation in many eukaryotes.

923 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: This Sprenger Briefs volume is dedicated to IDPs and IDPRs and an attempt is made to compress a massive amount of knowledge and into a digest that aims to be of use to those wishing a fast entry into this promising field of structural biology.
Abstract: Nothing is solid about proteins. Governing rules and established laws are constantly broken. As an example, the last decade and a half have witnessed the fall of one of the major paradigms in structural biology. Contrarily to the more than a century-old belief that the unique function of a protein is determined by its unique structure, which, in its turn, is defined by the unique amino acid sequence, many biologically active proteins lack stable tertiary and/or secondary structure either entirely or at their significant parts. Such intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) and hybrid proteins containing ordered domains and functional IDP regions (IDPRs) are highly abundant in nature, and many of them are associated with various human diseases. Such disordered proteins and regions are very different from ordered and well-structured proteins and domains at a variety of levels and possess well-recognizable biases in their amino acid compositions and amino acid sequences. A characteristic feature of these proteins is their exceptional structural heterogeneity, where different parts of a given polypeptide chain can be ordered (or disordered) to different degrees. As a result, a typical IDP/IDPR contains a multitude of potentially foldable, partially foldable, differently foldable or not foldable structural segments. This distribution of conformers is constantly changing in time, where a given segment of a protein molecule has different structures at different time points. The distribution is also constantly changing in response to changes in the environment. This mosaic structural organization is crucial for their functions and many IDPs are engaged in biological functions that rely on high conformational flexibility and that are not accessible to proteins with unique and fixed structures. As a result, the functional repertoire of IDPs complements that of ordered proteins, with IDPs/IDPRs being often involved in regulation, signaling and control. This Sprenger Briefs volume is dedicated to IDPs and IDPRs and an attempt is made to compress a massive amount of knowledge and into a digest that aims to be of use to those wishing a fast entry into this promising field of structural biology.

624 citations

01 Jan 1995
TL;DR: It is suggested that UV irradiation and MEKK1 activation stimulate TCF/Elk‐1 activity through JNK activation, while growth factors induce c‐fos through ERK activation.
Abstract: Growth factors induce c‐fos transcription by stimulating phosphorylation of transcription factor TCF/Elk‐1, which binds to the serum response element (SRE). Under such conditions Elk‐1 could be phosphorylated by the mitogen‐activated protein kinases (MAPKs) ERK1 and ERK2. However, c‐fos transcription and SRE activity are also induced by stimuli, such as UV irradiation and activation of the protein kinase MEKK1, that cause only an insignificant increase in ERK1/2 activity. However, both of these stimuli strongly activate two other MAPKs, JNK1 and JNK2, and stimulate Elk‐1 transcriptional activity and phosphorylation. We find that the JNKs are the predominant Elk‐1 activation domain kinases in extracts of UV‐irradiated cells and that immunopurified JNK1/2 phosphorylate Elk‐1 on the same major sites recognized by ERK1/2, that potentiate its transcriptional activity. Finally, we show that UV irradiation, but not serum or phorbol esters, stimulate translocation of JNK1 to the nucleus. As Elk‐1 is most likely phosphorylated while bound to the c‐fos promoter, these results suggest that UV irradiation and MEKK1 activation stimulate TCF/Elk‐1 activity through JNK activation, while growth factors induce c‐fos through ERK activation.

516 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Novel insights offer perspectives for the therapeutic targeting of PP1 by interfering with the binding of PIPs or substrates.

458 citations