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Lorene K. Langeberg

Researcher at Oregon Health & Science University

Publications -  52
Citations -  9091

Lorene K. Langeberg is an academic researcher from Oregon Health & Science University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Protein kinase A & A Kinase Anchor Proteins. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 52 publications receiving 8817 citations. Previous affiliations of Lorene K. Langeberg include Reed College & Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

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Association of protein kinase A and protein phosphatase 2B with a common anchoring protein

TL;DR: Results suggest that both PKA and CaN are targeted to subcellular sites by association with a common anchor protein and thereby regulate the phosphorylation state of key neuronal substrates.
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Coordination of Three Signaling Enzymes by AKAP79, a Mammalian Scaffold Protein

TL;DR: Deletion analysis and binding studies demonstrate that a third enzyme, protein kinase C (PKC), binds AKAP79 at a site distinct from those bound by PKA or CaN, andAKAP79 appears to function as a scaffold protein for three multifunctional enzymes.
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Ubiquitination regulates PSD-95 degradation and AMPA receptor surface expression.

TL;DR: It is shown that PSD-95 is regulated by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway, and data suggest that ubiquitination of PSd-95 through an Mdm2-mediated pathway is critical in regulating AMPA receptor surface expression during synaptic plasticity.
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The protein kinase A anchoring protein mAKAP coordinates two integrated cAMP effector pathways

TL;DR: Two coupled cAMP-dependent feedback loops are coordinated within the context of the mAKAP complex, suggesting that local control of cAMP signalling by AKAP proteins is more intricate than previously appreciated.
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Regulation of NMDA Receptors by an Associated Phosphatase-Kinase Signaling Complex

TL;DR: Yotiao is a scaffold protein that physically attaches PP1 and PKA to NMDA receptors to regulate channel activity and targeting of these enzymes near the substrate is proposed to enhance phosphorylation-dependent modulation.