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Journal ArticleDOI

Requirement for integration of signals from two distinct phosphorylation pathways for activation of MAP kinase

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TLDR
It is demonstrated that MAP kinase is only active when both tyrosyl and threonyl residues are phosphorylated and suggested therefore that the enzyme functions in vivo to integrate signals from two distinct transduction pathways.
Abstract
MAP kinase (relative molecular mass, 42,000), a low abundance serine--threonine protein kinase, is transiently activated in many cell types by a variety of mitogens, including insulin, epidermal growth factor, and phorbol esters. In vitro, MAP kinase will phosphorylate and reactivate S6 kinase II previously inactivated by phosphatase treatment. Because many of the stimuli that activate MAP kinase are also stimulators of cell proliferation, and regulation of the cell cycle seems to involve a network of protein kinases, MAP kinase could be important in the transmission of stimuli eventually leading to the progression from G0 to G1 in the cell cycle. Activated MAP kinase contains both phosphotyrosine and phosphothreonine. We report here that MAP kinase can be deactivated completely by treatment with either phosphatase 2A, a protein phosphatase specific for phosphoserine and phosphothreonine, or CD45, a phosphotyrosine-specific protein phosphatase. We demonstrate that MAP kinase is only active when both tyrosyl and threonyl residues are phosphorylated and suggest therefore that the enzyme functions in vivo to integrate signals from two distinct transduction pathways.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The MAPK signaling cascade.

TL;DR: This review highlights primarily the first MAPK cascade to be discovered that uses the MEK and ERK isoforms and describes their involvement in different cellular processes, and it is now known that signaling pathways initiated by phorbol esters, iono‐phors, heat shock, and liganda for seven transmembrane receptors use distinct MAPK cascades with little or no cross‐reactivity between them.
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Protein kinases and phosphatases: The Yin and Yang of protein phosphorylation and signaling

TL;DR: Although the use of PP inhibitors shows that there is significant basal PP activity in cells, it has become apparent that the activities of PPs are regulated in a sophisticated manner by a combination of targeting and regulatory subunits and by specific inhibitors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oncogenes and signal transduction

TL;DR: The protein-tyrosine kinase oncogenes will be the primary focus of the review as discussed by the authors, however, biochemical connections between the protein tyrosine Kinases and oncoproteins of the Ras,Raf,Fos,Jun, and Rel families as well as the protein kinase C family are also discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase: Conservation of a Three-Kinase Module From Yeast to Human

TL;DR: All known MAPK module kinases from yeast to humans are defined, what is known about their regulation, defined MAPK substrates, and the function of MAPK in cell physiology are defined.
Journal ArticleDOI

The stress-activated protein kinase subfamily of c-Jun kinases.

TL;DR: The kinase p54s are the principal c-Jun N-terminal kinases activated by cellular stress and tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-α, hence they are designated stress-activated protein kinases, or SAPKs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The structure and regulation of protein phosphatases

TL;DR: Four major serine/threonine-specific protein phosphatase catalytic subunits are present in the cytoplasm of animal cells and have broad and overlapping specificities in vitro, and account for virtually all measurable activity in tissue extracts toward a variety of phosphoproteins that regulate metabolism, muscle contractility, and other processes.
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Insulin-stimulated MAP-2 kinase phosphorylates and activates ribosomal protein S6 kinase II

TL;DR: These studies suggest that a step in insulin signalling involves sequential activation by phosphorylation of at least two serine/threonine protein kinases.
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Dominoes and clocks: the union of two views of the cell cycle.

TL;DR: The phylogenetic conservation of the mechanisms that induce mitosis and their implications for other transitions in the cell cycle are discussed.
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Rapid stimulation by insulin of a serine/threonine kinase in 3T3-L1 adipocytes that phosphorylates microtubule-associated protein 2 in vitro

TL;DR: Results show that a soluble serine/threonine kinase is rapidly activated by insulin, possibly by phosphorylation of either the kinase itself or an interacting modulator.
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Acid and base hydrolysis of phosphoproteins bound to immobilon facilitates analysis of phosphoamino acids in gel-fractionated proteins

TL;DR: Immobilon, a membrane of polyvinylidene difluoride to which gel-fractionated proteins can be transferred electrophoretically, was found to be an excellent matrix for the analysis of the phosphoamino acid content of phosphoproteins.
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