The mechanism of PAK activation. Autophosphorylation events in both regulatory and kinase domains control activity.

Article Details

Citation

Chong C, Tan L, Lim L, Manser E

The mechanism of PAK activation. Autophosphorylation events in both regulatory and kinase domains control activity.

J Biol Chem. 2001 May 18;276(20):17347-53. Epub 2001 Feb 22.

PubMed ID
11278486 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The p21-activated kinases (PAKs), in common with many kinases, undergo multiple autophosphorylation events upon interaction with appropriate activators. The Cdc42-induced phosphorylation of PAK serves in part to dissociate the kinase from its partners PIX and Nck. Here we investigate in detail how autophosphorylation events affect the catalytic activity of PAK by altering the autophosphorylation sites in both alpha- and betaPAK. Both in vivo and in vitro analyses demonstrate that, although most phosphorylation events in the PAK N-terminal regulatory domain play no direct role in activation, a phosphorylation of alphaPAK serine 144 or betaPAK serine 139, which lie in the kinase inhibitory domain, significantly contribute to activation. By contrast, sphingosine-mediated activation is independent of this residue, indicating a different mode of activation. Thus two autophosphorylation sites direct activation while three others control association with focal complexes via PIX and Nck.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Serine/threonine-protein kinase PAK 3O75914Details