IKAP is a scaffold protein of the IkappaB kinase complex.

Article Details

Citation

Cohen L, Henzel WJ, Baeuerle PA

IKAP is a scaffold protein of the IkappaB kinase complex.

Nature. 1998 Sep 17;395(6699):292-6.

PubMed ID
9751059 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The transcription factor NF-kappaB coordinates the activation of numerous genes in response to pathogens and pro-inflammatory cytokines, and is, therefore, vital in the development of acute and chronic inflammatory diseases. NF-kappaB is activated by phsophorylation of its inhibitory subunit, IkappaB-alpha, on serine residues 32 and 36 by cytokine-activated IKB kinases (IKKs); this phosphorylation precedes rapid degradation of IkappaB. IKK-alpha and IKK-beta isozymes are found in large complexes of relative molecular mass 700,000-900,000 (M(r) 70K-90K), but little is known about other components that organize and regulate these complexes. IKK-alpha was independently discovered as a NF-kappaB-inducing kinase (NIK)-associated protein in a yeast two-hybrid screen, and IKK-beta was also identified by homology screening. It is, however, unknown whether NIK is part of the IKK complex. Here we isolate large, interleukin-1-inducible IKK complexes that contain NIK, IKK-alpha, IKK-beta, IkappaB-alpha, NF-kappaB/RelA and a protein of M(r) 150K. This latter component is a new protein, termed IKK-complex-associated protein (IKAP), which can bind NIK and IKKs and assemble them into an active kinase complex. We show that IKAP is a scaffold protein and a regulator for three different kinases involved in pro-inflammatory cytokine signalling.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Inhibitor of nuclear factor kappa-B kinase subunit betaO14920Details
Inhibitor of nuclear factor kappa-B kinase subunit alphaO15111Details
Transcription factor p65Q04206Details