The several hundred members of the eukaryotic protein kinase superfamily characterized to date share a similar catalytic domain structure, consisting of 12 conserved subdomains. Here we report the existence and wide occurrence in eukaryotes of a protein kinase with a completely different structure. We cloned and sequenced the human, mouse, rat, and Caenorhabditis elegans eukaryotic elongation factor-2 kinase (eEF-2 kinase) and found that with the exception of the ATP-binding site, they do not contain any sequence motifs characteristic of the eukaryotic protein kinase superfamily. Comparison of different eEF-2 kinase sequences reveals a highly conserved region of approximately 200 amino acids which was found to be homologous to the catalytic domain of the recently described myosin heavy chain kinase A (MHCK A) from Dictyostelium. This suggests that eEF-2 kinase and MHCK A are members of a new class of protein kinases with a novel catalytic domain structure.
PhD student? Think long and hard about whether you want to commit yourself to a career in scientific neuroscience. There are limited resources, grants, jobs and ideas. The sort of people who can't live without research are the sort of people who will have the enthusiasm to continue. Also, it is very easy to get bogged down in the intricacies of the brain. Never forget that the brain is a cognitive machine, not just a piece of tissue. That is especially relevant to neurogeneticists, who will look at a gene in isolation from everything else.What, in your opinion, is the greatest unanswered question? What exactly are qualia? Qualia are the qualities of conscious experience -the redness of red, for example. But what are they in physical terms? For example, think in terms of explaining the conscious experience of the bat. We may be able to give a description of the conscious thought of a bat, but we will never be able to experience what it is to be that bat.Colin Blakemore works on vision and the early development of the brain at Oxford University, UK. Richard FrackowiakWhat is your greatest unanswered question? I'm working on it. In science, it is definitely how the brain is functionally organized. Consciousness is part of it, but it's the broader, more fundamental question. The fundamental belief or assumption is that everything we do, all our emotions, feelings, fears, are the product of the brain, in one way or another. How they are produced is just fascinating, and of course critical Steven Pinker works on language and its relation to mind and brain at the
A new class of eukaryotic protein kinases that are not homologous to members of the serine/threonine/tyrosine protein kinase superfamily was recently identified [Futey, L. M., et al. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 523-529; Ryazanov, A. G., et al. (1997) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 94, 4884-4889]. This class includes eukaryotic elongation factor-2 kinase, Dictyostelium myosin heavy chain kinases A, B, and C, and several mammalian putative protein kinases that are not yet fully characterized [Ryazanov, A. G., et al. (1999) Curr. Biol. 9, R43-R45]. eEF-2 kinase is a ubiquitous protein kinase that phosphorylates and inactivates eukaryotic translational elongation factor-2, and thus can modulate the rate of polypeptide chain elongation during translation. eEF-2 was the only known substrate for eEF-2 kinase. We demonstrate here that eEF-2 kinase can efficiently phosphorylate a 16-amino acid peptide, MH-1, corresponding to the myosin heavy chain kinase A phosphorylation site in Dictyostelium myosin heavy chains. This enabled us to develop a rapid assay for eEF-2 kinase activity. To localize the functional domains of eEF-2 kinase, we expressed human eEF-2 kinase in Escherichia coli as a GST-tagged fusion protein, and then performed systematic in vitro deletion mutagenesis. We analyzed eEF-2 kinase deletion mutants for the ability to autophosphorylate, and to phosphorylate eEF-2 as well as a peptide substrate, MH-1. Mutants with deletions between amino acids 51 and 335 were unable to autophosphorylate, and were also unable to phosphorylate eEF-2 and MH-1. Mutants with deletions between amino acids 521 and 725 were unable to phosphorylate eEF-2, but were still able to autophosphorylate and to phosphorylate MH-1. The kinases with deletions between amino acids 2 and 50 and 336 and 520 were able to catalyze all three reactions. In addition, the C-terminal domain expressed alone (amino acids 336-725) binds eEF-2 in a coprecipitation assay. These results suggest that eEF-2 kinase consists of two domains connected by a linker region. The amino-terminal domain contains the catalytic domain, while the carboxyl-terminal domain contains the eEF-2 targeting domain. The calmodulin-binding region is located between amino acids 51 and 96. The amino acid sequence of the carboxyl-terminal domain of eEF-2 kinase displays similarity to several proteins, all of which contain repeats of a 36-amino acid motif that we named "motif 36".
Elongation factor-2 kinase (eEF-2K) is a Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase that phosphorylates and inactivates eEF-2 and that can regulate the rate of protein synthesis at the elongation stage. Here we report that a slight decrease in pH, within the range observed in vivo, leads to a dramatic activation of eEF-2K. The activity of eEF-2K in mouse liver extracts, as well as the activity of purified recombinant human eEF-2K, is low at pH 7.2-7.4 and is increased by severalfold when the pH drops to 6.6-6.8. eEF-2K requires calmodulin for activity at neutral as well as acidic pH. Kinetic studies demonstrate that the pH does not affect the K(M) for ATP or eEF-2 and activation of eEF-2K at acidic pH is due to an increase in V(max). To analyze the potential role of eEF-2K in regulating protein synthesis by pH, we constructed a mouse fibroblast cell line that expresses eEF-2K in a tetracycline-regulated manner. Overexpression of eEF-2K led to a decreased rate of protein synthesis at acidic pH, but not at neutral pH. Our results suggest that pH-dependent activation of eEF-2K may play a role in the global inhibition of protein synthesis during tissue acidosis, which accompanies such processes as hypoxia and ischemia.
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