The holoenzyme complex of protein kinase A is in an inactive state; activation involves ordered cAMP binding to two tandem domains of the regulatory subunit and release of the catalytic subunit. Deactivation has been less studied, during which the two cAMPs unbind from the regulatory subunit to allow association of the catalytic subunit to reform the holoenzyme complex. Unbinding of the cAMPs appears ordered as indicated by a large difference in unbinding rates from the two sites, but the cause has remained elusive given the structural similarity of the two tandem domains. Even more intriguingly, NMR data show that allosteric communication between the two domains is unidirectional. Here, we present a mechanism for the unidirectionality, developed from extensive molecular dynamics simulations of the tandem domains in different cAMP-bound forms. Disparate responses to cAMP releases from the two sites (A and B) in conformational flexibility and chemical shift perturbation confirmed unidirectional allosteric communication. Community analysis revealed that the A-site cAMP, by forming across-domain interactions, bridges an essential pathway for interdomain communication. The pathway is impaired when this cAMP is removed but remains intact when only the B-site cAMP is removed. Specifically, removal of the A-site cAMP leads to the separation of the two domains, creating room for binding the catalytic subunit. Moreover, the A-site cAMP, by maintaining interdomain coupling, retards the unbinding of the B-site cAMP and stalls an unproductive pathway of cAMP release. Our work expands the perspective on allostery and implicates functional importance for the directionality of allostery.unidirectional allostery | cAMP | molecular dynamics | community analysis | NMR spectroscopy P rotein kinase A (PKA), also known as cAMP-dependent protein kinase, plays an important role in multiple cellular processes by catalyzing protein phosphorylation (1). Its dysregulation is involved in many diseases including cancer and inflammatory disorders (2). The holoenzyme complex, formed by two catalytic (C) subunits bound to a homodimer of regulatory (R) subunits, is inactive. Each regulatory subunit contains two tandem cAMP-binding domains (referred to as CBD-A and CBD-B) (3); in the holoenzyme complex, the A site is masked by the C subunit (4). Activation occurs when two cAMP molecules bind sequentially and cooperatively to the two sites on each R subunit (5). Possible structural changes in the activation process have been constructed from crystallographic studies (4). The first cAMP molecule binds to the B site and makes the A site accessible. Binding of the second cAMP molecule then leads to the release of the C subunit for catalyzing substrate phosphorylation. Deactivation, involving the unbinding of the two cAMP molecules from an R subunit and association of the R and C subunits to reform the holoenzyme complex, has been less studied, and a number of important questions remain open. In particular, kinetic studies have shown that the cAMP un...