A Dictyostelium discoideum cDNA encoding an a-type subunit of casein kinase If was isolated, and its cDNA was used to study developmental expression of casein kinase Hi during the Dictyostelium life cycle. The 1.3-kb cDNA insert contained an open reading frame of 337 amino acids (Mr 39,900 Casein kinase II is a ubiquitous protein-serine/threonine kinase in eukaryotic cells that catalyzes the phosphorylation of many protein substrates and has been regarded as a second-messenger-independent protein kinase (reviewed in references 27, 43, 82, and 109). When isolated from most species, this enzyme is composed of an a subunit (37 to 44 kDa) and a v subunit (24 to 28 kDa) and exists as an a212tetramer. The primary amino acid sequences of the a and 13 subunits of several species, which have been determined by molecular cloning and by direct protein sequence analysis, are well conserved among the species thus far studied (8,14,25,45,47,49,51,58,66,69,80,83,87,96,104,106). The a subunit contains a protein kinase domain that is homologous to the catalytic domain of other protein kinases (42), whereas the 13 subunit shows no significant homology Vv ith other proteins except the Drosophila melanogaster steijate gene products (67). The 1 subunit is presumed to regulate the catalytic activity (17), although the precise role of this subunit is not clear (59). There is some evidence that the 13 subunit stabilizes the a subunit, but it is not required for the catalytic activity of the a subunit (32,40,108 (80). In yeast cells, disruption of both a-subunit genes causes inviability, whereas disruption of either one of these genes alone has no detectable phenotype. This finding indicates that at least one of the a-type subunits is essential and that the two a-type subunits can complement one another in S. cerevisiae (87).Casein kinase II is detected in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm by fractionation experiments (43, 109). Immunolocalization studies have yielded somewhat conflicting results about the subcellular localization of casein kinase II (30,60,112). In one study, all three subunits were found to be predominantly nuclear under all conditions (60), whereas in the another study, the a and 13 subunits were found to be mainly cytoplasmic in interphase and the a' subunit was nuclear in G1 and cytoplasmic in S phase (112). In the third study, casein kinase II was found in the nucleus of growing cells but distributed in the nucleus and cytoplasm in quiescent cells (30). A role for casein kinase II in the nucleus is suggested by recent studies showing that a number of the nuclear proteins, such as c-Myc (72), Max (7), c-Myb (71), serum response factor (74, 79), c-Fos (12), c-Jun (64), DNA ligase (90), topoisomerase II (10), the p53 tumor suppressor protein (81), the adenovirus ElA protein (12), the human papillomavirus E7 protein (6,35), and the simian virus 40 large T antigen (41, 59), are phosphorylated by casein kinase II in vitro at physiological sites and that the DNA-binding activity of some of these nuclear proteins is regu...