학술논문

A robust methodology to subclassify pseudokinases based on their nucleotide-binding properties.
Document Type
article
Source
Biochemical Journal. 457(2)
Subject
Cancer
Underpinning research
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Generic health relevance
Amino Acid Sequence
Animals
Cell Line
Humans
Insecta
Janus Kinase 2
Molecular Sequence Data
Protein Binding
Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction
Receptor
ErbB-3
nucleotide binding
non-catalytic protein-interaction domain
protein kinase
pseudoenzyme
pseudokinase
Receptor
erbB-3
Chemical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Language
Abstract
Protein kinase-like domains that lack conserved residues known to catalyse phosphoryl transfer, termed pseudokinases, have emerged as important signalling domains across all kingdoms of life. Although predicted to function principally as catalysis-independent protein-interaction modules, several pseudokinase domains have been attributed unexpected catalytic functions, often amid controversy. We established a thermal-shift assay as a benchmark technique to define the nucleotide-binding properties of kinase-like domains. Unlike in vitro kinase assays, this assay is insensitive to the presence of minor quantities of contaminating kinases that may otherwise lead to incorrect attribution of catalytic functions to pseudokinases. We demonstrated the utility of this method by classifying 31 diverse pseudokinase domains into four groups: devoid of detectable nucleotide or cation binding; cation-independent nucleotide binding; cation binding; and nucleotide binding enhanced by cations. Whereas nine pseudokinases bound ATP in a divalent cation-dependent manner, over half of those examined did not detectably bind nucleotides, illustrating that pseudokinase domains predominantly function as non-catalytic protein-interaction modules within signalling networks and that only a small subset is potentially catalytically active. We propose that henceforth the thermal-shift assay be adopted as the standard technique for establishing the nucleotide-binding and catalytic potential of kinase-like domains.