Members of the Plant CRK Superfamily Are Capable of Trans- and Autophosphorylation of Tyrosine Residues

Protein phosphorylation on Tyr residues is a key post-translational modification in mammals. In plants, recent studies have identified Tyr-specific protein phosphatase and Tyr-phosphorylated proteins in Arabidopsis by phosphoproteomic screenings, implying that plants have a Tyr phosphorylation signa...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2015-07, Vol.290 (27), p.16665-16677
Hauptverfasser: Nemoto, Keiichirou, Takemori, Nobuaki, Seki, Motoaki, Shinozaki, Kazuo, Sawasaki, Tatsuya
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Protein phosphorylation on Tyr residues is a key post-translational modification in mammals. In plants, recent studies have identified Tyr-specific protein phosphatase and Tyr-phosphorylated proteins in Arabidopsis by phosphoproteomic screenings, implying that plants have a Tyr phosphorylation signal pathway. However, little is known about the protein kinases (PKs) involved in Tyr phosphorylation in plants. Here, we demonstrate that Arabidopsis calcium-dependent protein kinase (CDPK/CPK)-related PKs (CRKs) have high Tyr-autophosphorylation activity and that they can phosphorylate Tyr residue(s) on substrate proteins in Arabidopsis. To identify PKs for Tyr phosphorylation, we examined the autophosphorylation activity of 759 PKs using an Arabidopsis protein array based on a wheat cell-free system. In total, we identified 38 PKs with Tyr-autophosphorylation activity. The CRK family was a major protein family identified. A cell-free substrate screening revealed that these CRKs phosphorylate β-tubulin (TBB) 2, TBB7, and certain transcription factors (TFs) such as ethylene response factor 13 (ERF13). All five CRKs tested showed Tyr-auto/trans-phosphorylation activity and especially two CRKs, CRK2 and CRK3, showed a high ERF13 Tyr-phosphorylation activity. A cell-based transient expression assay revealed that Tyr16/Tyr207 sites in ERF13 were phosphorylated by CRK3 and that Tyr phosphorylation of endogenous TBBs occurs in CRK2 overexpressing cells. Furthermore, crk2 and crk3 mutants showed a decrease in the Tyr phosphorylation level of TBBs. These results suggest that CRKs have Tyr kinase activity, and these might be one of the major PKs responsible for protein Tyr phosphorylation in Arabidopsis plants. Background: Protein kinases that catalyze Tyr phosphorylation in plants in vivo are largely unknown. Results: CDPK/CPK-related protein kinases (CRKs) that auto/trans-phosphorylate Tyr residues and six substrates of these were identified. CRK knock-out mutants show reduced Tyr phosphorylation of β-tubulin proteins. Conclusion: CRKs can phosphorylate Tyr residues of β-tubulin and certain transcription factors. Significance: CRKs might be responsible for much of the protein Tyr phosphorylation in vivo.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M114.617274