Analysis of substrate specificity and cyclin Y binding of PCTAIRE-1 kinase

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Saifeldin N. Shehata
  • Roger W. Hunter
  • Eriko Ohta
  • Mark W. Peggie
  • Hua Jane Lou
  • Frank Sicheri
  • Elton Zeqiraj
  • Benjamin E. Turk
  • Sakamoto, Kei

PCTAIRE-1 (cyclin-dependent kinase [CDK] 16) is a highly conserved serine/threonine kinase that belongs to the CDK family of protein kinases. Little is known regarding PCTAIRE-1 regulation and function and no robust assay exists to assess PCTAIRE-1 activity mainly due to a lack of information regarding its preferred consensus motif and the lack of bona fide substrates. We used positional scanning peptide library technology and identified the substrate-specificity requirements of PCTAIRE-1 and subsequently elaborated a peptide substrate termed PCTAIRE-tide. Recombinant PCTAIRE-1 displayed vastly improved enzyme kinetics on PCTAIRE-tide compared to a widely used generic CDK substrate peptide. PCTAIRE-tide also greatly improved detection of endogenous PCTAIRE-1 activity. Similar to other CDKs, PCTAIRE-1 requires a proline residue immediately C-terminal to the phosphoacceptor site (+. 1) for optimal activity. PCTAIRE-1 has a unique preference for a basic residue at +. 4, but not at +. 3 position (a key characteristic for CDKs). We also demonstrate that PCTAIRE-1 binds to a novel cyclin family member, cyclin Y, which increased PCTAIRE-1 activity towards PCTAIRE-tide >100-fold. We hypothesised that cyclin Y binds and activates PCTAIRE-1 in a way similar to which cyclin A2 binds and activates CDK2. Point mutants of cyclin Y predicted to disrupt PCTAIRE-1-cyclin Y binding severely prevented complex formation and activation of PCTAIRE-1. We have identified PCTAIRE-tide as a powerful tool to study the regulation of PCTAIRE-1. Our understanding of the molecular interaction between PCTAIRE-1 and cyclin Y further facilitates future investigation of the functions of PCTAIRE-1 kinase.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCellular Signalling
Volume24
Issue number11
Pages (from-to)2085-2094
Number of pages10
ISSN0898-6568
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2012

    Research areas

  • CDK16, Cell cycle, Cyclin-dependent kinase, PCTK1, Positional scanning peptide library, Proline-directed kinase

ID: 239566412