1. Academic Validation
  2. Protein kinase C contains a pseudosubstrate prototope in its regulatory domain

Protein kinase C contains a pseudosubstrate prototope in its regulatory domain

  • Science. 1987 Dec 18;238(4834):1726-8. doi: 10.1126/science.3686012.
C House 1 B E Kemp
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Medicine, University of Melbourne, Repatriation General Hospital, West Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia.
Abstract

The regulatory domain of protein kinase C contains an amino acid sequence between residues 19 and 36 that resembles a substrate phosphorylation site in its distribution of basic residue recognition determinants. The corresponding synthetic peptide (Arg19-Phe-Ala-Arg-Lys-Gly-Ala25-Leu-Arg-Gln-Lys-Asn-Val-His -Glu-Val-Lys-Asn36) acts as a potent substrate antagonist with an inhibitory constant of 147 +/- 9 nM. It is a specific inhibitor of protein kinase C and inhibits both autophosphorylation and protein substrate phosphorylation. Substitution of Ala25 with serine transforms the pseudosubstrate into a potent substrate. These results demonstrate that the conserved region of the regulatory domain (residues 19 to 36) of protein kinase C has the secondary structural features of a pseudosubstrate and may be responsible for maintaining the Enzyme in the inactive form in the absence of allosteric activators such as Phospholipids.

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