Hyperphosphorylation of JNK-interacting protein 1, a protein associated with Alzheimer disease.

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Citation

D'Ambrosio C, Arena S, Fulcoli G, Scheinfeld MH, Zhou D, D'Adamio L, Scaloni A

Hyperphosphorylation of JNK-interacting protein 1, a protein associated with Alzheimer disease.

Mol Cell Proteomics. 2006 Jan;5(1):97-113. Epub 2005 Sep 29.

PubMed ID
16195223 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) group of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases are activated by pleiotropic signals including environmental stresses, growth factors, and hormones. JNK-interacting protein 1 (JIP1) is a scaffold protein that assembles and facilitates the activation of the mixed lineage kinase-dependent JNK module and also establishes an interaction with beta-amyloid precursor protein that has been partially characterized. Here we show that, similarly to other proteins involved in various neurological diseases, JIP1 becomes hyperphosphorylated following activation of stress-activated and MAP kinases. By immobilized metal affinity chromatography and a combined microcapillary LC/MALDI-TOF/ESI-ion trap mass spectrometry approach, we identified 35 sites of mitotic phosphorylation within JIP1, among which eight were present within (Ser/Thr)-Pro sequence. This motif is modified by various kinases in aggregates of the microtubule-associated protein tau, which generates typical intraneuronal lesions occurring in Alzheimer disease. Most of the post-translational modifications found were located within the JNK, MAP kinase kinase, and RAC-alpha Ser/Thr protein kinase binding regions; no modifications occurred in protein Src homology 3 and phosphotyrosine interaction domains, which are essential for binding to kinesin, beta-amyloid precursor protein, and MAP kinase kinase kinase. Protein phosphorylation is known to affect stability and protein-protein interactions. Thus, the findings that JIP1 is extensively phosphorylated after activation of stress-activated and MAP kinases indicate that these signaling pathways might modulate JIP1 signaling by regulating its stability and association with some, but not all, interacting proteins.

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Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
C-Jun-amino-terminal kinase-interacting protein 1Q9UQF2Details