Human T-cell mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases are related to yeast signal transduction kinases.

Article Details

Citation

Seger R, Seger D, Lozeman FJ, Ahn NG, Graves LM, Campbell JS, Ericsson L, Harrylock M, Jensen AM, Krebs EG

Human T-cell mitogen-activated protein kinase kinases are related to yeast signal transduction kinases.

J Biol Chem. 1992 Dec 25;267(36):25628-31.

PubMed ID
1281467 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase kinases, intermediates in a growth factor-stimulated protein kinase cascade, are dual specificity protein kinases that specifically phosphorylate and activate MAP kinases in response to extracellular signals. Here, we report the cloning of two forms of cDNA that encode this protein from human T-cells. MKK1a encodes a protein with predicted molecular size of 43,439 Da. Overexpression of this clone in COS cells led to elevated levels of protein and phorbol ester-stimulated MAP kinase kinase activity, confirming that MKK1a encodes the predicted protein. MKK1b, which appears to be an alternatively spliced form of the MKK1a gene, encodes a protein with predicted molecular size of 40,745 Da. Northern analysis revealed that the MKK1 cDNA hybridizes with a single 2.6-kilobase mRNA species in all human tissues examined. Sequence comparison shows homology to a group of yeast kinases that participate in signal transduction and to subdomain XI of other dual specificity kinase.

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Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Dual specificity mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1Q02750Details