The RKIP (Raf-1 Kinase Inhibitor Protein) conserved pocket binds to the phosphorylated N-region of Raf-1 and inhibits the Raf-1-mediated activated phosphorylation of MEK.
Article Details
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Citation
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Rath O, Park S, Tang HH, Banfield MJ, Brady RL, Lee YC, Dignam JD, Sedivy JM, Kolch W, Yeung KC
The RKIP (Raf-1 Kinase Inhibitor Protein) conserved pocket binds to the phosphorylated N-region of Raf-1 and inhibits the Raf-1-mediated activated phosphorylation of MEK.
Cell Signal. 2008 May;20(5):935-41. doi: 10.1016/j.cellsig.2008.01.012. Epub 2008 Jan 24.
- PubMed ID
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18294816 [View in PubMed]
- Abstract
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The Raf-MEK-ERK pathway regulates many fundamental biological processes, and its activity is finely tuned at multiple levels. The Raf kinase inhibitory protein (RKIP) is a widely expressed negative modulator of the Raf-MEK-ERK signaling pathway. We have previously shown that RKIP inhibits the phosphorylation of MEK by Raf-1 through interfering with the formation of a kinase-substrate complex by direct binding to both Raf-1 and MEK. Here, we show that the evolutionarily conserved ligand-binding pocket of RKIP is required for its inhibitory activity towards the Raf-1 kinase mediated activation of MEK. Single amino acid substitutions of two of the conserved residues form the base and the wall of the pocket confers a loss-of-function phenotype on RKIP. Loss-of-function RKIP mutants still appear to bind to Raf-1. However the stability of the complexes formed between mutants and the N-region Raf-1 phosphopeptide were drastically reduced. Our results therefore suggest that the RKIP conserved pocket may constitute a novel phosphoamino-acid binding motif and is absolutely required for RKIP function.