Title | Substrate displacement of CK1 C-termini regulates kinase specificity. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2024 |
Authors | Cullati SN, Akizuki K, Chen J-S, Johnson JL, Yaron-Barir TM, Cantley LC, Gould KL |
Journal | Sci Adv |
Volume | 10 |
Issue | 19 |
Pagination | eadj5185 |
Date Published | 2024 May 10 |
ISSN | 2375-2548 |
Keywords | Amino Acid Sequence, Casein Kinase 1 epsilon, Catalytic Domain, Humans, Mutation, Peptides, Phosphorylation, Protein Binding, Schizosaccharomyces, Schizosaccharomyces pombe Proteins, Substrate Specificity |
Abstract | CK1 kinases participate in many signaling pathways, and their regulation is of meaningful biological consequence. CK1s autophosphorylate their C-terminal noncatalytic tails, and eliminating these tails increases substrate phosphorylation in vitro, suggesting that the autophosphorylated C-termini act as inhibitory pseudosubstrates. To test this prediction, we comprehensively identified the autophosphorylation sites on Schizosaccharomyces pombe Hhp1 and human CK1ε. Phosphoablating mutations increased Hhp1 and CK1ε activity toward substrates. Peptides corresponding to the C-termini interacted with the kinase domains only when phosphorylated, and substrates competitively inhibited binding of the autophosphorylated tails to the substrate binding grooves. Tail autophosphorylation influenced the catalytic efficiency with which CK1s targeted different substrates, and truncating the tail of CK1δ broadened its linear peptide substrate motif, indicating that tails contribute to substrate specificity as well. Considering autophosphorylation of both T220 in the catalytic domain and C-terminal sites, we propose a displacement specificity model to describe how autophosphorylation modulates substrate specificity for the CK1 family. |
DOI | 10.1126/sciadv.adj5185 |
Alternate Journal | Sci Adv |
PubMed ID | 38728403 |
PubMed Central ID | PMC11086627 |