Abstract
The deduced primary sequence of the cytoplasmic protein-tyrosine kinase domain of the insulin receptor contains a conserved kinase homology region (receptor residues 1002-1257) flanked by a juxtamembrane region and a C-terminal tail. A soluble 48-kDa derivative (residues 959-1355) containing these regions but lacking the first six residues of the juxtamembrane region had earlier been synthesized in Sf9 cells using a baculovirus expression system. The catalytic core of the kinase domain was studied first by proteolytic analysis of the 48-kDa kinase and then by expressing a series of truncated kinase domains in transiently transfected COS cells. Based on these studies, two core kinases of 34 (residues 985-1283) and 35 (residues 978-1283) kDa, respectively, were overexpressed in Sf9 cells. Biochemical characterization of the 35-kDa kinase revealed that the core kinase conserved the major functional properties of the native receptor kinase domain. Activity of the 35-kDa kinase toward a synthetic peptide increased more than 200-fold upon autophosphorylation, which occurred exclusively at Tyr-1158, Tyr-1162, and Tyr-1163; the largest increase was observed between bis- and trisphosphorylation of the kinase. The activated 35- and 48-kDa kinases were similar with respect to specific activity and ATP and Mg2+ requirements for peptide phosphorylation. Moreover, autophosphorylation appeared to initiate predominantly at Tyr-1162, immediately followed by phosphorylation at Tyr-1158 and then at Tyr-1163. The rate of autophosphorylation was dependent on enzyme concentration, consistent with a trans-phosphorylation mechanism. Finally, the 35-kDa kinase was crystallized, making possible elucidation of its three-dimensional structure by x-ray crystallography.
Highlights
in the enzyme combined with native PAGE allows one to follow the autophosphorylation cascade of the three tyrosines
the core kinase has be en found to be suitable for protein crystallization
Proteolytic experiments were performed for a fixed time as a function
Summary
Proteolytic experiments were performed for a fixed time as a function of proteolytic enzyme concentration rather than as a time course at fixed enzyme concentration. N-terminal Deletion-The starting construct was the plasmid peiBgI (12), which comprises a human insulin receptor cDNA cloned into the expression vector pECE (11) containing the SV40 early promoter. This plasmid encodes the 48-kDa soluble kinase that contains two heterologous residues (Met-Asp) followed by receptor residues 959-1355. 3439-4443) fragment containing either the Ala-1284 or Asp-1265 mutation in M13 was sequenced to ensure that no other mutation had occurred and isolated from M13 to replace the corresponding fragment in peiBgl. The resulting plasmids, designated pe~CT72 and pe~CT91, encode receptor residues Gly-959 to Lys-1283 and Gly-959 to. The N- and C-terminal coding sequences of the cDNA in these expression plasmids were confirmed by DNA sequencing
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