Abstract

BackgroundProtein kinase (PK) genes comprise the third largest superfamily that occupy ∼2% of the human genome. They encode regulatory enzymes that control a vast variety of cellular processes through phosphorylation of their protein substrates. Expression of PK genes is subject to complex transcriptional regulation which is not fully understood.Principal FindingsOur comparative analysis demonstrates that genomic organization of regulatory PK genes differs from organization of other protein coding genes. PK genes occupy larger genomic loci, have longer introns, spacer regions, and encode larger proteins. The primary transcript length of PK genes, similar to other protein coding genes, inversely correlates with gene expression level and expression breadth, which is likely due to the necessity to reduce metabolic costs of transcription for abundant messages. On average, PK genes evolve slower than other protein coding genes. Breadth of PK expression negatively correlates with rate of non-synonymous substitutions in protein coding regions. This rate is lower for high expression and ubiquitous PKs, relative to low expression PKs, and correlates with divergence in untranslated regions. Conversely, rate of silent mutations is uniform in different PK groups, indicating that differing rates of non-synonymous substitutions reflect variations in selective pressure. Brain and testis employ a considerable number of tissue-specific PKs, indicating high complexity of phosphorylation-dependent regulatory network in these organs. There are considerable differences in genomic organization between PKs up-regulated in the testis and brain. PK genes up-regulated in the highly proliferative testicular tissue are fast evolving and small, with short introns and transcribed regions. In contrast, genes up-regulated in the minimally proliferative nervous tissue carry long introns, extended transcribed regions, and evolve slowly.Conclusions/SignificancePK genomic architecture, the size of gene functional domains and evolutionary rates correlate with the pattern of gene expression. Structure and evolutionary divergence of tissue-specific PK genes is related to the proliferative activity of the tissue where these genes are predominantly expressed. Our data provide evidence that physiological requirements for transcription intensity, ubiquitous expression, and tissue-specific regulation shape gene structure and affect rates of evolution.

Highlights

  • Phosphorylation of serine, threonine and tyrosine residues in substrate proteins by protein kinases (PKs) provides a fundamental mechanism for the control of cell division, growth and apoptosis, metabolic activity, adhesion and migration, and mediates cell responses upon environmental stimuli [1,2,3]

  • We evaluated expression of PK and non-PK genes based on the numbers of gene-specific expressed sequence tag (EST) in GenBank originating from normal human tissues, which reflect mRNA abundance and relative gene transcription levels

  • PKs fall into a category of moderately transcribed genes, which is consistent with their regulatory role

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Summary

Introduction

Phosphorylation of serine, threonine and tyrosine residues in substrate proteins by protein kinases (PKs) provides a fundamental mechanism for the control of cell division, growth and apoptosis, metabolic activity, adhesion and migration, and mediates cell responses upon environmental stimuli [1,2,3]. Phosphorylation-dephosphorylation allows fast and sensitive regulation of enzyme activity It is a major mechanism of transmembrane signal transduction and amplification in the branching network of intracellular PK cascades that control gene expression by phosphorylation of transcription factors. The majority of the human protein kinases have orthologs in the mouse, implying similar biological functions in both organisms. Some of these enzymes are restricted to or predominantly expressed in specialized tissues or cell types. Protein kinase (PK) genes comprise the third largest superfamily that occupy ,2% of the human genome They encode regulatory enzymes that control a vast variety of cellular processes through phosphorylation of their protein substrates. Expression of PK genes is subject to complex transcriptional regulation which is not fully understood

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