Abstract

Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) are broadly used regulators of cellular signaling. However, how these enzymes can be involved in such a broad spectrum of physiological functions is not understood. Systematic discovery of MAPK networks both experimentally and in silico has been hindered because MAPKs bind to other proteins with low affinity and mostly in less-characterized disordered regions. We used a structurally consistent model on kinase-docking motif interactions to facilitate the discovery of short functional sites in the structurally flexible and functionally under-explored part of the human proteome and applied experimental tools specifically tailored to detect low-affinity protein-protein interactions for their validation invitro and in cell-based assays. The combined computational and experimental approach enabled the identification of many novel MAPK-docking motifs that were elusive for other large-scale protein-protein interaction screens. The analysis produced an extensive list of independently evolved linear binding motifs from a functionally diverse set of proteins. These all target, with characteristic binding specificity, an ancient protein interaction surface on evolutionarily related but physiologically clearly distinct three MAPKs (JNK, ERK, and p38). This inventory of human protein kinase binding sites was compared with that of other organisms to examine how kinase-mediated partnerships evolved over time. The analysis suggests that most human MAPK-binding motifs are surprisingly new evolutionarily inventions and newly found links highlight (previously hidden) roles of MAPKs. We propose that short MAPK-binding stretches are created in disordered protein segments through a variety of ways and they represent a major resource for ancient signaling enzymes to acquire new regulatory roles.

Highlights

  • Protein–protein interactions influence all aspects of cellular life and the most direct mechanism through which proteins can influence each other is by physical interaction

  • The typical helical conformation at the N-terminus of HePTP-type docking motif is characteristic to some Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) interactors from yeast (Ste7) and peptides with such motifs are known to bind human ERK2 with high affinity (Fernandes et al, 2007)

  • We found that docking motif versions of GAB1 had diminished capacity to translocate to the cell membrane and that these mutants were more sensitive to epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulation regarding ERK2 activation

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Summary

Introduction

Protein–protein interactions influence all aspects of cellular life and the most direct mechanism through which proteins can influence each other is by physical interaction. As an example relevant to cellular signaling, mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) are prototypical enzymes that depend on short segments from partner proteins and on their dedicated protein–protein interaction hot spots. They mainly recognize their substrates not with the catalytic site but with auxiliary docking surfaces on their kinase domains (Tanoue et al, 2000; Biondi & Nebreda, 2003). The most important of these docking sites consists of a hydrophobic docking groove and the negatively charged CD (common docking) region (Chang et al, 2002) (Fig 1A) Together, they can bind the so-called D(ocking)-motifs of the target proteins.

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