1.A phosphorylation pattern-recognizing antibody specifically reacts to RNA polymerase II bound to exons.
Jungwon HAN ; Jong Hyuk LEE ; Sunyoung PARK ; Soomin YOON ; Aerin YOON ; Do B HWANG ; Hwa K LEE ; Min S KIM ; Yujean LEE ; Won J YANG ; Hong Duk YOUN ; Hyori KIM ; Junho CHUNG
Experimental & Molecular Medicine 2016;48(11):e271-
The C-terminal domain of RNA polymerase II is an unusual series of repeated residues appended to the C-terminus of the largest subunit and serves as a flexible binding scaffold for numerous nuclear factors. The binding of these factors is determined by the phosphorylation patterns on the repeats in the domain. In this study, we generated a synthetic antibody library by replacing the third heavy chain complementarity-determining region of an anti-HER2 (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2) antibody (trastuzumab) with artificial sequences of 7–18 amino-acid residues. From this library, antibodies were selected that were specific to serine phosphopeptides that represent typical phosphorylation patterns on the functional unit (YSPTSPS)₂ of the RNA polymerase II C-terminal domain (CTD). Antibody clones pCTD-1stS2 and pCTD-2ndS2 showed specificity for peptides with phosphoserine at the second residues of the first or second heptamer repeat, respectively. Additional clones specifically reacted to peptides with phosphoserine at the fifth serine of the first repeat (pCTD-1stS5), the seventh residue of the first repeat and fifth residue of the second repeat (pCTD-S7S5) or the seventh residue of either the first or second repeat (pCTD-S7). All of these antibody clones successfully reacted to RNA polymerase II in immunoblot analysis. Interestingly, pCTD-2ndS2 precipitated predominately RNA polymerase II from the exonic regions of genes in genome-wide chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing analysis, which suggests that the phosphoserine at the second residue of the second repeat of the functional unit (YSPTSPS)2 is a mediator of exon definition.
Antibodies
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Chromatin Immunoprecipitation
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Clone Cells
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Complementarity Determining Regions
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DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases*
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Exons*
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Peptides
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Phosphopeptides
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Phosphorylation*
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Phosphoserine
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Receptor, Epidermal Growth Factor
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RNA Polymerase II*
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RNA*
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Sensitivity and Specificity
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Serine
3.Advances of Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitors.
Yunyang LIU ; Shuai JIANG ; Qian LI ; Yi KONG
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2021;37(11):3988-4000
Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitors are a class of ubiquitous protease inhibitors, which play important roles in various life activities. The structures of such inhibitors are generally stable, and are usually characterized by the presence of one or several Kunitz domains in tandem, which are able to bind to serine proteases in a manner similar to substrate binding, thereby inhibiting enzyme activity. In terms of function, Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitors are involved in processes such as blood coagulation and fibrinolysis, tumor immunity, inflammation regulation, and resistance to bacterial and fungal infections. This article summarizes the advances of Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitors and provides new ideas for the development of novel Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitors.
Protease Inhibitors
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Serine Proteases
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Serine Proteinase Inhibitors
4.Identification of novel substrates for human checkpoint kinase Chk1 and Chk2 through genome-wide screening using a consensus Chk phosphorylation motif.
Myoung Ae KIM ; Hyun Ju KIM ; Alexandra L BROWN ; Min Young LEE ; Yoe Sik BAE ; Joo In PARK ; Jong Young KWAK ; Jay H CHUNG ; Jeanho YUN
Experimental & Molecular Medicine 2007;39(2):205-212
Checkpoint kinase 1 (Chk1) and Chk2 are effector kinases in the cellular DNA damage response and impairment of their function is closely related to tumorigenesis. Previous studies revealed several substrate proteins of Chk1 and Chk2, but identification of additional targets is still important in order to understand their tumor suppressor functions. In this study, we screened novel substrates for Chk1 and Chk2 using substrate target motifs determined previously by an oriented peptide library approach. The potential candidates were selected by genome-wide peptide database searches and were examined by in vitro kinase assays. ST5, HDAC5, PGC-1alpha, PP2A PR130, FANCG, GATA3, cyclin G, Rad51D and MAD1alpha were newly identified as in vitro substrates for Chk1 and/or Chk2. Among these, HDAC5 and PGC-1alpha were further analyzed to substantiate the screening results. Immunoprecipitation kinase assay of full-length proteins and site-directed mutagenesis analysis of the target motifs demonstrated that HDAC5 and PGC-1alpha were specific targets for Chk1 and/or Chk2 at least in vitro.
Amino Acid Motifs
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Amino Acid Sequence
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*Consensus Sequence
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Genome, Human/*genetics
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Heat-Shock Proteins/chemistry/metabolism
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Histone Deacetylases/chemistry/metabolism
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Humans
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Molecular Sequence Data
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Peptide Fragments/chemistry/metabolism
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Phosphorylation
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Phosphoserine/metabolism
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Protein Kinases/*metabolism
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Protein-Serine-Threonine Kinases/*metabolism
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Substrate Specificity
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Transcription Factors/chemistry/metabolism
5.Identification of a Novel Putative Protein Serine / Threonine Kinase, PK38, in Normal Human Keratinocytes.
Korean Journal of Immunology 1997;19(2):189-196
No abstract available.
Humans*
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Keratinocytes*
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Protein-Serine-Threonine Kinases*
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Serine*
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Threonine*
8.Metabolic engineering of Escherichia coli for L-homoserine production.
Bo ZHANG ; Zhenhao YAO ; Zhiqiang LIU ; Yuguo ZHENG
Chinese Journal of Biotechnology 2021;37(4):1287-1297
L-Homoserine is a non-essential amino acid that is often used as an important platform compound and additive in industrial production. To improve the production efficiency, a previously constructed L-homoserine producing strain E. coli H0-0 was used as a chassis for further metabolic modification. Firstly, the ppc and pyccgP458S genes were overexpressed to optimize the Kreb's cycle. Subsequently, thrAC1034T and lysCcgC932T were overexpressed to improve the product synthesis, followed by inactivation of iclR gene to reduce the accumulation of by-products. The introduction of three sucrose metabolism genes, scrA, scrB and scrK, enabled E. coli to ferment sucrose. The titer of L-homoserine increased from 3.2 g/L to 11.1 g/L.
Escherichia coli/genetics*
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Homoserine
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Metabolic Engineering
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Serine
10.Activated Rac1 regulates the degradation of IκBα and the nuclear translocation of STAT3–NFκB complexes in starved cancer cells.
Experimental & Molecular Medicine 2016;48(5):e231-
In several human tumors, signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) and nuclear factor κB (NFκB) are activated and interact; how these STAT3–NFκB complexes are transported to the nucleus is not fully understood. In this study, we found that Rac1 was activated in starved cancer cells and that activated Rac1 coexisted with STAT3 and NFκB. Rac1 knockdown and overexpression of the dominant-negative mutant Rac1N19 inhibited the degradation of IκBα, an inhibitor of NFκB. MG132, an inhibitor of the ubiquitin proteasome pathway, increased the amount of non-phosphorylated IκBα, but not serine-phosphorylated IκBα, indicating that IκBα degradation by Rac1 in starved cancer cells is independent of IκBα serine phosphorylation by IKK. Rac1 knockdown also inhibited the nuclear translocation of STAT3–NFκB complexes, indicating that this translocation requires activated Rac1. We also demonstrated that the mutant STAT3 Y705F could form complexes with NFκB, and these unphosphorylated STAT3–NFκB complexes translocated into the nucleus and upregulated the activity of NFκB in starved cancer cells, suggesting that phosphorylation of STAT3 is not essential for its translocation. To our knowledge, this is the first study demonstrating the crucial role of Rac1 in the function of STAT3–NFκB complexes in starved cancer cells and implies that targeting Rac1 may have future therapeutic significance in cancer therapy.
Humans
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Phosphorylation
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Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex
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Serine
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STAT3 Transcription Factor
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Ubiquitin