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Autocatalytic Phosphorylation of CDK2 at the Activating Thr160

Tarek Abbas, Sudhakar Jha, Nicholas E. Sherman and Anindya Dutta

volume 6 | issue 7

1 April 2007
Pages: 843 - 852

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Phosphorylation of a critical residue in the activation loop of many protein kinases is essential for enzymatic activity. The trimeric complex CDK7/cyclin H/Mat1 phosphorylates the cell cycle regulated cyclin-dependent kinase, CDK2 at Thr-160 in the activation segment in vitro. Whether CDK7/cyclin H is the in vivo CDK2 activating kinase (CAK), or the sole CAK for CDK2 remains elusive. Here we show that monomeric human CDK2 purified from bacteria is phosphorylated at Thr-160. CDK2 expressed and purified from bacteria exhibited kinase activity against histone H1, which was stimulated by cyclin E or A expressed and purified from bacteria. The kinase activity was dependent on both the catalytic activity of CDK2 and Thr-160 phosphorylation since it was abolished when CDK2 was mutated at Lys33 in the ATP binding site (K33R) or Thr160 (T160A) or when treated with lambda phosphatase. Mass spectrometry based phosphopeptide mapping confirmed the phosphorylation of bacterial CDK2 on Thr160. Consistent with a role of CDK2 in auto-activation, inhibition of CDK2 in human cells either by pharmacological inhibition of CDK2 or by the coexpression of the CDK2 inhibitors p21 or p27, inhibited CDK2 Thr-160 phosphorylation. Our results demonstrate that CDK2 is capable of autophosphorylation at T160.

Authors

Tarek Abbas

University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia

Sudhakar Jha

University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia

Nicholas E. Sherman

University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia

Anindya Dutta

University of Virginia School of Medicine Charlottesville



We now provide open access to journal articles published online for one year or more. This article may be downloaded at the following link:
 Download PDF

If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.