4.6 Article

A human kinase yeast array for the identification of kinases modulating phosphorylation-dependent protein-protein interactions

Journal

MOLECULAR SYSTEMS BIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/msb.202110820

Keywords

estrogen receptor; kinase signaling; protein networks; U5 spliceosome; yeast two-hybrid

Funding

  1. Max Planck Society
  2. University of Graz (Field of Excellence BioHealth)
  3. Open-Access-Publikationsfonds der Universitat Graz

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Protein kinases play a critical role in cellular signaling pathways and their dysregulation can lead to various diseases. A human kinase array was developed to assess kinase activity in yeast, allowing for the study of protein-protein interactions and other related investigations.
Protein kinases play an important role in cellular signaling pathways and their dysregulation leads to multiple diseases, making kinases prime drug targets. While more than 500 human protein kinases are known to collectively mediate phosphorylation of over 290,000 S/T/Y sites, the activities have been characterized only for a minor, intensively studied subset. To systematically address this discrepancy, we developed a human kinase array in Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a simple readout tool to systematically assess kinase activities. For this array, we expressed 266 human kinases in four different S. cerevisiae strains and profiled ectopic growth as a proxy for kinase activity across 33 conditions. More than half of the kinases showed an activity-dependent phenotype across many conditions and in more than one strain. We then employed the kinase array to identify the kinase(s) that can modulate protein-protein interactions (PPIs). Two characterized, phosphorylation-dependent PPIs with unknown kinase-substrate relationships were analyzed in a phospho-yeast two-hybrid assay. CK2 alpha 1 and SGK2 kinases can abrogate the interaction between the spliceosomal proteins AAR2 and PRPF8, and NEK6 kinase was found to mediate the estrogen receptor (ER alpha) interaction with 14-3-3 proteins. The human kinase yeast array can thus be used for a variety of kinase activity-dependent readouts.

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