Title of article :
Histidine kinases and histidine phosphorylated proteins in mammalian cell biology, signal transduction and cancer
Author/Authors :
Steeg، نويسنده , , Patricia S and Palmieri، نويسنده , , Diane and Ouatas، نويسنده , , Taoufik and Salerno، نويسنده , , Massimiliano، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Intensive investigation of protein tyrosine, serine and threonine phosphorylation has lead to advances in signal transduction research and cancer treatment. This feature summarizes research on mammalian proteins exhibiting histidine phosphorylation. Histidine kinases are well known in prokaryotic and lower eukaryotic systems where they form the ‘two-component’ signal transduction system. The relative invisibility of histidine phosphorylation in mammalian cells may result from technical obstacles such as its acid lability, which precludes detection in electrophoretic systems, amino acid sequencing, etc. Emerging data have identified mammalian histidine kinases for the kinase suppressor of ras, a scaffold molecule for the Map kinase pathway, as well as histone H4, aldolase C and the β-subunit of heterotrimeric G proteins. Additional mammalian proteins of interest to signal transduction and cancer research exhibit histidine phosphorylation, including P-selectin, annexin I and the 20S proteasome. Other candidate histidine phosphorylated proteins are identified. These data suggest the existence of another series of phosphorylation patterns in signal transduction.
Keywords :
histidine , cancer , Signal transduction , nm23 , histone , G protein , MAP kinase , RAS , phosphorylation
Journal title :
Cancer Letters
Journal title :
Cancer Letters