Ancestral reconstruction reveals mechanisms of ERK regulatory evolution Journal Article


Authors: Sang, D.; Pinglay, S.; Wiewiora, R. P.; Selvan, M. E.; Lou, H. J.; Chodera, J. D.; Turk, B. E.; Gümüş, Z. H.; Holt, L. J.
Article Title: Ancestral reconstruction reveals mechanisms of ERK regulatory evolution
Abstract: Protein kinases are crucial to coordinate cellular decisions and therefore their activities are strictly regulated. Previously we used ancestral reconstruction to determine how CMGC group kinase specificity evolved (Howard et al., 2014). In the present study, we reconstructed ancestral kinases to study the evolution of regulation, from the inferred ancestor of CDKs and MAPKs, to modern ERKs. Kinases switched from high to low autophosphorylation activity at the transition to the inferred ancestor of ERKs 1 and 2. Two synergistic amino acid changes were sufficient to induce this change: shortening of the β3-αC loop and mutation of the gatekeeper residue. Restoring these two mutations to their inferred ancestral state led to a loss of dependence of modern ERKs 1 and 2 on the upstream activating kinase MEK in human cells. Our results shed light on the evolutionary mechanisms that led to the tight regulation of a kinase that is central in development and disease. © 2019, Sang et al.
Keywords: evolution; evolutionary biology; biochemistry; protein kinase; erk; chemical biology; human; ancestral reconstruction; extracellular regulated kinase
Journal Title: eLife
Volume: 8
ISSN: 2050-084X
Publisher: eLife Sciences Publications Ltd.  
Date Published: 2019-01-01
Start Page: e38805
Language: English
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.38805
PUBMED: 31407663
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC6692128
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 1 October 2019 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. John Damon Chodera
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