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Structure of dystrophia myotonica protein kinase

Authors

Jonathan M. Elkins, Ann Amos, Frank H. Niesen, Ashley C.W. Pike, Oleg Fedorov, Stefan Knapp

Abstract

Dystrophia myotonica protein kinase (DMPK) is a serine/threonine kinase composed of a kinase domain and a coiled‐coil domain involved in the multimerization. The crystal structure of the kinase domain of DMPK bound to the inhibitor bisindolylmaleimide VIII (BIM‐8) revealed a dimeric enzyme associated by a conserved dimerization domain. The affinity of dimerisation suggested that the kinase domain alone is insufficient for dimerisation in vivo and that the coiled‐coil domains are required for stable dimer formation. The kinase domain is in an active conformation, with a fully‐ordered and correctly positioned αC helix, and catalytic residues in a conformation competent for catalysis. The conserved hydrophobic motif at the C‐terminal extension of the kinase domain is bound to the N‐terminal lobe of the kinase domain, despite being unphosphorylated. Differences in the arrangement of the C‐terminal extension compared to the closely related Rho‐associated kinases include an altered PXXP motif, a different conformation and binding arrangement for the turn motif, and a different location for the conserved NFD motif. The BIM‐8 inhibitor occupies the ATP site and has similar binding mode as observed in PDK1.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1002/pro.82 About DOI

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