Published September 26, 1997 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Identification of Serine 643 of Protein Kinase C-δ as an Important Autophosphorylation Site for Its Enzymatic Activity

Description

To investigate the role of serine/threonine autophosphorylation of protein kinase C-delta (PKC-delta), we mutated serine 643 of PKC-delta to an alanine residue (PKC-deltaS643A). Two different expression vectors containing PKC-deltaS643A mutant cDNAs were transfected and expressed in 32D myeloid progenitor cells. In vitro autophosphorylation assays demonstrated 65-83% reduction in autophosphorylation of PKC-deltaS643A in comparison to wild type PKC-delta (PKC-deltaWT). The enzymatic activity of PKC-deltaS643A mutant as measured by phosphorylating the PKC-delta pseudosubstrate region-derived substrate was also reduced more than 70% in comparison to that of PKC-deltaWT. In vivo labeling and subsequent two-dimensional phosphopeptide analysis demonstrated that at least one phosphopeptide was absent in PKC-deltaS643A when compared with PKC-deltaWT, further substantiating that serine 643 is phosphorylated in vivo. Localization and 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate-dependent translocation and tyrosine phosphorylation of PKC-deltaS643A were not altered in comparison to PKC-deltaWT, indicating that mutagenesis did not affect the structural integrity of the mutant protein. 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate-mediated monocytic differentiation of 32D cells overexpressing PKC-deltaS643A mutant protein was impaired in comparison to that of PKC-deltaWT transfectant. Taken together, our results demonstrate that serine 643 of PKC-delta is a major autophosphorylation site, and phosphorylation of this site plays an important role in controlling its enzymatic activity and biological function.

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