Journalartikel

Sequential autophosphorylation steps in the interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase-1 regulate its availability as an adapter in interleukin-1 signaling


AutorenlisteKollewe, C; Mackensen, AC; Neumann, D; Knop, J; Cao, P; Li, SU; Wesche, H; Martin, MU

Jahr der Veröffentlichung2004

Seiten5227-5236

ZeitschriftJournal of Biological Chemistry

Bandnummer279

Heftnummer7

ISSN0021-9258

Open Access StatusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M309251200

VerlagElsevier


Abstract
The interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase 1 (IRAK-1) is an important adapter in the signaling complex of the Toll/interleukin-1 (IL-1) receptor family. Formation of the signaling IL-1 receptor complex results in the activation and hyperphosphorylation of IRAK-1, which leads to a pronounced shift of its apparent molecular mass in gel electrophoresis. Presently, the individual residues phosphorylated in IRAK-1 and the consequences for IRAK-1 function are unknown. We define sequential phosphorylation steps in IRAK-1, which are, in vitro, autophosphorylation. First, IRAK-1 is phosphorylated at Thr(209). By fluorescence energy transfer experiments, we demonstrate that Thr209 phosphorylation results in a conformational change of the kinase domain, permitting further phosphorylations to take place. Substitution of Thr209 by alanine results in a kinase-inactive IRAK-1. Second, Thr(387) in the activation loop is phosphorylated, leading to full enzymatic activity. Third, IRAK-1 autophosphorylates several times in the proline-, serine-, and threonine-rich ProST region between the N-terminal death domain and kinase domain. Hyperphosphorylation of this region leads to dissociation of IRAK-1 from the upstream adapters MyD88 and Tollip but leaves its interaction with the downstream adapter TRAF6 unaffected. This identifies IRAK-1 as a novel type of adapter protein, which employs its own kinase activity to introduce negative charges adjacent to the protein interaction domain, which anchors IRAK-1 at the active receptor complex. Thus, IRAK-1 regulates its own availability as an adapter molecule by sequential autophosphorylation.



Zitierstile

Harvard-ZitierstilKollewe, C., Mackensen, A., Neumann, D., Knop, J., Cao, P., Li, S., et al. (2004) Sequential autophosphorylation steps in the interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase-1 regulate its availability as an adapter in interleukin-1 signaling, Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(7), pp. 5227-5236. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M309251200

APA-ZitierstilKollewe, C., Mackensen, A., Neumann, D., Knop, J., Cao, P., Li, S., Wesche, H., & Martin, M. (2004). Sequential autophosphorylation steps in the interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase-1 regulate its availability as an adapter in interleukin-1 signaling. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 279(7), 5227-5236. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M309251200



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