화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.280, No.3, 605-609, 2001
Rho-associated kinase phosphorylates MARCKS in human neuronal cells
Myristoylated alanine-rich C kinase substrate (MARCKS) is a filamentous actin bundling protein and has multiple sites for phosphorylation, by which the bio chemical function is negatively regulated. However, the role of such phosphorylation in physiological functions, particularly in neuronal functions, is not well understood. Using a phosphorylation-site specific antibody, we detected the phosphorylation of MARCKS at Ser159 by various protein kinases. Rho-kinase, protein kinase A and protein kinase C, could introduce P-32 into human recombinant MARCKS in vitro and the phosphorylation site was confirmed to be the Ser159 residue. In human neuronal teratoma (NT-2) cells, lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) induced MARCKS phosphorylation dose- and time-dependently. This phosphorylation was sensitive to Rho-kinase inhibitor HA1077. However, the phosphorylation induced by PDBu was lesser sensitive. In a skinned NTera-2 cell system, Ca2+-independent and GTP gammaS/ATP-stimulated phosphorylation at Ser159 was also sensitive to pre-treatment C3 toxin and HA1077. These findings suggest that the Ser159 residue of MARCKS is a target of LPA-stimulated Rho-kinase in neuronal cells,