Author:
Teige Markus,Scheikl Elisabeth,Reiser Vladimir,Ruis Helmut,Ammerer Gustav
Abstract
Rck2, a yeast Ser/Thr protein kinase homologous to mammalian
calmodulin kinases, requires phosphorylation for
activation. We provide evidence that in budding yeast, this step can be
executed by the osmostress-activated mitogen-activated protein kinase
Hog1. Rck2 phosphorylation was transiently increased during osmostress
or in mutants with a hyperactive high osmolarity glycerol (HOG)
pathway. This modification depended on catalytically active Hog1 kinase
and two putative mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphorylation sites
in Rck2. Immunokinase assays showed that Hog1 can directly
phosphorylate Rck2 to stimulate its enzymatic activity toward
translation elongation factor 2. We demonstrate that Hog1 and Rck2 are
necessary for attenuation of protein synthesis in response to osmotic
challenge and show that modification of elongation factor 2 induced by
osmostress depends on Rck2 and Hog1 in vivo. Therefore,
we propose that the transient down-regulation of protein synthesis
after osmotic shock is a response not to damage but to an extracellular
signal mediated by Hog1 and Rck2.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
135 articles.
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