The cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) that drive the eukaryotic cell cycle must be phosphorylated within the activation segment (T-loop) by a CDK-activating kinase (CAK) to achieve full activity. Although a requirement for CDK-activating phosphorylation is conserved throughout eukaryotic evolution, CAK itself has diverged between metazoans and budding yeast, and fission yeast has two CAKs, raising the possibility that additional mammalian enzymes remain to be identified. We report here the characterization of PNQALRE (also known as CCRK or p42), a member of the mammalian CDK family most similar to the cell-cycle effectors Cdk1 and Cdk2 and to the CAK, Cdk7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclin-dependent kinase 9 (Cdk9) of fission yeast is an essential ortholog of metazoan positive transcription elongation factor b (P-TEFb), which is proposed to coordinate capping and elongation of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) transcripts. Here we show that Cdk9 is activated to phosphorylate Pol II and the elongation factor Spt5 by Csk1, one of two fission yeast CDK-activating kinases (CAKs). Activation depends on Cdk9 T-loop residue Thr-212.
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