The structure of dimeric ROCK I reveals the mechanism for ligand selectivity.

J Biol Chem

Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA.

Published: January 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • ROCK (Rho-associated kinase) is a key player in regulating cell movement and structure by acting in Rho-dependent signaling and influencing the actin cytoskeleton.
  • The structure analysis reveals that ROCK is organized into multiple regions, including a dimerization domain that allows two kinase domains to work closely together, enhancing their functionality.
  • Binding studies of ROCK with various ATP-competitive inhibitors show differences in how these inhibitors interact with ROCK compared to a similar kinase (PKA), indicating unique selectivity that may be influenced by specific amino acid interactions.

Article Abstract

ROCK or Rho-associated kinase, a serine/threonine kinase, is an effector of Rho-dependent signaling and is involved in actin-cytoskeleton assembly and cell motility and contraction. The ROCK protein consists of several domains: an N-terminal region, a kinase catalytic domain, a coiled-coil domain containing a RhoA binding site, and a pleckstrin homology domain. The C-terminal region of ROCK binds to and inhibits the kinase catalytic domains, and this inhibition is reversed by binding RhoA, a small GTPase. Here we present the structure of the N-terminal region and the kinase domain. In our structure, two N-terminal regions interact to form a dimerization domain linking two kinase domains together. This spatial arrangement presents the kinase active sites and regulatory sequences on a common face affording the possibility of both kinases simultaneously interacting with a dimeric inhibitory domain or with a dimeric substrate. The kinase domain adopts a catalytically competent conformation; however, no phosphorylation of active site residues is observed in the structure. We also determined the structures of ROCK bound to four different ATP-competitive small molecule inhibitors (Y-27632, fasudil, hydroxyfasudil, and H-1152P). Each of these compounds binds with reduced affinity to cAMP-dependent kinase (PKA), a highly homologous kinase. Subtle differences exist between the ROCK- and PKA-bound conformations of the inhibitors that suggest that interactions with a single amino acid of the active site (Ala215 in ROCK and Thr183 in PKA) determine the relative selectivity of these compounds. Hydroxyfasudil, a metabolite of fasudil, may be selective for ROCK over PKA through a reversed binding orientation.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M508847200DOI Listing

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