AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the doublecortin-like kinases (DCLKs), a family of proteins involved in cell signaling and regulation, utilize flexible segments in their structure to modulate their activity, particularly focusing on the unique C-terminal autoregulatory 'tail' found in different human DCLK isoforms.
  • Using various methods including statistical analysis and molecular dynamics, the research reveals how differences in the length and structure of the C-tail affect the inhibitory potential and stability of DCLKs, indicating that alternative splicing plays a key role in their functional regulation.
  • The findings emphasize the importance of specific motifs in the DCLK structure that facilitate interactions with the catalytic domain, promoting a better understanding of

Article Abstract

Catalytic signaling outputs of protein kinases are dynamically regulated by an array of structural mechanisms, including allosteric interactions mediated by intrinsically disordered segments flanking the conserved catalytic domain. The doublecortin-like kinases (DCLKs) are a family of microtubule-associated proteins characterized by a flexible C-terminal autoregulatory 'tail' segment that varies in length across the various human DCLK isoforms. However, the mechanism whereby these isoform-specific variations contribute to unique modes of autoregulation is not well understood. Here, we employ a combination of statistical sequence analysis, molecular dynamics simulations, and in vitro mutational analysis to define hallmarks of DCLK family evolutionary divergence, including analysis of splice variants within the DCLK1 sub-family, which arise through alternative codon usage and serve to 'supercharge' the inhibitory potential of the DCLK1 C-tail. We identify co-conserved motifs that readily distinguish DCLKs from all other calcium calmodulin kinases (CAMKs), and a 'Swiss Army' assembly of distinct motifs that tether the C-terminal tail to conserved ATP and substrate-binding regions of the catalytic domain to generate a scaffold for autoregulation through C-tail dynamics. Consistently, deletions and mutations that alter C-terminal tail length or interfere with co-conserved interactions within the catalytic domain alter intrinsic protein stability, nucleotide/inhibitor binding, and catalytic activity, suggesting isoform-specific regulation of activity through alternative splicing. Our studies provide a detailed framework for investigating kinome-wide regulation of catalytic output through cis-regulatory events mediated by intrinsically disordered segments, opening new avenues for the design of mechanistically divergent DCLK1 modulators, stabilizers, or degraders.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10602587PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.87958DOI Listing

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