An atlas of substrate specificities for the human serine/threonine kinome

Jared L. Johnson(Cornell University), Tomer M. Yaron(Cornell University), Emily M. Huntsman(Cornell University), Alexander Kerelsky(Cornell University), Junho Song(Cornell University), Amit Regev(Cornell University), Ting-Yu Lin(Cornell University), Katarina Liberatore(Cornell University), Daniel M. Cizin(Cornell University), Benjamin M. Cohen(Cornell University), Neil Vasan(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Yilun Ma(Cornell University), Konstantin Krismer(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Jaylissa Torres Robles(Yale University), Bert van de Kooij(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Anne E. van Vlimmeren(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Nicole Andrée-Busch(Technische Universität Braunschweig), Norbert F. Käufer(Technische Universität Braunschweig), Maxim V. Dorovkov(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Alexey G. Ryazanov(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Yuichiro Takagi(Indiana University School of Medicine), Edward R. Kastenhuber(Cornell University), Marcus D. Goncalves(Cornell University), Benjamin D. Hopkins(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Olivier Elemento(Cornell University), Dylan J. Taatjes(University of Colorado Boulder), Alexandre Maucuer(Inserm), Akio Yamashita(University of the Ryukyus), Alexei Degterev(Tufts University), Mohamed Uduman(Cell Signaling Technology (United States)), Jingyi Lu(Cell Signaling Technology (United States)), Sean D. Landry(Cell Signaling Technology (United States)), Bin Zhang(Cell Signaling Technology (United States)), Ian Cossentino(Cell Signaling Technology (United States)), Rune Linding(Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin), John Blenis(Cornell University), Peter Hornbeck(Cell Signaling Technology (United States)), Benjamin E. Turk(Yale University), Michael B. Yaffe(National Institutes of Health), Lewis C. Cantley(Cornell University)
Nature
January 11, 2023
Cited by 688Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Protein phosphorylation is one of the most widespread post-translational modifications in biology 1,2 . With advances in mass-spectrometry-based phosphoproteomics, 90,000 sites of serine and threonine phosphorylation have so far been identified, and several thousand have been associated with human diseases and biological processes 3,4 . For the vast majority of phosphorylation events, it is not yet known which of the more than 300 protein serine/threonine (Ser/Thr) kinases encoded in the human genome are responsible 3 . Here we used synthetic peptide libraries to profile the substrate sequence specificity of 303 Ser/Thr kinases, comprising more than 84% of those predicted to be active in humans. Viewed in its entirety, the substrate specificity of the kinome was substantially more diverse than expected and was driven extensively by negative selectivity. We used our kinome-wide dataset to computationally annotate and identify the kinases capable of phosphorylating every reported phosphorylation site in the human Ser/Thr phosphoproteome. For the small minority of phosphosites for which the putative protein kinases involved have been previously reported, our predictions were in excellent agreement. When this approach was applied to examine the signalling response of tissues and cell lines to hormones, growth factors, targeted inhibitors and environmental or genetic perturbations, it revealed unexpected insights into pathway complexity and compensation. Overall, these studies reveal the intrinsic substrate specificity of the human Ser/Thr kinome, illuminate cellular signalling responses and provide a resource to link phosphorylation events to biological pathways.


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