PLoS ONE (Aug 2007)

Evidence for a minimal eukaryotic phosphoproteome?

  • Sander H Diks,
  • Kaushal Parikh,
  • Marijke van der Sijde,
  • Jos Joore,
  • Tita Ritsema,
  • Maikel P Peppelenbosch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000777
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 8
p. e777

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundReversible phosphorylation catalysed by kinases is probably the most important regulatory mechanism in eukaryotes.Methodology/principal findingsWe studied the in vitro phosphorylation of peptide arrays exhibiting the majority of PhosphoBase-deposited protein sequences, by factors in cell lysates from representatives of various branches of the eukaryotic species. We derived a set of substrates from the PhosphoBase whose phosphorylation by cellular extracts is common to the divergent members of different kingdoms and thus may be considered a minimal eukaryotic phosphoproteome. The protein kinases (or kinome) responsible for phosphorylation of these substrates are involved in a variety of processes such as transcription, translation, and cytoskeletal reorganisation.Conclusions/significanceThese results indicate that the divergence in eukaryotic kinases is not reflected at the level of substrate phosphorylation, revealing the presence of a limited common substrate space for kinases in eukaryotes and suggests the presence of a set of kinase substrates and regulatory mechanisms in an ancestral eukaryote that has since remained constant in eukaryotic life.