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  • Title: Properties of protein kinases in brain coated vesicles.
    Author: Takahashi A, Usami M, Kadota T, Kadota K.
    Journal: J Biochem; 1985 Jul; 98(1):63-8. PubMed ID: 2864335.
    Abstract:
    Coated vesicles prepared from bovine brain contained cyclic nucleotides- and Ca2+-calmodulin-independent protein kinases which in the presence of Mg2+ catalyzed the phosphorylation of an endogenous 48,000 Mr protein of coated vesicles (C-48), phosvitin and troponin T. Phosvitin was phosphorylated either in the presence of ATP or GTP. The phosphorylation of C-48, on the other hand, was specific for ATP. Heparin inhibited the phosphorylation of phosvitin but not that of C-48. Mn2+ inhibited the phosphorylation of phosvitin, while Mn2+ substituted for Mg2+ in the phosphorylation of C-48. When the coated vesicles were prepared in the presence of NaF, C-48 contained 2.5-2.8 mol of phosphate/mol. On incubation with Mg2+ and ATP, C-48 incorporated 1.2-1.6 mol of phosphate/mol. With C-48 as a substrate, the value of its apparent Km for ATP was 6 microM. With phosvitin as a substrate, the value of its apparent Km was 20 microM. The phosphorylated amino acid residues in the phosvitin were identified as serine and threonine. Phosphothreonine was detected in C-48. These results suggest that brain coated vesicles possess two different classes of protein kinase, a casein kinase II and C-48 kinase.
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