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Title: c-Fos transcriptional activity stimulated by H-Ras-activated protein kinase distinct from JNK and ERK. Author: Deng T, Karin M. Journal: Nature; 1994 Sep 08; 371(6493):171-5. PubMed ID: 8072547. Abstract: Ras proteins exert their mitogenic and oncogenic effects through activation of downstream protein kinases. An important question is how Ras-generated signals reach the nucleus to activate downstream target genes. AP-1, a heterodimeric complex of Jun and Fos proteins, which activates mitogen-inducible genes, is a major nuclear target of Ras. Ras can stimulate AP-1 activity by inducing c-fos transcription, a process which is probably mediated by the ERK1 and -2 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases, which phosphorylate the transcription factor Elk-1/TCF. Besides inducing transcription from fos and jun genes, mitogens and Ras proteins enhance AP-1 activity through phosphorylation of c-Jun. Phosphorylation of the c-Jun activation domain leads to c-jun induction through an autoregulatory loop. Ras- and ultra-violet-responsive protein kinases that phosphorylate c-Jun on serine residues at positions 63 and 73 and stimulate its transcriptional activity have been identified. These proline-directed kinases, termed JNKs, are novel MAP kinases. It is not clear, however, whether c-Jun is the only recipient and JNK the only transducer of the Ras signal to AP-1 proteins. A short sequence surrounding the major JNK phosphorylation site of c-Jun is conserved in c-Fos and is part of its activation domain, suggesting that c-Fos may be similarly regulated. Here we show that Ras does indeed augment the transcriptional activity of c-Fos through phosphorylation at Thr 232, the homologue of Ser 73 of c-Jun. However, this is mediated by a novel Ras- and mitogen-responsive proline-directed protein kinase that is different from JNKs and ERKs. Therefore, at least three types of proline-directed kinases transmit Ras- and mitogen-generated signals to the transcriptional machinery.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]