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Research Summary
The goal of our research is to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying cellular phosphorylation networks, and how these networks are re-wired in cancer cells. The completion of the human genome a decade ago revealed more than 500 genes encoding protein kinases, and mass spectrometry based phosphoproteomics efforts have now cataloged over 100,000 sites of phosphorylation in mammalian cells. These studies have outpaced our ability to understand signaling networks through analysis of individual kinases and their substrates: for the vast majority of the phosphorylation sites, the responsible kinase and functional significance are simply not known. My group studies basic mechanisms used by kinases to target specific substrates within the cell, with the idea of applying this knowledge to identify new kinase-substrate pairs on a proteomic scale. Kinases interact with their substrates through short sequence motifs found both at the site of phosphorylation and at distal sites. We have recently conducted a biochemical screen to identify phosphorylation site motifs recognized by the entire set of kinases from budding yeast, and a similar screen of the human kinome is in progress. Information from these screens is used to map cellular phosphorylation networks and to relate mechanisms of substrate targeting to specific structural features of kinases. As an extension of these studies, we are also examining how kinase mutations found in tumor cells can cause changes in substrate specificity or catalytic activity and consequent "re-wiring" of phosphorylation networks. We are also developing new methodology to identify “docking” motifs in substrates that interact with grooves and pockets outside of the kinase active site. One outcome of this work is the identification of new strategies and agents for pharmacological targeting of signaling pathways relevant to disease.
Specialized Terms: Cell signaling; Protein kinases; Chemical biology; Proteomics; Protein engineering; Cancer signaling networks
Research Interests
Pharmacology; Protein Kinases; Protein Engineering; Peptide Library; Proteomics; Molecular Mechanisms of Pharmacological Action; Carcinogenesis
The goal of our research is to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying cellular phosphorylation networks, and how these networks are re-wired in cancer cells. The completion of the human genome a decade ago revealed more than 500 genes encoding protein kinases, and mass spectrometry based phosphoproteomics efforts have now cataloged over 100,000 sites of phosphorylation in mammalian cells. These studies have outpaced our ability to understand signaling networks through analysis of individual kinases and their substrates: for the vast majority of the phosphorylation sites, the responsible kinase and functional significance are simply not known. My group studies basic mechanisms used by kinases to target specific substrates within the cell, with the idea of applying this knowledge to identify new kinase-substrate pairs on a proteomic scale. Kinases interact with their substrates through short sequence motifs found both at the site of phosphorylation and at distal sites. We have recently conducted a biochemical screen to identify phosphorylation site motifs recognized by the entire set of kinases from budding yeast, and a similar screen of the human kinome is in progress. Information from these screens is used to map cellular phosphorylation networks and to relate mechanisms of substrate targeting to specific structural features of kinases. As an extension of these studies, we are also examining how kinase mutations found in tumor cells can cause changes in substrate specificity or catalytic activity and consequent "re-wiring" of phosphorylation networks. We are also developing new methodology to identify “docking” motifs in substrates that interact with grooves and pockets outside of the kinase active site. One outcome of this work is the identification of new strategies and agents for pharmacological targeting of signaling pathways relevant to disease.
Specialized Terms: Cell signaling; Protein kinases; Chemical biology; Proteomics; Protein engineering; Cancer signaling networks
Research Interests
Pharmacology; Protein Kinases; Protein Engineering; Peptide Library; Proteomics; Molecular Mechanisms of Pharmacological Action; Carcinogenesis
研究兴趣
论文共 185 篇作者统计合作学者相似作者
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The Journal of Cell Biologyno. 11 (2024)
Tomer M. Yaron-Barir,Brian A. Joughin,Emily M. Huntsman,Alexander Kerelsky,Daniel M. Cizin,Benjamin M. Cohen, Amit Regev,Junho Song,Neil Vasan,Ting-Yu Lin,Jose M. Orozco,Christina Schoenherr,Cari Sagum,Mark T. Bedford,R. Max Wynn,Shih-Chia Tso,David T. Chuang, Lei Li,Shawn S. -C. Li,Pau Creixell,Konstantin Krismer, Mina Takegami, Harin Lee, Bin Zhang, Jingyi Lu, Ian Cossentino, Sean D. Landry,Mohamed Uduman,John Blenis,Olivier Elemento,Margaret C. Frame,Peter V. Hornbeck,Lewis C. Cantley,Benjamin E. Turk,Michael B. Yaffe,Jared L. Johnson
NATURE (2024)
NATURE COMMUNICATIONSno. 1 (2024)
SCIENCE SIGNALINGno. 836 (2024)
Joel A. Sexton, Tony Potchernikov,Jeffrey P. Bibeau, Gabriela Casanova-Sepúlveda,Wenxiang Cao,Hua Jane Lou,Titus J. Boggon,Enrique M. De La Cruz,Benjamin E. Turk
Cancer immunology research (2024)
Nature Communicationsno. 1 (2023)
Pedro Torres-Ayuso,Elvira An,Katherine M. Nyswaner,Ryan C. Bensen,Daniel A. Ritt,Suzanne I. Specht, Sudipto Das,Thorkell Andresson, Raul E. Cachau,Roger J. Liang,Amy L. Ries,Christina M. Robinson,Simone Difilippantonio,Brad Gouker,Laura Bassel,Baktiar O. Karim,Chad J. Miller,Benjamin E. Turk,Deborah K. Morrison,John Brognard
crossref(2023)
Nature Communicationsno. 1 (2023): 1-13
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作者统计
#Papers: 186
#Citation: 15641
H-Index: 54
G-Index: 124
Sociability: 7
Diversity: 4
Activity: 76
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