Parallel signal processing among mammalian MAPKs

E Cano, LC Mahadevan - Trends in biochemical sciences, 1995 - cell.com
E Cano, LC Mahadevan
Trends in biochemical sciences, 1995cell.com
The intracellular signalling field is dominated by the mitogen-activated protein kinase
(MAPK) cascade and its control, which involves the small GTPase Ras and sequential
kinase activation. Until recently, ERK1 and ERK2 were the only cloned and well-
characterized mammalian MAPKs; diverse ligand-stimulated, proline-directed protein
phosphorylation events were attributed to these kinases. The recent discovery of two other
MAPK subtypes, the JNK/SAPK subfamily and p38/RK (mammalian equivalents of HOG1 in …
Abstract
The intracellular signalling field is dominated by the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade and its control, which involves the small GTPase Ras and sequential kinase activation. Until recently, ERK1 and ERK2 were the only cloned and well-characterized mammalian MAPKs; diverse ligand-stimulated, proline-directed protein phosphorylation events were attributed to these kinases. The recent discovery of two other MAPK subtypes, the JNK/SAPK subfamily and p38/RK (mammalian equivalents of HOG1 in yeast), reveals extreme complexity within the family and, most intriguingly, the existence in mammalian cells of parallel MAPK cascades that can be activated simultaneously.
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