Affiliation:
1. Departments of Genetics and Development, and
Microbiology, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032; and
Medical Research Council Clinical Sciences
Centre, Cellular Stress Group, Imperial College, London W12 0NN, United
Kingdom
Abstract
The Snf1/AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) family plays fundamental roles
in cellular responses to metabolic stress in eukaryotes. In humans, AMPK
regulates lipid and glucose metabolism and has been implicated in such
metabolic disorders as diabetes and obesity and in cardiac abnormalities. Snf1
and AMPK are the downstream components of kinase cascades, but the upstream
kinase(s) have remained elusive. We have here identified three yeast kinases,
Pak1p, Tos3p, and Elm1p, that activate Snf1 kinase
in vivo
. Triple
deletion of the cognate genes causes a Snf
–
mutant phenotype
and abolishes Snf1 catalytic activity. All three kinases phosphorylate
recombinant Snf1p on the activation-loop threonine. Moreover, Tos3p
phosphorylates mammalian AMPK on the equivalent residue and activates the
enzyme, suggesting functional conservation of the upstream kinases between
yeast and mammals. We further show that the closely related mammalian LKB1
kinase, which is associated with Peutz–Jeghers cancer-susceptibility
syndrome, phosphorylates and activates AMPK
in vitro
. Thus, the
identification of the yeast upstream kinases should facilitate identification
of the corresponding, physiologically important mammalian upstream
kinases.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
520 articles.
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