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Mass Spectrometry Reveals Protein Kinase CK2 High-Order Oligomerization via the Circular and Linear Assembly.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Type

Article

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Authors

Seetoh, Wei-Guang 
Chan, Daniel Shiu-Hin 
Matak-Vinković, Dijana 

Abstract

CK2 is an intrinsically active protein kinase that is crucial for cellular viability. However, conventional kinase regulatory mechanisms do not apply to CK2, and its mode of regulation remains elusive. Interestingly, CK2 is known to undergo reversible ionic-strength-dependent oligomerization. Furthermore, a regulatory mechanism based on autoinhibitory oligomerization has been postulated on the basis of the observation of circular trimeric oligomers and linear CK2 assemblies in various crystal structures. Here, we employ native mass spectrometry to monitor the assembly of oligomeric CK2 species in an ionic-strength-dependent manner. A subsequent combination of ion mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry and hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry techniques was used to analyze the conformation of CK2 oligomers. Our findings support ionic-strength-dependent CK2 oligomerization, demonstrate the transient nature of the α/β interaction, and show that CK2 oligomerization proceeds via both the circular and linear assembly.

Description

Keywords

Acetates, Casein Kinase II, Deuterium, Humans, Mass Spectrometry, Osmolar Concentration, Protein Multimerization, Protein Structure, Quaternary

Journal Title

ACS Chem Biol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1554-8929
1554-8937

Volume Title

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (090340/Z/09/Z)
This research was supported by the Wellcome Trust Strategic Award (090340/Z/09/Z), the Agency for Science Technology and Research (A*STAR) Singapore (Ph.D. sponsorship, W.G.S.), and the Croucher Foundation and the Cambridge Overseas Trust (Croucher Cambridge International Scholarship, D.S.-H.C).