Abstract

ABSTRACT Kinase Suppressor of Ras (KSR) is an intriguing component of the Ras pathway that was first identified by genetic studies performed in Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans. In both organisms, inactivating mutations in KSR suppress the phenotypic effects induced by activated Ras. These findings together with the fact that KSR contains many structural features characteristic of a protein kinase led to early speculation that KSR is a kinase functioning upstream of the Ras pathway component Raf-1 or in a parallel Ras-dependent pathway. However, in the six years since its discovery, KSR has been found to lack several key properties of known protein kinases, which has cast doubt on whether KSR is indeed a functional enzyme. A major breakthrough in our understanding of the role of KSR in signal transduction has come from recent findings that KSR interacts with several components of the MAP kinase cascade, including Raf-1, MEK1/2 and ERK1/2. The model now emerging is that KSR acts as a scaffolding protein that coordinates the assembly of a membrane-localized, multiprotein MAP kinase complex, a vital step in Ras-mediated signal transduction. Thus, while Kinase Suppressor of Ras may be its name, phosphorylation may not be its game.

Keywords

BiologyScaffold proteinCell biologySignal transductionKinaseCaenorhabditis elegansMAPK/ERK pathwayProtein kinase ABiochemistryGene

MeSH Terms

AnimalsProtein KinasesSignal Transductionras Proteins

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Publication Info

Year
2001
Type
review
Volume
114
Issue
9
Pages
1609-1612
Citations
235
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Deborah K. Morrison (2001). KSR: a MAPK scaffold of the Ras pathway?. Journal of Cell Science , 114 (9) , 1609-1612. https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.114.9.1609

Identifiers

DOI
10.1242/jcs.114.9.1609
PMID
11309192

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%