Structural Studies of Arabidopsis Thaliana Inositol Polyphosphate Multi-Kinase

dc.contributor.advisor

York, John D

dc.contributor.author

Endo-Streeter, Stuart Tamotsu

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2010-05-18T05:00:26Z

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2009-12-18T16:25:20Z

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2009-12-18T16:25:20Z

dc.date.issued

2009

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Biochemistry

dc.description.abstract

Inositol Polyphosphate Multi-Kinase (IPMK, also known as ArgRIII, Arg82, and IPK2) is a central component of the inositol signaling system, catalyzing the phosphorylation of at least four different inositol polyphosphate species in vivo with in vitro activity observed for three more. Each of these IP species is sterically unique and the phosphorylation target varies between the 6'-, 3'-, or 5'-hydroxyls, classifying IPMK as a 6/3/5-kinase. The products of IPMK have been linked to multiple processes including cell cycle regulation, transcriptional control, telomere length regulation, mRNA export and various phenotypes including mouse embryonic and fly larvae development, and stress responses in plants and yeast. Linking specific IP species and cellular processes has been complicated by the inability to distinguish between the different effects of the various IP species generated by IPMK. Deletion of IPMK affects the IP populations of all its various substrates and products and therefore the role of a single IP species cannot be tracked. The goals of this work were to address the question of substrate selectivity and develop new tools to probe inositol signaling in vivo through a combination of structural, enzymatic, and genomic techniques.

The structure of Arabidopsis thaliana IPMK is reported at 2.9Å resolution and in conjunction with a new model of inositol selectivity has been used to design constructs with altered substrate profiles. In vitro and in vivo experiments have confirmed that IPMK identifies substrate inositol polyphosphate species through a recognition surface that requires phosphate groups occupy specific pockets and rejects those with axial phosphate groups in specific regions. In vivo experiments have linked specific inositol polyphosphate species to nitrogen metabolism and temperature sensitivity in yeast and established the potential for these constructs to be used to probe signaling in other organisms.

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/1608

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en_US

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Chemistry, Biochemistry

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Biophysics, General

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Molecular biology

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Design

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Inositol

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Kinase

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Signaling

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Structure

dc.title

Structural Studies of Arabidopsis Thaliana Inositol Polyphosphate Multi-Kinase

dc.type

Dissertation

duke.embargo.months

12

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