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(Received for publication, December 13,
1994; and in revised form, January 27, 1995) Protein kinase C (PKC) is a phospholipid-dependent isozyme
family that plays a pivotal role in mammalian signal-transduction
pathways that mediate cell growth and differentiation and pathological
developments, such as the acquisition of drug resistance by cancer
cells. Several peptide-substrate analogs have been shown to reversibly
inhibit PKC with high potency and selectivity, but peptide-substrate
analogs that antagonize PKC by forming a covalent complex with the
enzyme have not been reported. The development of active site-directed
irreversible inactivators of PKC could provide new insights into the
catalytic mechanism and might ultimately lead to the design of novel
therapeutics targeted at PKC. In this report, we show that the
peptide-substrate analog Arg-Lys-Arg-Cys-Leu-Arg-Arg-Leu (RKRCLRRL)
irreversibly inactivates PKC in a dithiothreitol-sensitive manner. The
inactivation mechanism most consistent with our results is the
formation of a covalent linkage between the inhibitor-peptide and the
enzyme at its active-site. Limited proteolysis of PKC produces a
catalytic-domain fragment that is independent of the phospholipid
cofactor. RKRCLRRL antagonized the histone kinase activity of PKC and
its catalytic-domain fragment with similar efficacies, achieving
>50% inactivation at an RKRCLRRL concentration of 10
µM. In contrast, RKRCLRRL analogs with single amino acid
substitutions at Cys were non-inhibitory. The inactivated complex of
the catalytic-domain fragment and RKRCLRRL was stable upon dilution,
and the inactivation of PKC and the catalytic-domain fragment by
RKRCLRRL was quenched by dithiothreitol, providing evidence that the
enzyme and the synthetic peptide may be covalently linked in an
inactivated complex by a disulfide bond. Substrates and substrate
analogs protected the catalytic-domain fragment against inactivation by
RKRCLRRL, providing evidence that inactivation entailed binding of
RKRCLRRL at the active-site of the enzyme. S-Thiolation is
the formation of mixed disulfides between proteins and low molecular
weight thiols. PKC is thought to have a highly reactive Cys residue in
its active-site, and Cys residues that are flanked by basic residues,
as is the case in RKRCLRRL, display enhanced reactivity. Our results
support an inactivation mechanism that entails S-thiolation of
the active-site of PKC by RKRCLRRL. This is the first report of
irreversible inactivation of PKC by an active site-directed peptide.
Volume 270,
Number 14,
Issue of April 7, 1995 pp. 8056-8060
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
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