FAK1 (focal adhesion kinase 1) is a non-receptor tyrosine kinase that localizes to focal adhesions in adherent cells and it is involved in diverse cellular roles. The N-terminal region of FAK1 contains a FERM domain which is subdivided FERM_N or A-lo ...
FAK1 (focal adhesion kinase 1) is a non-receptor tyrosine kinase that localizes to focal adhesions in adherent cells and it is involved in diverse cellular roles. The N-terminal region of FAK1 contains a FERM domain which is subdivided FERM_N or A-lobe, FERM_M or B-lobe and FERM_C or C-lobe. This entry represents the C-lobe, which is structurally similar to the PH and PTB domains and consequently is capable of binding to both peptides and phospholipids at different sites [1-5]. This domain is also present in protein-tyrosine kinase 2-beta (also known as PYK2), a cytoplasmic, non-receptor tyrosine kinase which is a close paralogue to FAK in vertebrates. FRMPD1/3/4 also contain this domain; FRMPD1 regulates the subcellular location of activator of G-protein signaling 3 and its interaction with G-proteins. FRMPD4 has been shown to regulate dendritic spine morphogenesis and the function of FRMPD3 is not clear.
Protein phosphorylation, which plays a key role in most cellular activities, is a reversible process mediated by protein kinases and phosphoprotein phosphatases. Protein kinases catalyse the transfer of the gamma phosphate from nucleotide triphosph ...
Protein phosphorylation, which plays a key role in most cellular activities, is a reversible process mediated by protein kinases and phosphoprotein phosphatases. Protein kinases catalyse the transfer of the gamma phosphate from nucleotide triphosphates (often ATP) to one or more amino acid residues in a protein substrate side chain, resulting in a conformational change affecting protein function. Phosphoprotein phosphatases catalyse the reverse process. Protein kinases fall into three broad classes, characterised with respect to substrate specificity [1]; Serine/threonine-protein kinases, tyrosine-protein kinases, and dual specificity protein kinases (e.g. MEK - phosphorylates both Thr and Tyr on target proteins). This entry represents the catalytic domain found in a number of serine/threonine- and tyrosine-protein kinases. It does not include the catalytic domain of dual specificity kinases.