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Disulfide relays and phosphorylative cascades: Partners in redox-mediated signaling pathways
Authors
A Delaunay
AA Akhand
+41 more
D Barford
E Pineda-Molina
FQ Schafer
G Filomeni
G Filomeni
G Filomeni
G Filomeni
G Filomeni
G Georgiou
G Rotilio
G Rotilio
H Ichijo
H Kamata
H Nakamura
H Schroeter
HE Marshall
JD Helmann
JM McCord
K Takeda
LN Johnson
M R Ciriolo
M Saitoh
M Zheng
MR Jacquier-Sarlin
MS Paget
P Klatt
P Turella
S Kuge
SK Hanks
SO Kim
T Buschmann
T Finkel
T Finkel
T Hunter
T Pawson
V Adler
V Adler
WC Barrett
WM Toone
XZ Sun
Y Liu
Publication date
1 January 2005
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Doi
Abstract
Modifications of specific amino-acid residues of proteins are fundamental in order to modulate different signaling processes among which the cascade of phosphorylation represents the most effective example. Recently, also, the modification of the redox state of cysteine residues of certain proteins, which is a widespread mechanism in the regulation of protein function, has been proposed to be involved in signaling pathways. Growing evidence shows that some transcription factors could be modulated by both oxidation and phosphorylation. In particular, the pathways regulated by the mitogen activated protein (MAP) kinases represent well-established examples of the cross talk between redox-mediated signaling and phosphorylative cascades. This review will compare the two modes of signal transduction and propose an evolutionary model of a partnership of the two mechanisms in the eukaryotic cell, with redox-mediated signals being more specific and ancestral and phosphorylative signals being more diffuse but predominant in signal propagation. © 2005 Nature Publishing Group All rights reserved
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