- Quantification of the Dynamic Phosphorylation Process of ERK Using Stable Isotope Dilution Selective Reaction Monitoring Mass Spectrometry.
Quantification of the Dynamic Phosphorylation Process of ERK Using Stable Isotope Dilution Selective Reaction Monitoring Mass Spectrometry.
Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase signaling is critical for various cellular responses, including cell proliferation, differentiation, and cell death. The MAP kinase cascade is conserved in the eukaryotic kingdom as a three-tiered kinase module-MAP kinase kinase kinase, MAP kinase kinase, and MAP kinase-that transduces signals via sequential phosphorylation upon stimulation. Dual phosphorylation of MAP kinase on the conserved threonine-glutamic acid-tyrosine (TEY) motif is essential for its catalytic activity and signal activation; however, the molecular mechanism by which the two residues are phosphorylated remains elusive. In the present study, the pattern of dual phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) is profiled on the TEY motif using stable isotope dilution (SID)-selective reaction monitoring (SRM) mass spectrometry (MS) to elucidate the order and magnitude of endogenous ERK phosphorylation in cellular model systems. The SID-SRM-MS analysis of phosphopeptides demonstrates that tyrosine phosphorylation in the TEY motif is dynamic, while threonine phosphorylation is static. Analyses of the mono-phosphorylatable mutants ERKT202A and ERKY204F indicate that phosphorylation of tyrosine is not affected by the phosphorylation state of threonine, while threonine phosphorylation depends on tyrosine phosphorylation. The data suggest that dual phosphorylation of ERK is a highly ordered and restricted mechanism determined by tyrosine phosphorylation.