Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases and Reactive Oxygen Species: How Can ROS Activate MAPK Pathways?
Wonkwang University · University of Ulsan
Abstract
Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) are serine-threonine protein kinases that play the major role in signal transduction from the cell surface to the nucleus. MAPKs, which consist of growth factor-regulated extracellular signal-related kinases (ERKs), and the stress-activated MAPKs, c-jun NH(2)-terminal kinases (JNKs) and p38 MAPKs, are part of a three-kinase signaling module composed of the MAPK, an MAPK kinase (MAP2K) and an MAPK kinase (MAP3K). MAP3Ks phosphorylate MAP2Ks, which in turn activate MAPKs. MAPK phosphatases (MKPs), which recognize the TXY amino acid motif present in MAPKs, dephosphorylate and deactivate MAPKs. MAPK pathways are known to be influenced not only by receptor ligand…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.24
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- MAPK/ERK pathway
- Reactive oxygen species
- Kinase
- Medicine
- Mitogen-activated protein kinase
- Cell biology
- Protein kinase A
- p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases