Camp-dependent Protein Kinase
In
cell biology
,
cAMP-dependent protein kinase
(
cAPK
), also known as
protein kinase A
(
PKA
)(EC 2.7.1.37), refers to a family of
enzymes
whose activity is dependent on the level of
cyclic AMP
(cAMP) in the cell. Each PKA is a
holoenzyme
that consists of two regulatory and two
catalytic
subunits
. Under low levels of cAMP, the holoenzyme remains intact and is catalytically inactive. When the concentration of cAMP rises (e.g. activation of
adenylate cyclases
by certain
G protein-coupled receptors
, inhibition of
phosphodiesterases
which degrade cAMP), cAMP binds to the two
binding sites
on the regulatory subunits, which then undergo a
conformational
change that releases the catalytic subunits. The free catalytic subunits can then
phosphorylate
protein
substrates
at
serine
or
threonine
residues
. This phosphorylation usually results in a change in activity of the substrate.
See also
Protein kinase
Signal transduction
G protein-coupled receptor
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