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NOBELFÖRSAMLINGEN KAROLINSKA INSTITUTET
THE NOBEL ASSEMBLY AT THE KAROLINSKA INSTITUTE
The
Nobel Assembly at the Karolinska Institute has today
decided to award the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
for 1992 jointly to
Edmond H. Fischer and Edwin G. Krebs
for their discoveries concerning "reversible protein
phosphorylation as a biological regulatory
mechanism".
Thousands of proteins participate in a complex interplay in
a cell. They are the tools of the living organism,
regulating its reactions and activities. For example,
proteins maintain the metabolic flux, dictate growth and
cellular division, release hormones, and mediate muscular
work.
Protein interactions are strictly controlled. One of the
most important regulatory mechanisms isreversible
protein phosphorylation. This means that enzymes
phosphorylate and dephosphorylate proteins. Both these
enzymatic processes are in turn regulated, often in several
steps, allowing amplification and fine control. The 1992
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine is awarded to the
American biochemists Edmond Fischer and Edwin
Krebs. They purified and characterized the first enzyme
of this type. Their fundamental finding initiated a
research area which today is one of the most active and
wide-ranging.
Reversible protein phosphorylation is responsible for
regulation of processes as diverse as mobilization of
glucose from glycogen, prevention of transplant rejection
by cyclosporin, and development of a cancer form like
chronic myeloic leukemia.
Thousands of proteins participate in the complex interplay in a cell. They constitute the tools of the living organism, regulating all its reactions and activities. For example, proteins maintain the metabolic flux, dictate growth and cellular division, release hormones, and mediate muscular work. Proteins are composed of amino acid residues and have a defined three-dimensional structure. It is this form that dictates the molecular functions. The interactions are strictly regulated. One of the most important mechanisms is phosphorylation of proteins. This means covalent attachment of one or several phosphate groups to the protein (Fig. 1).
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Fig. 1. Reversible protein
phosphorylation. A protein kinase moves a phosphate group (P)
from ATP (ADP(P)) to the protein. The biological properties
of the protein is thereby altered. There is also a protein
phosphatase that is able to remove the phosphate group. The
amount of phosphate that is associated with the protein is
thus determined by the relative activities of the kinase and
the phosphatase.
The phosphorylation influences the conformation and charge of
the protein, thereby also its activity. In this manner, the
biological function of a protein can be set at different
levels. However, the phosphate groups can also be removed
from the protein in a regulated fashion
dephosphorylation. This fact constitutes the basis for
the designation reversible protein
phosphorylation.
Edmond Fischer and Edwin Krebs characterized the
first protein which revealed a novel mechanism for enzyme
control through reversible protein phosphorylation. The basic
discoveries were made in the mid 1950's through studies of a
special muscle system.
Muscles are composed of a large number of cells capable of
contraction or relaxation. For a resting muscle to contract,
it has to get energy in the form of sugar, glucose. The
glucose is released from glycogen, which is the body storage
form of sugar. Glycogen is stored in the liver, and also in
muscle cells. When they are told to initiate contractile
work, they quickly mobilize their glycogen deposits,
converting them to the glucose fuel. In order to achieve
this, the organism utilizes a specific glycogen catabolizing
protein, termed phosphorylase. This enzyme was
discovered by the biochemists Carl and Gerti Cori, bestowing them
with the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1947.
Enzymes are proteins with the specific role of making
biological reactions possible, in short they are
catalysts.
It was known that the enzyme phosphorylase can be regulated
by small molecules. Edmond Fischer and Edwin
Krebs detected that phosphorylase could be converted from
an inactive to an active form by a principally novel
mechanism. This is carried through by transfer of a phosphate
group from the energy-rich compound ATP to the protein. They
also showed that this process is catalyzed by an enzyme, a protein kinase.
Enzymes do not only catalyze the attachment of phosphate
groups but also their removal. Such enzymes are named phosphatases.
In this manner, the glycogen catabolizing phosphorylase is regulated
by two enzymes working in opposing directions in a reversible process,
one kinase and one phosphatase. Fischer and Krebs,
in their fundamental biochemical studies, showed how proteins
in the muscle cell rapidly make the energy supply accessible
for muscular work.
Step by step, it has become evident that protein
phosphorylation constitutes a fundamental mechanism,
influencing all cellular functions. For example, Edwin
Krebs showed that the effects of cyclic AMP are
mediated through a specific protein kinase. Cyclic AMP was
discovered by Earl
Sutherland (Nobel laureate 1971). It is formed in
response to a large number of hormones and molecular signals.
The stress hormone, adrenalin (epinephrine), mediates
catabolism of glycogen stored in the liver. This liberates
glucose into the blood, giving the muscle and heart energy to
combat stress.
The fact that cyclic AMP mediates its effects via stimulation
of a protein kinase activating the enzyme phosphorylase
explains how a hormone signal can lead to quick mobilization
of sugar. The serial protein phosphorylations then work as a biological amplifying system (see
Fig. 2).
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Fig. 2. Protein phosphorylation
reactions that are coupled in series can act as a biological
amplifier. We are dealing with a controlled chain reaction.
When the level of glucose in blood is lowered the amount of
the hormone adrenaline rises. This elevates the cyclic AMP
content in the liver cell. This activates a cyclic AMP
dependent protein kinase, which phosphorylates a kinase that
in turn switches on the glycogen degrading enzyme
phosphorylase. Hence glycogen is converted to glucose which
can enter the blood stream. When the blood glucose rises the
adrenaline level in blood goes down. The stimulation is
turned off and the phosphatase reactions take over turning
the glucose production down. In muscle cells a rise in
calcium is the signal for muscular work. Calcium ions also
switch on the phosphorylation reactions so that the muscle is
provided with the required energy.
Subsequent to these findings of Fischer and
Krebs, novel protein kinases are continously found. We
now estimate that perhaps one percent of the genes in the
entire genome encode protein kinases. These kinases regulate
the function of a large proportion of the thousands of
proteins in a cell. In addition, the system includes a large
number of phosphatases, which in an opposite manner regulate
the removal of the protein phosphate groups from
proteins.
Some of the innumerable cellular processes regulated by reversible protein phosphorylation are shown in Fig. 3. They concern almost all processes important to life. Imbalance between kinases and phosphatases can cause disease and nondesirable tissue reactions. Blood pressure, the inflammatory reaction, and brain signal transduction - just to name a few examples - are being regulated through different hormonal interactions and these interactions in turn are mediated through kinases and phosphatases. We therefore expect the development of drugs which make it possible to influence imbalances by supplying inhibitors and activators directed against the phosphorylation/dephosphorylation components.
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Fig. 3. How the cell is affected by protein phosphorylation. 1. Hormone receptors (e.g. the adrenaline receptor) are phosphorylated by specific kinases, which prevent over-stimulation. 2. Phosphorylation can control cell shape and motility. It can even lead to the outgrowth of long processes 3. Phosphorylation of ribosomes affect protein synthesis. 4. Proteins that regulate genes can be reversibly phosphorylated, causing an adapted expression of the genomic information. 5. Hormones and neurotransmitters are contained in storage vesicles. Phosphorylation reactions regulate their release. 6. The proteins that control muscle contraction can be phosphorylated by kinases. Reversible protein phosphorylation thereby affects e.g. blood pressure and respiration. 7. Phosphorylation regulates the enzymes that govern metabolism.
The wide-ranging importance of reversible protein
phosphorylation makes it difficult to select a single,
representative example when so many could be chosen with
equal right. However, the activation of the immune response
constitutes a suitable model. It illustrates how a series
of protein phosphorylations in a cascade amplifies the
strength of the initial signal. It further shows how
phosphorylation and dephosphorylation intimately interact.
The model also gives an insight into work performed by Fischer and Krebs in
recent years. The example also shows how drugs that influence
phosphorylations are used to save transplants threatened by
rejection.
In infections, our immune system is activated by non-self
compounds, the antigens. They are consumed by
macrophages which transport the antigenic constituents to
defined surface structures (Nobel Prize 1980 to Benacerraf,
Dausset and Snell). The antigens are then recognized by
specialized lymphocytes. The lymphocytes get into contact
with the macrophages via a special surface protein. Edmond Fischer showed
that this protein works as a phosphatase, removing a phosphate group
from an enzyme. This constitutes the start of a chain reaction where a
whole cascade of novel phosphorylating enzymes
(including several detected by Edwin Krebs) are
activated. Their counterparts, the phosphatases, are
equally essential in the extended cascade. In the end, an
elevated number of specific lymphocytes have been recruited
to combat the infection.
However, sometimes the immune defense causes problems, for
example following organ transplantations. The recipient's
immune response then attacks the transplanted kidney, liver
or pancreas, trying to reject it. Cyclosporin is a drug
used with great success in prevention of such graft
rejection. It works by intervention of a phosphorylation
reaction - it inactivates the phosphatase calcineurin. This
enzyme is necessary for development and growth of the
specific lymphocytes that attack the transplant.
Under certain conditions, protein phosphorylation can also
be of importance for development of cancer. The nuclear DNA
of the cell contains a hundred-odd oncogenes. Normally,
they produce proteins participating in the regulation of
cellular growth. However, should alterations in the
oncogenes, mutations, develop, this can lead to formation
of products that give abnormal cellular growth, cancer. In
several instances an erroneously regulated protein kinase
activity is responsible. Chronic myeloic leukemia
constitutes such an example.
| References |
| Alberts et al. The Molecular Biology of the Cell. Garland Press, 1990, 2nd edition. |
| Phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle of proteins pp. 129-131, 710-712, 736-737, 777-778. |
| Fredholm, B. Molekylär farmakologi - vägen till selektiv farmakoterapi. Läkartidningen 1991, 88: 320-421. |