2025 · Chemical Science · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-21
Here, we shed physico-chemical light on major kinase signal transduction cascades in cell proliferation in the Ras network, MAPK and PI3K/AKT/mTOR. The cascades respond to external stimuli. The kinase Show more
Here, we shed physico-chemical light on major kinase signal transduction cascades in cell proliferation in the Ras network, MAPK and PI3K/AKT/mTOR. The cascades respond to external stimuli. The kinases are allosterically activated and relay the signal, leading to cell growth and division. The pathways are crosslinked, with the output of one pathway influencing the other. The effectiveness of their allosteric signaling relay stems from coordinated speed and precision. These qualities are essential for cell life-yet exactly how they are obtained and regulated has challenged the community over four decades. Here, we define their nature by their kinases' repertoires, substrate specificities and breadth, activation and autoinhibition mechanisms, catalytic rates, interactions, and their dilution state. The cascades are lodged in a dense molecular condensate phase at the membrane adjoining RTK clusters, where their assemblies promote specific, productive signaling. Aiming to shed further physico-chemical light, we ask (i) how starting the cascades with a single substrate and ending with hundreds is still labeled specific; (ii) what we can learn from their different number of mutations; and (iii) why B-Raf unique side-to-side inverse dimerization slows ERK activation and signaling. We point to the (iv) chemical mechanics of the distributions of rates of the crucial MAPK cascade: slower at the top and rapid at the bottom. Finally, the cascades provide inspiration for pharmacological perspectives. Collectively, our updated physico-chemical outlook provides the molecular basis of targeting protein kinases in cancer and spans mechanisms and scales, from conformational landscapes to membraneless organelles, cells and systems levels. Show less
Berico P, Coin F · 2018 · Transcription · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-20
TFIIH is a 10-subunit complex involved in transcription and DNA repair. It contains several enzymatic activities including a ATP-dependent DNA translocase in XPB and a cyclin-dependent kinase in CDK7. Show more
TFIIH is a 10-subunit complex involved in transcription and DNA repair. It contains several enzymatic activities including a ATP-dependent DNA translocase in XPB and a cyclin-dependent kinase in CDK7. Recently the discovery of several XPB and CDK7 inhibitors with specific impact on the transcriptional addiction of many tumors pinpointed these activities as potential target in cancer chemotherapy. Unexpectedly a basal transcription factor involved in global mRNA expression now emerges a one of the most clinically promising Achilles heels of cancerous cells. These inhibitors also proved to be useful tools to unveil new functions of TFIIH in gene expression. Show less