Spatial and temporal regulation of protein kinase D (PKD)

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Abstract

Protein kinase D (PKD; also known as PKCμ) is a serine/threonine kinase activated by diacylglycerol signalling pathways in a variety of cells. PKD has been described previously as Golgi-localized, but herein we show that it is present within the cytosol of quiescent B cells and mast cells and moves rapidly to the plasma membrane after antigen receptor triggering. The membrane redistribution of PKD requires the diacylglycerol-binding domain of the enzyme, but is independent of its catalytic activity and does not require the integrity of the pleckstrin homology domain. Antigen receptor signalling initiates in glyco-sphingolipid-enriched microdomains, but membrane-associated PKD does not co-localize with these specialized structures. Membrane targeting of PKD is transient, the enzyme returns to the cytosol within 10 min of antigen receptor engagement. Strikingly, the membrane-recycled PKD remains active in the cytosol for several hours. The present work thus characterizes a sustained antigen receptor-induced signal transduction pathway and establishes PKD as a serine kinase that temporally and spatially disseminates antigen receptor signals away from the plasma membrane into the cytosol.

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Matthews, S. A., Iglesias, T., Rozengurt, E., & Cantrell, D. (2000). Spatial and temporal regulation of protein kinase D (PKD). EMBO Journal, 19(12), 2935–2945. https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/19.12.2935

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