Difference between revisions of "Kinase Family GASK"

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GASK kinases lack the R of the HRD motif and have no conserved phosphorylable residues in their short predicted activation loops, suggesting that they are not controlled by autophosphorylation. These proteins are generally not seen to be phosphorylated (http://phosphosite.org)
 
GASK kinases lack the R of the HRD motif and have no conserved phosphorylable residues in their short predicted activation loops, suggesting that they are not controlled by autophosphorylation. These proteins are generally not seen to be phosphorylated (http://phosphosite.org)
  
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The GASK family has the following subfamilies:
  
[[User:Gerard|Gerard]] 20:09, 10 February 2012 (UTC)
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====[[Kinase_Subfamily_FAM198|Subfamily FAM198]]====
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====[[Kinase_Subfamily_FAM20AC|Subfamily FAM20AC]]====
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====[[Kinase_Subfamily_FAM20B|Subfamily FAM20B]]====
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====[[Kinase_Subfamily_FJ|Subfamily FJ]]====

Latest revision as of 01:38, 15 January 2022

Kinase Classification: Group PKL: Family GASK

The GASK (Golgi-Associated Kinase) kinases are a recently-emerging family of atypical PKL-fold kinases which function in the Golgi to phosphorylate secreted proteins and sugar residues on glycoproteins and are sometimes secreted. The founding member, Drosophila four-jointed phosphorylates a cadherin substrate on the extracellular domain and is implicated in planar cell polarity. FAM20B can phosphorylate xylose sugars within proteoglycans, and both FAM20A, FAM20B and FAM20C are associated with abnormalities in bone and tooth mineralization in humans and zebrafish. Some FK proteins may also be secreted from the cell.

Distinct subfamilies, FJ, FAM20A and FAM20B and FAM198 are found in bilaterian animals and some in lower animals, and unclassified homologs have also been found in Trypanosomes.

GASK kinases lack the R of the HRD motif and have no conserved phosphorylable residues in their short predicted activation loops, suggesting that they are not controlled by autophosphorylation. These proteins are generally not seen to be phosphorylated (http://phosphosite.org)

The GASK family has the following subfamilies:

Subfamily FAM198

Subfamily FAM20AC

Subfamily FAM20B

Subfamily FJ