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. 1994 Jun;9(6):1605-12.

Identification of a human cDNA encoding a novel protein kinase with two repeats of the LIM/double zinc finger motif

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  • PMID: 8183554

Identification of a human cDNA encoding a novel protein kinase with two repeats of the LIM/double zinc finger motif

K Mizuno et al. Oncogene. 1994 Jun.

Abstract

By low-stringency screening of a human hepatoma HepG2 cell cDNA library, using the genomic fragment of chick c-sea receptor tyrosine kinase as a probe, we isolated overlapping cDNAs encoding a novel protein kinase, which we termed LIM-kinase (LIMK).* The predicted open reading frame encodes a 647-amino-acid polypeptide containing a putative protein kinase structure in the C-terminal half. In addition, LIMK has two repeats of cysteine-rich LIM/double zinc finger motif at the most N-terminus. To our knowledge, this is the first protein kinase seen to contain the LIM motif(s) in the molecule. Although the protein kinase domain of LIMK has highly conserved sequence elements of protein kinases, phylogenetic analysis revealed that LIMK cannot be classified into any subfamily of known protein kinases. Northern blot analysis revealed that the single species of LIMK mRNA of 3.3 kb was expressed in various human epithelial and hematopoietic cell lines. In rat tissues, LIMK mRNA was expressed in the brain, at the highest level. LIM is suggested to be involved in protein-protein interactions by binding to another LIM motif. As the LIM domain is frequently present in the homeodomain-containing transcriptional regulators and oncogenic nuclear proteins, LIMK may be involved in developmental or oncogenic processes through interactions with these LIM-containing proteins.

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