Protein Kinase Classification: TK Csk※ Csk family introduction Csk family contains two members in human genome. Family member MATK could play a significant role in the signal transduction of hematopoietic cells. MATK may regulate tyrosine kinase activity of SRC-family members in brain by specifically phosphorylating their C-terminal regulatory tyrosine residue which acts as a negative regulatory site. It may play an inhibitory role in the control of T-cell proliferation (1). CSK, another family member, is a non-receptor tyrosine-protein kinase that plays an important role in the regulation of cell growth, differentiation, migration and immune response. Phosphorylates tyrosine residues located in the C-terminal tails of Src-family kinases (SFKs) including LCK, SRC, HCK, FYN, LYN or YES1. Upon tail phosphorylation, Src-family members engage in intramolecular interactions between the phosphotyrosine tail and the SH2 domain that result in an inactive conformation. To inhibit SFKs, CSK is recruited to the plasma membrane via binding to transmembrane proteins or adapter proteins located near the plasma membrane. CSK can also suppresses signaling by various surface receptors, including T-cell receptor (TCR) and B-cell receptor (BCR) by phosphorylation and maintaining inactive several positive effectors such as FYN or LCK (2).
Reference
UniProt Annotation: MATK_HUMAN
UniProt Annotation: CSK_HUMAN
TK Csk in eukaryotes:
UniProt Annotation: MATK_HUMAN
UniProt Annotation: CSK_HUMAN
TK Csk in eukaryotes: