Mitogen-activated protein kinase 7 (MAPK7)

The protein contains 816 amino acids for an estimated molecular weight of 88386 Da.

 

Plays a role in various cellular processes such as proliferation, differentiation and cell survival. The upstream activator of MAPK7 is the MAPK kinase MAP2K5. Upon activation, it translocates to the nucleus and phosphorylates various downstream targets including MEF2C. EGF activates MAPK7 through a Ras-independent and MAP2K5-dependent pathway. May have a role in muscle cell differentiation. May be important for endothelial function and maintenance of blood vessel integrity. MAP2K5 and MAPK7 interact specifically with one another and not with MEK1/ERK1 or MEK2/ERK2 pathways. Phosphorylates SGK1 at Ser-78 and this is required for growth factor-induced cell cycle progression. Involved in the regulation of p53/TP53 by disrupting the PML-MDM2 interaction. (updated: Sept. 12, 2018)

Protein identification was indicated in the following studies:

  1. Bryk and co-workers. (2017) Quantitative Analysis of Human Red Blood Cell Proteome. J Proteome Res. 16(8), 2752-2761.

Methods

The following articles were analysed to gather the proteome content of erythrocytes.

The gene or protein list provided in the studies were processed using the ID mapping API of Uniprot in September 2018. The number of proteins identified and mapped without ambiguity in these studies is indicated below.
Only Swiss-Prot entries (reviewed) were considered for protein evidence assignation.

PublicationIdentification 1Uniprot mapping 2Not mapped /
Obsolete
TrEMBLSwiss-Prot
Goodman (2013)2289 (gene list)227853205992269
Lange (2014)123412347281224
Hegedus (2015)2638262202352387
Wilson (2016)165815281702911068
d'Alessandro (2017)18261817201815
Bryk (2017)20902060101081942
Chu (2018)18531804553621387

1 as available in the article and/or in supplementary material
2 uniprot mapping returns all protein isoforms as one entry

The compilation of older studies can be retrieved from the Red Blood Cell Collection database.

The data and differentiation stages presented below come from the proteomic study and analysis performed by our partners of the GReX consortium, more details are available in their published work.

No sequence conservation computed yet.

Interpro domains
Total structural coverage: 54%
Model score: 0
No model available.

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VariantDescription
empty
dbSNP:rs56388327

The reference OMIM entry for this protein is 602521

Mitogen-activated protein kinase 7; mapk7
Protein kinase, mitogen-activated, 7; prkm7
Extracellular signal-regulated kinase 5; erk5

CLONING

Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs, or PRKMs) are activated by an upstream cascade of kinases in response to a wide variety of extracellular stimuli. Specific PRKM kinases (MAPKKs, or PRKMKs) have been shown to phosphorylate and activate specific PRKMs in a given signaling pathway. Using the yeast 2-hybrid system with mutant forms of PRKMK5 (602520) as baits, Zhou et al. (1995) identified a cDNA encoding MAPK7, called ERK5 by them. They demonstrated that MAPK7 interacts specifically with PRKMK5, but not with PRKMK1 (176872) or PRKMK2 (601263), suggesting that the PRKMK5/MAPK7 protein cascade is a novel signaling pathway. The 815-amino acid MAPK7 contains the conserved thr-glu-tyr activation motif of ERK-type MAPKs. MAPK7 has an uncharacteristic 400-amino acid C-terminal domain with sequences indicating that it may be targeted to the cytoskeleton. Zhou et al. (1995) found that full-length MAPK7 has no detectable kinase activity in vitro, whereas removal of the C terminus results in autophosphorylation, suggesting that the C terminus may play a role in regulating MAPK7. Northern blot analysis detected a 3.1-kb transcript in a number of human tissues, with the highest levels in heart and skeletal muscle. By degenerate PCR, Lee et al. (1995) isolated a cDNA encoding a PRKM which they named BMK1. BMK1 shows 98% amino acid identity to ERK5; they differ in a short span of residues at the N terminus. Lee et al. (1995) speculated that these kinases are derived from the same gene, possibly via differential mRNA splicing.

MAPPING

By PCR analysis of a somatic cell hybrid panel, Purandare et al. (1998) mapped the MAPK7 gene to human chromosome 17p11.2.

GENE FUNCTION

Thymocyte emigration after positive selection requires KLF2 (602016) expression. Although KLF2 expression by endothelial cells requires ERK5, which is phosphorylated in response to IL7 (146660), Weinreich et al. (2011) found that Erk5-deficient mouse T cells underwent normal development and had no Klf2 deficiency. They concluded that IL7 and ERK5 do not control KLF2 or the semimature to mature single-positive thymocyte transition.

ANIMAL MODEL

To assess the biologic role of MAPK7 (called ERK5 by them), Regan et al. (2002) deleted the gene in mice. Inactivation of the gene resulted in defective blood vessel and cardiac development leading to embryonic lethality around embryonic day 9.5 to 10.5. Cardiac development was retarded, and the heart failed to undergo normal looping. Endothelial cells that line the developing myocardium of erk5 -/- embryos displayed a disorganized, rounded morphology. Vasculogenesis occurred, but extraembryonic and embryonic blood vessels were disorganized and failed to mature. Furthermore, the investment of embryonic blood vessels with smooth muscle cells was attenuated. Hayashi et al. (2004) found that targeted ablation of MAPK7 using the Mx1-Cre transgene in adult mice led to lethality within 2 to 4 weeks after the induction of Cre recombinase. Physiologic analysis showed that blood vessels became abnormally leaky after deletion of the MAPK7 gene; histologically, the endothelial cells lining the leaky blood vessels were round, irregularly aligned, and ultimately apoptotic. In vitro removal of MAPK7 also led to the death of endothelial cells, partially due to the downregulation of transcriptional factor MEF2C (600662), which is a direct substrate of MAPK7. In addition, endothelial-specific Mapk7 knockout ... More on the omim web site

Subscribe to this protein entry history

Nov. 17, 2018: Protein entry updated
Automatic update: OMIM entry 602521 was added.

Oct. 19, 2018: Additional information
Initial protein addition to the database. This entry was referenced in Bryk and co-workers. (2017).