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MAPK9 / JNK2

mitogen-activated protein kinase 9

Serine/threonine-protein kinase involved in various processes such as cell proliferation, differentiation, migration, transformation and programmed cell death. Extracellular stimuli such as proinflammatory cytokines or physical stress stimulate the stress-activated protein kinase/c-Jun N-terminal kinase (SAP/JNK) signaling pathway. In this cascade, two dual specificity kinases MAP2K4/MKK4 and MAP2K7/MKK7 phosphorylate and activate MAPK9/JNK2. In turn, MAPK9/JNK2 phosphorylates a number of transcription factors, primarily components of AP-1 such as JUN and ATF2 and thus regulates AP-1 transcriptional activity. In response to oxidative or ribotoxic stresses, inhibits rRNA synthesis by phosphorylating and inactivating the RNA polymerase 1-specific transcription initiation factor RRN3. Promotes stressed cell apoptosis by phosphorylating key regulatory factors including TP53 and YAP1. In T-cells, MAPK8 and MAPK9 are required for polarized differentiation of T-helper cells into Th1 cells. Upon T-cell receptor (TCR) stimulation, is activated by CARMA1, BCL10, MAP2K7 and MAP3K7/TAK1 to regulate JUN protein levels. Plays an important role in the osmotic stress-induced epithelial tight-junctions disruption. When activated, promotes beta-catenin/CTNNB1 degradation and inhibits the canonical Wnt signaling pathway. Participates also in neurite growth in spiral ganglion neurons.MAPK9 isoforms display different binding patterns: alpha-1 and alpha-2 preferentially bind to JUN, whereas beta-1 and beta-2 bind to ATF2. However, there is no correlation between binding and phosphorylation, which is achieved at about the same efficiency by all isoforms. JUNB is not a substrate for JNK2 alpha-2, and JUND binds only weakly to it.

Gene Name: mitogen-activated protein kinase 9
Family/Subfamily: Protein Kinase , MAPK
Synonyms: MAPK9, C-Jun kinase 2, C-Jun N-terminal kinase 2, JNK2B, JNK2, JNK2ALPHA, MAP kinase 9, p54a, JNK2BETA, PRKM9, SAPK, MAPK 9, p54aSAPK, SAPK1a, JNK-55, JNK2A, Jun kinase
Target Sequences: NM_002752 NP_002743.3 P45984

Publications (1)

1
Cerebral ischemia provokes a profound exchange of activated JNK isoforms in brain mitochondria. Zhao Y, Herdegen T. Molecular and cellular neurosciences. 2009 41:186-95. (WB, IP) [PubMed:19289169]

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The data on this page has been compiled from LifeSpan internal sources, the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), and The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt).