As mentioned above, MAPKs typically form multi-tiered pathways, receiving input several levels above the actual MAP kinase. In contrast to the relatively simple, phosphorylation-dependent activation mechanism of MAPKs and
MAP2Ks, MAP3Ks have stunningly complex regulation. Many of the better-known
MAP3Ks, such as
c-Raf,
MEKK4 or
MLK3 require multiple steps for their activation. These are typically allosterically-controlled enzymes, tightly locked into an inactive state by multiple mechanisms. The first step en route to their activation consists of relieving their autoinhibition by a smaller ligand (such as
Ras for
c-Raf,
GADD45 for
MEKK4 or
Cdc42 for MLK3). This commonly (but not always) happens at the cell membrane, where most of their activators are bound (note that
small G-proteins are constitutively membrane-associated due to
prenylation). That step is followed by side-to-side homo- and heterodimerisation of their now accessible kinase domains. Recently determined complex structures reveal that the dimers are formed in an orientation that leaves both their substrate-binding regions free. Importantly, this dimerisation event also forces the MAP3 kinase domains to adopt a partially active conformation. Full activity is only achieved once these dimers transphosphorylate each other on their activation loops. The latter step can also be achieved or aided by auxiliary protein kinases (MAP4 kinases, members of the Ste20 family). Once a MAP3 kinase is fully active, it may phosphorylate its substrate MAP2 kinases, which in turn will phosphorylate their MAP kinase substrates.
In animals The
ERK1/2 pathway of mammals is probably the best-characterized MAPK system. The most important upstream activators of this pathway are the Raf proteins (
A-Raf,
B-Raf or
c-Raf), the key mediators of response to growth factors (
EGF,
FGF,
PDGF, etc.); but other MAP3Ks such as c-Mos and
Tpl2/Cot can also play the same role. All these enzymes phosphorylate and thus activate the
MKK1 and/or
MKK2 kinases, that are highly specific activators for
ERK1 and
ERK2. The latter phosphorylate a number of substrates important for
cell proliferation,
cell cycle progression,
cell division and
differentiation (
RSK kinases, Elk-1
transcription factor, etc.) In contrast to the relatively well-insulated
ERK1/2 pathway, mammalian
p38 and
JNK kinases have most of their activators shared at the MAP3K level (
MEKK1,
MEKK4,
ASK1,
TAK1,
MLK3,
TAOK1, etc.). In addition, some MAP2K enzymes may activate both p38 and JNK (
MKK4), while others are more specific for either JNK (
MKK7) or p38 (
MKK3 and
MKK6). Due to these interlocks, there are very few if any stimuli that can elicit JNK activation without simultaneously activating p38 or reversed. Both JNK and p38 signaling pathways are responsive to stress stimuli, such as
cytokines,
ultraviolet irradiation,
heat shock, and
osmotic shock, and are involved in
adaptation to stress,
apoptosis or
cell differentiation. JNKs have a number of dedicated substrates that only they can phosphorylate (
c-Jun,
NFAT4, etc.), while p38s also have some unique targets (e.g. the MAPKAP kinases
MK2 and
MK3), ensuring the need for both in order to respond to stressful stimuli.
ERK5 is part of a fairly well-separated pathway in mammals. Its sole specific upstream activator
MKK5 is turned on in response to the MAP3 kinases
MEKK2 and
MEKK3. The specificity of these interactions are provided by the unique architecture of MKK5 and MEKK2/3, both containing N-terminal PB1 domains, enabling direct heterodimerisation with each other. The PB1 domain of MKK5 also contributes to the ERK5-MKK5 interaction: it provides a special interface (in addition to the
D-motif found in MKK5) through which MKK5 can specifically recognize its substrate ERK5. Although the molecular-level details are poorly known, MEKK2 and MEKK3 respond to certain developmental cues to direct
endothel formation and
cardiac morphogenesis. While also implicated in brain development, the embryonic lethality of ERK5 inactivation due to
cardiac abnormalities underlines its central role in mammalian
vasculogenesis. It is notable, that
conditional knockout of ERK5 in adult animals is also lethal, due to the widespread disruption of
endothelial barriers. Mutations in the upstream components of the ERK5 pathway (the CCM complex) are thought to underlie
cerebral cavernous malformations in humans.
In fungi MAPK pathways of fungi are also well studied. In yeast, the Fus3 MAPK is responsible for cell cycle arrest and
mating in response to pheromone stimulation. The pheromone alpha-factor is sensed by a
seven transmembrane receptor. The recruitment and activation of Fus3 pathway components are strictly dependent on
heterotrimeric G-protein activation. The mating MAPK pathway consist of three tiers (Ste11-Ste7-Fus3), but the MAP2 and MAP3 kinases are shared with another pathway, the Kss1 or filamentous growth pathway. While Fus3 and Kss1 are closely related ERK-type kinases, yeast cells can still activate them separately, with the help of a scaffold protein Ste5 that is selectively recruited by the G-proteins of the mating pathway. The trick is that Ste5 can associate with and "unlock" Fus3 for Ste7 as a substrate in a tertiary complex, while it does not do the same for Kss1, leaving the filamentous growth pathway to be activated only in the absence of Ste5 recruitment. Fungi also have a pathway reminiscent of mammalian JNK/p38 signaling. This is the Hog1 pathway: activated by high osmolarity (in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae) or a number of other abiotic stresses (in
Schizosaccharomyces pombe). The MAP2 kinase of this pathway is called Pbs2 (related to mammalian MKK3/4/6/7), the dedicated MAP3 kinases involved in activation are Ssk2 and SSk22. The system in
S. cerevisiae is activated by a sophisticated osmosensing module consisting of the Sho1 and Sln1 proteins, but it is yet unclear how other stimuli can elicit activation of Hog1. Yeast also displays a number of other MAPK pathways without close homologs in animals, such as the cell wall integrity pathway (Mpk1/Slt2) or the
sporulation pathway (Smk1).
In plants Despite the high number of MAPK genes, MAPK pathways of higher plants were studied less than animal or fungal ones. Although their signaling appears very complex, the MPK3, MPK4 and MPK6 kinases of
Arabidopsis thaliana are key mediators of responses to
osmotic shock,
oxidative stress, response to cold and involved in anti-pathogen responses. Asai
et al. 2002's model of MAPK mediated immunity passes the
effector recognition signal from
FLS2 ⇨
MEKK1 ⇨
MKK4 or
MKK5 ⇨ MPK3 and MPK6 ⇨ WRKY22 or WRKY29. == Evolutionary relationships ==