MAPK12 (mitogen-activated protein kinase 12)
2010-01-01 Maria Isabel Cerezo-Guisado  , Ana Cuenda   AffiliationCentro Nacional de Biotecnologia-CSIC, Department of Immunology, Oncology, Madrid, Spain
Identity
HGNC
LOCATION
22q13.33
IMAGE

LEGEND
MAPK12 genomic context (Chromosome 22, location 22q13.33).
LOCUSID
ALIAS
ERK-6,ERK3,ERK6,MAPK
FUSION GENES
DNA/RNA

Genomic organization of MAPK12 gene on chromosome 22q13.33. The boxes indicate coding regions (exon 1-12) of the gene.
Description
The MAPK12 entire gene spans 8.46 kb on the long arm of chromosome 22. It contains 12 exons.
Transcription
The MAPK12 gene encodes a 367 amino-acid protein of about 42 kDa. MAPK12 mRNA is 1457 bp. No splice variants have been reported.
Pseudogene
No human or mouse pseudogene known.
Proteins
Note
p38gamma (MAPK12), also known as Stress-activated protein kinase 3 (SAPK3) belongs to the p38 subfamily of MAPKs. The p38MAPK subfamily is composed by four members encoded by different genes, which share high sequence homologies and are designated as p38alpha (MAPK14, or SAPK2a), p38beta (MAPK11 or SAPK2b), p38gamma (MAPK12 or SAPK3) and p38delta (MAPK13 or SAPK4). They are about 60% identical in their amino acid sequence but differ in their expresion patterns, substrate specificities and sensitivities to chemical inhibitors. (Iñesta-Vaquera et al., 2008). All p38 MAPKs are strongly activated in vivo by environmental stresses and inflammatory cytokines, and less by serum and growth factors.

Schematic representation of the p38gamma (MAPK12) protein structure. Kinase Domain, catalytic kinase domain; TGY, sequence motif containing the regulatory phosphorylation residues. p38gamma (MAPK12) possesses at the C-terminal a sequence that binds to PDZ domain of several proteins.
Description
p38gamma (MAPK12) is a Serine/Threonine protein kinase of 367 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 42 kDa. It possesses the conserved amino acid domains (I-XI) characteristic of protein kinases (Mertens et al., 1996). The Thr183 and Tyr185 residues in subdomain VIII are in an equivalent position to the TXY sequence in known MAPKs. The activation of p38gamma (MAPK12) occurs via dual phosphorylation of its TGY motif, in the activation loop, by MKK3 and MKK6 (Cuenda et al., 1997; Goedert et al., 1997).
Expression
p38gamma (MAPK12) mRNA is widely expressed with high levels of expression in skeletal muscle.
Localisation
p38gamma (MAPK12) localizes to the cytoplasm and nucleus of cultured cells.
Function
p38gamma (MAPK12) regulates many cellular functions by phosphorylating several proteins. A feature that makes p38gamma unique among the p38 MAPKs is its short C-terminal sequence -KETXL, an amino acid sequence ideal for binding PDZ domains in proteins. SAPK3/p38gamma binds to a variety of these proteins, such as alpha1-syntrophin, SAP90/PSD95 and SAP97/hDlg, and under stress conditions is able to phosphorylate them and modulate their activity (Hasegawa et al., 1999; Sabio et al., 2004; Sabio et al., 2005). These proteins are scaffold proteins usually targeted to the plasma membrane cytoskeleton at specialised sites such as the neuromuscular junction and gap junctions through protein-protein interactions. In the case of SAP97/hDlg its phosphorylation by SAPK3/p38gamma provided a mechanism of dissociating SAP97/hDlg from the cytoskeleton (Sabio et al., 2005). p38gamma can also phosphorylate typical p38 MAPK substrates such as the transcription factors ATF2, Elk-1 or SAP1. However, it cannot phosphorylate MAPKAPK2 or MAPKAPK3, which are good substrates for other p38 MAPK isoforms (Cuenda et al., 1997; Goedert et al., 1997). Another p38gamma substrates that do not require PDZ domain binding interactions are the mitochondrial protein Sab (Court et al., 2004) and the microtubule-associated protein Tau (Feijoo et al., 2005).
Since p38gamma expression is very high in skeletal muscle in comparison to other tissues, it is not surprising that it may play a fundamental role in skeletal muscle differentiation. Thus, p38gamma protein level increases when myoblast differentiate into myotubes endogenous (Tortorella et al., 2003; Cuenda and Cohen, 1999). Moreover, it has been shown that over-expression of p38gamma in skeletal muscle cells leads to differentiation from myoblast to myotubes, and that a dominant-negative mutant of p38gamma prevented this differentiation process (Lechner et al., 1996). Recently, Gillespie et al. (2009) reported that p38gamma phosphorylates the transciption factor MyoD, which results in a decrease in its transcriptional activity. p38gamma plays a cardinal role in blocking the premature differentiation of skeletal muscle stem cells, the satellite cells. Additionally, p38gamma regulates mitochondrial biogenesis and angiogenesis, and it is required for endurance exercise-induced skeletal muscle adaptation (Pogozelski et al., 2009).
Most of the work published on cellular transformation regulation by p38MAPK pathway has been focused on studying the role of the isoforms p38alpha and beta, but there are a number of recent publications providing evidences for the role of p38gamma (MAPK12) in cellular transformation. Overexpression of the active form of Rit, a Ras family member, in NIH3T3 cells, causes transformation and stimulates p38gamma, but not other isoforms of p38MAPKs, ERK1, ERK2 or ERK5 (Sakabe et al., 2002). In rat intestinal epithelial cells, Ras oncogene was found to increase p38gamma RNA and protein expression with concurrently stimulated p38alpha phosphorylation and decreased p38gamma phosphorylation (Tang et al., 2005; Loesch and Chen, 2008). These results indicate that increased p38gamma gene expression is required for Ras oncogene activity but the mechanism by which p38gamma may promote Ras transformation is not clear. Recent studies show that phospho-p38alpha can down-regulate p38gamma protein expression through c-jun dependent ubiquitin/proteasome pathways (Qi et al., 2007; Loesch and Chen, 2008). On the other hand other recent study shows that whereas p38gamma mediates Ras-induced senescence at least partly by stimulating the transcriptional activity of p53 through direct phosphorylation, p38alpha appears to regulate senescence in a p53-independent, p16INK4A dependent manner (Kwong et al., 2009).
Since p38gamma expression is very high in skeletal muscle in comparison to other tissues, it is not surprising that it may play a fundamental role in skeletal muscle differentiation. Thus, p38gamma protein level increases when myoblast differentiate into myotubes endogenous (Tortorella et al., 2003; Cuenda and Cohen, 1999). Moreover, it has been shown that over-expression of p38gamma in skeletal muscle cells leads to differentiation from myoblast to myotubes, and that a dominant-negative mutant of p38gamma prevented this differentiation process (Lechner et al., 1996). Recently, Gillespie et al. (2009) reported that p38gamma phosphorylates the transciption factor MyoD, which results in a decrease in its transcriptional activity. p38gamma plays a cardinal role in blocking the premature differentiation of skeletal muscle stem cells, the satellite cells. Additionally, p38gamma regulates mitochondrial biogenesis and angiogenesis, and it is required for endurance exercise-induced skeletal muscle adaptation (Pogozelski et al., 2009).
Most of the work published on cellular transformation regulation by p38MAPK pathway has been focused on studying the role of the isoforms p38alpha and beta, but there are a number of recent publications providing evidences for the role of p38gamma (MAPK12) in cellular transformation. Overexpression of the active form of Rit, a Ras family member, in NIH3T3 cells, causes transformation and stimulates p38gamma, but not other isoforms of p38MAPKs, ERK1, ERK2 or ERK5 (Sakabe et al., 2002). In rat intestinal epithelial cells, Ras oncogene was found to increase p38gamma RNA and protein expression with concurrently stimulated p38alpha phosphorylation and decreased p38gamma phosphorylation (Tang et al., 2005; Loesch and Chen, 2008). These results indicate that increased p38gamma gene expression is required for Ras oncogene activity but the mechanism by which p38gamma may promote Ras transformation is not clear. Recent studies show that phospho-p38alpha can down-regulate p38gamma protein expression through c-jun dependent ubiquitin/proteasome pathways (Qi et al., 2007; Loesch and Chen, 2008). On the other hand other recent study shows that whereas p38gamma mediates Ras-induced senescence at least partly by stimulating the transcriptional activity of p53 through direct phosphorylation, p38alpha appears to regulate senescence in a p53-independent, p16INK4A dependent manner (Kwong et al., 2009).
Homology
p38gamma (MAPK12) shows 70% identity with p38delta (MAPK13), 60% sequence identity with p38alpha (MAPK14) and p38beta (MAPK11), 45% identity with HOG1 from S. cerevisiae, 47% identity with human SAP kinase-1 (JNK1) and 42% identity with p42 MAP kinase (ERK2).
Mutations
Note
No mutation reported yet.
Implicated in
Entity name
Breast cancer
Oncogenesis
In human MCF-7 breast cancer cells, MKK6 expression inhibits DNA synthesis. This inhibitory effect is enhanced by the co-expressed p38gamma (Pramanik et al., 2003; Loesch and Chen, 2008). Ras also increases p38gamma protein expression in human breast cancer (Qi et al., 2006).
Entity name
Skin cancer
Oncogenesis
p38gamma isoform is specifically implicated in melanoma death induced by UV radiation, cisplatin treatment (Pillaire et al., 2000). Moreover, melanoma cells overexpressing PDGF-Ralpha show a marked increase of p38gamma (Faraone et al., 2009).
Entity name
Hepatoma
Oncogenesis
p38gamma expression is increased in hepatoma cell line HLE (Liu et al., 2003).
Entity name
Ovarian cancer
Oncogenesis
p38gamma expression is regulated by the TNF-related apoptosis inducing ligand (TRIAL) and IL-8 in cellular lines from ovarian cancer (Abdollahi et al., 2003).
Entity name
Pancreatic cancer
Oncogenesis
The levels of p38gamma seems to be decreased in pancreatic cancer cells (Crnogorac-Jurcevic et al., 2001).
Article Bibliography
| Pubmed ID | Last Year | Title | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12907626 | 2003 | Identification of interleukin 8 as an inhibitor of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand-induced apoptosis in the ovarian carcinoma cell line OVCAR3. | Abdollahi T et al |
| 15158451 | 2004 | Phosphorylation of the mitochondrial protein Sab by stress-activated protein kinase 3. | Court NW et al |
| 11704875 | 2001 | Gene expression profiles of pancreatic cancer and stromal desmoplasia. | Crnogorac-Jurcevic T et al |
| 9933636 | 1999 | Stress-activated protein kinase-2/p38 and a rapamycin-sensitive pathway are required for C2C12 myogenesis. | Cuenda A et al |
| 17481747 | 2007 | p38 MAP-kinases pathway regulation, function and role in human diseases. | Cuenda A et al |
| 19649203 | 2009 | Platelet-derived growth factor-receptor alpha strongly inhibits melanoma growth in vitro and in vivo. | Faraone D et al |
| 15632108 | 2005 | Evidence that phosphorylation of the microtubule-associated protein Tau by SAPK4/p38delta at Thr50 promotes microtubule assembly. | Feijoo C et al |
| 9218798 | 1997 | Activation of the novel stress-activated protein kinase SAPK4 by cytokines and cellular stresses is mediated by SKK3 (MKK6); comparison of its substrate specificity with that of other SAP kinases. | Goedert M et al |
| 9169156 | 1997 | Assignment of the human stress-activated protein kinase-3 gene (SAPK3) to chromosome 22q13.3 by fluorescence in situ hybridization. | Goedert M et al |
| 10212242 | 1999 | Stress-activated protein kinase-3 interacts with the PDZ domain of alpha1-syntrophin. A mechanism for specific substrate recognition. | Hasegawa M et al |
| 19251701 | 2009 | p38alpha and p38gamma mediate oncogenic ras-induced senescence through differential mechanisms. | Kwong J et al |
| 8633070 | 1996 | ERK6, a mitogen-activated protein kinase involved in C2C12 myoblast differentiation. | Lechner C et al |
| 12679910 | 2003 | Gene expression profiles of hepatoma cell line HLE. | Liu LX et al |
| 18508457 | 2008 | The p38 MAPK stress pathway as a tumor suppressor or more? | Loesch M et al |
| 8925912 | 1996 | SAP kinase-3, a new member of the family of mammalian stress-activated protein kinases. | Mertens S et al |
| 11095975 | 2000 | Cisplatin and UV radiation induce activation of the stress-activated protein kinase p38gamma in human melanoma cells. | Pillaire MJ et al |
| 19936205 | 2009 | p38gamma mitogen-activated protein kinase is a key regulator in skeletal muscle metabolic adaptation in mice. | Pogozelski AR et al |
| 12475989 | 2003 | p38 isoforms have opposite effects on AP-1-dependent transcription through regulation of c-Jun. The determinant roles of the isoforms in the p38 MAPK signal specificity. | Pramanik R et al |
| 17724032 | 2007 | p38alpha antagonizes p38gamma activity through c-Jun-dependent ubiquitin-proteasome pathways in regulating Ras transformation and stress response. | Qi X et al |
| 16885352 | 2006 | p38gamma mitogen-activated protein kinase integrates signaling crosstalk between Ras and estrogen receptor to increase breast cancer invasion. | Qi X et al |
| 15729360 | 2005 | p38gamma regulates the localisation of SAP97 in the cytoskeleton by modulating its interaction with GKAP. | Sabio G et al |
| 14741046 | 2004 | Stress- and mitogen-induced phosphorylation of the synapse-associated protein SAP90/PSD-95 by activation of SAPK3/p38gamma and ERK1/ERK2. | Sabio G et al |
| 11821041 | 2002 | Potent transforming activity of the small GTP-binding protein Rit in NIH 3T3 cells: evidence for a role of a p38gamma-dependent signaling pathway. | Sakabe K et al |
| 15851477 | 2005 | Essential role of p38gamma in K-Ras transformation independent of phosphorylation. | Tang J et al |
| 12788083 | 2003 | ERK6 is expressed in a developmentally regulated manner in rodent skeletal muscle. | Tortorella LL et al |
| 19629069 | 2009 | Signal integration by JNK and p38 MAPK pathways in cancer development. | Wagner EF et al |
Other Information
Locus ID:
NCBI: 6300
MIM: 602399
HGNC: 6874
Ensembl: ENSG00000188130
Variants:
dbSNP: 6300
ClinVar: 6300
TCGA: ENSG00000188130
COSMIC: MAPK12
RNA/Proteins
| Gene ID | Transcript ID | Uniprot |
|---|---|---|
| ENSG00000188130 | ENST00000215659 | P53778 |
| ENSG00000188130 | ENST00000395778 | A8MY48 |
| ENSG00000188130 | ENST00000395780 | B5MDL5 |
| ENSG00000188130 | ENST00000622558 | P53778 |
Expression (GTEx)
Pathways
Protein levels (Protein atlas)
PharmGKB
| Entity ID | Name | Type | Evidence | Association | PK | PD | PMIDs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PA284 | MAP2K7 | Gene | Pathway | associated | 20124951 | ||
| PA30584 | MAP2K1 | Gene | Pathway | associated | 20124951 | ||
| PA30587 | MAP2K2 | Gene | Pathway | associated | 20124951 | ||
| PA30588 | MAP2K3 | Gene | Pathway | associated | 20124951 | ||
| PA30589 | MAP2K4 | Gene | Pathway | associated | 20124951 | ||
| PA30590 | MAP2K5 | Gene | Pathway | associated | 20124951 | ||
| PA30591 | MAP2K6 | Gene | Pathway | associated | 20124951 | ||
| PA7000 | sorafenib | Chemical | Pathway | associated | 20124951 |
References
| Pubmed ID | Year | Title | Citations |
|---|---|---|---|
| 38214819 | 2024 | G-quadruplex structural dynamics at MAPK12 promoter dictates transcriptional switch to determine stemness in breast cancer. | 0 |
| 38214819 | 2024 | G-quadruplex structural dynamics at MAPK12 promoter dictates transcriptional switch to determine stemness in breast cancer. | 0 |
| 34719109 | 2022 | Conditional ERK3 overexpression cooperates with PTEN deletion to promote lung adenocarcinoma formation in mice. | 2 |
| 35246508 | 2022 | The pro-tumorigenic activity of p38γ overexpression in nasopharyngeal carcinoma. | 14 |
| 34719109 | 2022 | Conditional ERK3 overexpression cooperates with PTEN deletion to promote lung adenocarcinoma formation in mice. | 2 |
| 35246508 | 2022 | The pro-tumorigenic activity of p38γ overexpression in nasopharyngeal carcinoma. | 14 |
| 30447427 | 2019 | Impact of p38γ mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) on MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells using metabolomic approach. | 5 |
| 30569573 | 2019 | The atypical MAPK ERK3 potently suppresses melanoma cell growth and invasiveness. | 9 |
| 30971822 | 2019 | p38γ is essential for cell cycle progression and liver tumorigenesis. | 51 |
| 31349971 | 2019 | Targeting p38γ to inhibit human colorectal cancer cell progression. | 13 |
| 30447427 | 2019 | Impact of p38γ mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) on MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells using metabolomic approach. | 5 |
| 30569573 | 2019 | The atypical MAPK ERK3 potently suppresses melanoma cell growth and invasiveness. | 9 |
| 30971822 | 2019 | p38γ is essential for cell cycle progression and liver tumorigenesis. | 51 |
| 31349971 | 2019 | Targeting p38γ to inhibit human colorectal cancer cell progression. | 13 |
| 30166347 | 2018 | Activation loop phosphorylation of ERK3 is important for its kinase activity and ability to promote lung cancer cell invasiveness. | 16 |
Citation
Maria Isabel Cerezo-Guisado ; Ana Cuenda
MAPK12 (mitogen-activated protein kinase 12)
Atlas Genet Cytogenet Oncol Haematol. 2010-01-01
Online version: http://atlasgeneticsoncology.org/gene/41290/mapk12
