autophosphorylating
Autophosphorylating is the biochemical process by which a protein kinase catalyzes the transfer of a phosphate group from ATP to one of its own amino acid residues, typically serine, threonine, or tyrosine. In many contexts the term also covers phosphorylation of a second molecule of the same enzyme in close proximity, a phenomenon known as trans-autophosphorylation; by contrast, cis-autophosphorylation occurs within the same polypeptide.
In receptor and non-receptor tyrosine kinases, autophosphorylating often follows dimerization or activation, enabling full catalytic activity
Biological significance: autophosphorylating can modulate enzymatic activity, substrate specificity, and interaction with adaptor proteins. It acts
Examples include epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) family receptors that autophosphorylate on multiple tyrosines upon ligand
Measurement and regulation: autophosphorylating depends on ATP and divalent cations like Mg2+. It is regulated by