phosphoregulation
Phosphoregulation refers to the reversible control of protein function through phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. In this process, kinases transfer phosphate groups from ATP to specific amino acid residues, typically serine, threonine, or tyrosine, while phosphatases remove these phosphate groups. Phosphorylation can alter a protein’s activity, stability, interaction with other molecules, or subcellular localization, enabling rapid and dynamic regulation in response to cellular signals.
Kinases and phosphatases provide the core of phosphoregulation. Kinases exhibit substrate specificity for particular motifs and
Phosphoregulation influences many cellular processes, including signal transduction, metabolism, and the cell cycle. In signaling pathways,
Regulation is shaped by factor localization, scaffold proteins, and feedback loops, which ensure specificity and timing.