phosphosubstrates
Phosphosubstrates are substrate molecules that undergo phosphorylation, a reversible post-translational modification catalyzed by protein kinases. In cells, kinases transfer a phosphate group to specific amino acid residues—primarily serine, threonine, or tyrosine—on target proteins, altering their behavior and interactions. Phosphosubstrates can be proteins, peptides, or other biomolecules that receive the phosphate group as a result of kinase activity.
Phosphorylation acts as a regulatory switch that can change a substrate’s activity, conformation, stability, subcellular localization,
Substrate specificity is determined by multiple factors, including kinase recognition motifs, docking interactions, scaffold or adaptor
Identification of phosphosubstrates employs phosphoproteomics (often via mass spectrometry), phospho-specific antibodies, and in vitro kinase assays.
Dysregulation of phosphorylation—through mutations, altered kinase or phosphatase activity, or changes in substrate availability—can contribute to