Ser266
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Home > Phosphorylation Site Page: > Ser266  -  PIK4CB (human)

Site Information
PAPDtGLsPsKRTHQ   SwissProt Entrez-Gene
Blast this site against: NCBI  SwissProt  PDB 
Site Group ID: 457619

In vivo Characterization
Methods used to characterize site in vivo:
mass spectrometry ( 1 , 2 , 4 , 5 , 7 , 8 , 10 , 11 , 12 , 13 , 14 ) , mass spectrometry (in vitro) ( 15 )
Disease tissue studied:
HER2 positive breast cancer ( 2 ) , luminal A breast cancer ( 2 ) , luminal B breast cancer ( 2 ) , breast cancer, surrounding tissue ( 2 ) , breast cancer, triple negative ( 2 ) , cervical cancer ( 12 ) , cervical adenocarcinoma ( 12 ) , melanoma skin cancer ( 4 )
Relevant cell line - cell type - tissue:

Upstream Regulation
Kinases, in vitro:
CDK1 (human) ( 15 )
Treatments:
EGF ( 14 ) , nocodazole ( 12 ) , vemurafenib ( 4 )

References 

1

Huang H, et al. (2016) Simultaneous Enrichment of Cysteine-containing Peptides and Phosphopeptides Using a Cysteine-specific Phosphonate Adaptable Tag (CysPAT) in Combination with titanium dioxide (TiO2) Chromatography. Mol Cell Proteomics 15, 3282-3296
27281782   Curated Info

2

Mertins P, et al. (2016) Proteogenomics connects somatic mutations to signalling in breast cancer. Nature 534, 55-62
27251275   Curated Info

3

Boeing S, et al. (2016) Multiomic Analysis of the UV-Induced DNA Damage Response. Cell Rep 15, 1597-1610
27184836   Curated Info

4

Stuart SA, et al. (2015) A Phosphoproteomic Comparison of B-RAFV600E and MKK1/2 Inhibitors in Melanoma Cells. Mol Cell Proteomics 14, 1599-615
25850435   Curated Info

5

Sharma K, et al. (2014) Ultradeep human phosphoproteome reveals a distinct regulatory nature of Tyr and Ser/Thr-based signaling. Cell Rep 8, 1583-94
25159151   Curated Info

6

Shiromizu T, et al. (2013) Identification of missing proteins in the neXtProt database and unregistered phosphopeptides in the PhosphoSitePlus database as part of the Chromosome-centric Human Proteome Project. J Proteome Res 12, 2414-21
23312004   Curated Info

7

Zhou H, et al. (2013) Toward a comprehensive characterization of a human cancer cell phosphoproteome. J Proteome Res 12, 260-71
23186163   Curated Info

8

Franz-Wachtel M, et al. (2012) Global detection of protein kinase D-dependent phosphorylation events in nocodazole-treated human cells. Mol Cell Proteomics 11, 160-70
22496350   Curated Info

9

Beli P, et al. (2012) Proteomic Investigations Reveal a Role for RNA Processing Factor THRAP3 in the DNA Damage Response. Mol Cell 46, 212-25
22424773   Curated Info

10

Hsu PP, et al. (2011) The mTOR-regulated phosphoproteome reveals a mechanism of mTORC1-mediated inhibition of growth factor signaling. Science 332, 1317-22
21659604   Curated Info

11

Kettenbach AN, et al. (2011) Quantitative phosphoproteomics identifies substrates and functional modules of aurora and polo-like kinase activities in mitotic cells. Sci Signal 4, rs5
21712546   Curated Info

12

Olsen JV, et al. (2010) Quantitative phosphoproteomics reveals widespread full phosphorylation site occupancy during mitosis. Sci Signal 3, ra3
20068231   Curated Info

13

Chen RQ, et al. (2009) CDC25B mediates rapamycin-induced oncogenic responses in cancer cells. Cancer Res 69, 2663-8
19276368   Curated Info

14

Cantin GT, et al. (2008) Combining protein-based IMAC, peptide-based IMAC, and MudPIT for efficient phosphoproteomic analysis. J Proteome Res 7, 1346-51
18220336   Curated Info

15

Blethrow JD, Glavy JS, Morgan DO, Shokat KM (2008) Covalent capture of kinase-specific phosphopeptides reveals Cdk1-cyclin B substrates. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 105, 1442-7
18234856   Curated Info