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PKA C-alpha Protein

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protein643 wordssynced 2026-04-02

PKA C-alpha Protein

Overview

Protein Kinase A Catalytic Subunit Alpha (PKA C-alpha), encoded by the PRKACA gene, is a serine/threonine-specific protein kinase that functions as a critical signaling enzyme in cellular communication pathways. As one of two catalytic subunit isoforms of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), PKA C-alpha is broadly distributed across neuronal and non-neuronal tissues, with particularly high expression in the central and peripheral nervous systems. The protein contains a highly conserved kinase domain and regulatory binding sites that enable its activation through cAMP-mediated signaling cascades. PKA C-alpha plays essential roles in synaptic plasticity, gene transcription, metabolic regulation, and neuronal survival—processes that become increasingly dysregulated in neurodegenerative diseases.

Function and Biology

PKA C-alpha functions as the catalytic component of the cAMP-PKA signaling pathway, one of the most fundamental second-messenger systems in neurobiology. In its inactive state, the catalytic subunit associates with regulatory subunits (RI or RII) to form an inactive heteromeric complex. Upon elevation of intracellular cAMP levels—typically triggered by G-protein coupled receptor activation downstream of neurotransmitter signaling—cAMP binds to the regulatory subunits, causing conformational changes that release and activate the catalytic subunit.

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