See Also: calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IV kinase(medicine)
AMP-activated protein kinase kinase(medicine)
ribosomal protein S6 kinase kinase(medicine)
protein kinase B kinase(medicine)
Protein kinase(medicine)
p54 protein kinase(medicine)
KSR-1 protein kinase(medicine)
MUK protein kinase(medicine)
Mak protein kinase(medicine)
tau-protein kinase(medicine)

Henslowe, Philip (sh) and Protein kinase (medicine)


Henslowe, Philip (sh)




born งใ 1550, Lindfield, Sussex, Eng.
died Jan. 6, 1616, London

English theatre owner and manager.

He settled in London before 1577, married a wealthy widow, and became the owner of several theatres, among them the Rose Theatre, which he built (with a partner) in 1587. The most lavish was the Fortune Theatre, built in 1600 for the Admiral's Men, the chief rivals of William Shakespeare's company. Henslowe's theatres gave the first productions of many Elizabethan dramas. His diary (edited 1904-08 by Sir Walter Gregg) is an important source for theatrical history.


Protein kinase (medicine)


protein kinase
<enzyme> Enzyme catalysing transfer of phosphate from ATP to hydroxyl side chains on proteins, causing changes in function. most phosphate on proteins of animal cells is on serine residues, less on threonine, with a very small amount on tyrosine residues. Tyrosine kinases phosphorylate proteins on tyrosine, serine / threonine kinases on serine or threonine.