Publication Abstract from PubMed 
Scaffold proteins organize signaling proteins into pathways and are often viewed as passive assembly platforms. We found that the Ste5 scaffold has a more active role in the yeast mating pathway: A fragment of Ste5 allosterically activated autophosphorylation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase Fus3. The resulting form of Fus3 is partially active-it is phosphorylated on only one of two key residues in the activation loop. Unexpectedly, at a systems level, autoactivated Fus3 appears to have a negative regulatory role, promoting Ste5 phosphorylation and a decrease in pathway transcriptional output. Thus, scaffolds not only direct basic pathway connectivity but can precisely tune quantitative pathway input-output properties.
The Ste5 scaffold allosterically modulates signaling output of the yeast mating pathway.,Bhattacharyya RP, Remenyi A, Good MC, Bashor CJ, Falick AM, Lim WA Science. 2006 Feb 10;311(5762):822-6. Epub 2006 Jan 19. PMID:16424299[1]
From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.