The Product of the cbl Oncogene Forms Stable Complexes In Vivo with Endogenous Crk in a Tyrosine Phosphorylation-Dependent Manner

V Ribon, S Hubbell, R Herrera… - Molecular and cellular …, 1996 - Taylor & Francis
V Ribon, S Hubbell, R Herrera, AR Saltiel
Molecular and cellular biology, 1996Taylor & Francis
The cellular homologs of the v-Crk oncogene product are composed exclusively of Src
homology region 2 (SH2) and SH3 domains. v-Crk overexpression in fibroblasts causes cell
transformation and elevated tyrosine phosphorylation of specific cellular proteins. Among
these proteins is a 130-kDa protein, identified as p130 cas, that forms a stable complex in
vivo with v-Crk. We have explored the role of endogenous Crk proteins in Bcr-Abl-
transformed cells. In the K562 human chronic myelogenous leukemia cell line, p130 cas is …
The cellular homologs of the v-Crk oncogene product are composed exclusively of Src homology region 2 (SH2) and SH3 domains. v-Crk overexpression in fibroblasts causes cell transformation and elevated tyrosine phosphorylation of specific cellular proteins. Among these proteins is a 130-kDa protein, identified as p130cas, that forms a stable complex in vivo with v-Crk. We have explored the role of endogenous Crk proteins in Bcr-Abl-transformed cells. In the K562 human chronic myelogenous leukemia cell line, p130cas is not tyrosine phosphorylated or bound to Crk. Instead, Crk proteins predominantly associate with the tyrosine-phosphorylated proto-oncogene product of Cbl. In vitro analysis showed that this interaction is mediated by the SH2 domain of Crk and can be inhibited with a phosphopeptide containing the Crk-SH2 binding motif. In NIH 3T3 cells transformed by Bcr-Abl, c-Cbl becomes strongly tyrosine phosphorylated and associates with c-Crk. The complex between c-Crk and c-Cbl is also seen upon T-cell receptor cross-linking or with the transforming, tyrosine-phosphorylated c-Cbl. These results indicate that Crk binds to c-Cbl in a tyrosine phosphorylation-dependent manner, suggesting a physiological role for the Crk-c-Cbl complex in Bcr-Abl tyrosine phosphorylation-mediated transformation.
Taylor & Francis Online