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Inhibition of Cell Spreading by Expression of the C-Terminal Domain of Focal Adhesion Kinase (FAK) Is Rescued by Coexpression of Src or Catalytically Inactive FAK: a Role for Paxillin Tyrosine Phosphorylation
Author(s) -
Alan Richardson,
Rajesh Malik,
Jeffrey D. Hildebrand,
J. Thomas Parsons
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.17.12.6906
Subject(s) - paxillin , focal adhesion , ptk2 , proto oncogene tyrosine protein kinase src , biology , phosphorylation , microbiology and biotechnology , tyrosine phosphorylation , tyrosine , tyrosine kinase , sh2 domain , cell adhesion , protein kinase domain , kinase , signal transduction , cancer research , cell , biochemistry , protein kinase a , mitogen activated protein kinase kinase , gene , mutant
pp125FAK is a tyrosine kinase that appears to regulate the assembly of focal adhesions and thereby promotes cell spreading on the extracellular matrix. In some cells, the C terminus of pp125FAK is expressed as a separate protein, pp41/43FRNK. We have previously shown that overexpression of pp41/43FRNK inhibits tyrosine phosphorylation of pp125FAK and paxillin and, in addition, delays cell spreading and focal adhesion assembly. Thus, pp41/43FRNK functions as a negative inhibitor of adhesion signaling and provides a tool to dissect the mechanism by which pp125FAK promotes cell spreading. We report here that the inhibitory effects of pp41/43FRNK expression can be rescued by the co-overexpression of wild-type pp125FAK and partially rescued by catalytically inactive variants of pp125FAK. However, coexpression of an autophosphorylation site mutant of pp125FAK, which fails to bind the SH2 domain of pp60c-Src, or a mutant that fails to bind paxillin did not promote cell spreading. In contrast, expression of pp41/43FRNK and pp60c-Src reconstituted cell spreading and tyrosine phosphorylation of paxillin but did so without inducing tyrosine phosphorylation of pp125FAK. These data provide additional support for a model whereby pp125FAK acts as a "switchable adaptor" that recruits pp60c-Src to phosphorylate paxillin, promoting cell spreading. In addition, these data point to tyrosine phosphorylation of paxillin as being a critical step in focal adhesion assembly.

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