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Differential membrane compartmentalization of Ret by PTB‐adaptor engagement
Author(s) -
Lundgren T. K.,
Luebke Moritz,
Stenqvist Anna,
Ernfors Patrik
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
the febs journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 204
eISSN - 1742-4658
pISSN - 1742-464X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2008.06360.x
Subject(s) - lipid raft , microbiology and biotechnology , signal transducing adaptor protein , signal transduction , receptor tyrosine kinase , lipid microdomain , compartmentalization (fire protection) , biology , phosphorylation , chemistry , membrane , biochemistry , enzyme
Glial cell line‐derived neurotrophic factor family ligands act through the receptor tyrosine kinase Ret, which plays important roles during embryonic development for cell differentiation, survival, and migration. Ret signaling is markedly affected by compartmentalization of receptor complexes into membrane subdomains. Ret can propagate biochemical signaling from within concentrates in cholesterol‐rich membrane microdomains or lipid rafts, or outside such regions, but the mechanisms for, and consequences of, Ret translocation between these membrane compartments remain largely unclear. Here we investigate the interaction of Shc and Frs2 phosphotyrosine‐binding domain‐containing adaptor molecules with Ret and their function in redistributing Ret to specialized membrane compartments. We found that engagement of Ret with the Frs2 adaptor results in an enrichment of Ret in lipid rafts and that signal transduction pathways and chemotaxis responses depend on the integrity of such rafts. The competing Shc adaptor did not promote Ret translocation to equivalent domains, and Shc‐mediated effects were less affected by disruption of lipid rafts. However, by expressing a chimeric Shc protein that localizes to lipid rafts, we showed that biochemical signaling downstream of Ret resembled that of Ret signaling via Frs2. We have identified a previously unknown mechanism in which phosphotyrosine‐binding domain‐containing adaptors, by means of relocating Ret receptor complexes to lipid rafts, segregate diverse signaling and cellular functions mediated by Ret. These results reveal the existence of a novel mechanism that could, by subcellular relocation of Ret, work to amplify ligand gradients during chemotaxis.

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