Functional heterogeneity of proto-oncogene tyrosine kinases: the C terminus of the human epidermal growth factor receptor facilitates cell proliferation.
Author(s) -
Thierry Velu,
William C. Vass,
Douglas R. Lowy,
Laura Beguinot
Publication year - 1989
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.9.4.1772
Subject(s) - autophosphorylation , biology , epidermal growth factor , receptor tyrosine kinase , erbb , tyrosine kinase , tyrosine , ror1 , tyrosine phosphorylation , platelet derived growth factor receptor , cell surface receptor , microbiology and biotechnology , proto oncogene tyrosine protein kinase src , growth factor receptor , epidermal growth factor receptor , biochemistry , receptor , mutant , phosphorylation , growth factor , gene , protein kinase a
Previous reports have indicated that the C termini of the membrane-associated tyrosine kinases encoded by c-src and c-fms proto-oncogenes have a negative effect on their biological activity and that this effect is mediated by their C-terminal tyrosine residue. To determine whether this was true for the human epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor, which is also a membrane-associated tyrosine kinase proto-oncogene, we have constructed two premature termination mutants, dc19 and dc63, that delete the C-terminal 19 and 63 amino acids, respectively, from the human full-length receptor (hEGFR). The smaller deletion removes the C-terminal tyrosine residue, while the larger deletion removes the two most C-terminal tyrosines; similar deletions are found in v-erbB. As previously shown for the gene encoding the full-length EGF receptor, the two C-terminal mutants induced EGF-dependent focal transformation and anchorage-independent growth of NIH 3T3 cells. However, both dc19 and dc63 were quantitatively less efficient than the gene encoding the full-length receptor, with dc63 being less active than dc19. Although the C-terminal mutants displayed lower biological activity than the gene encoding the full-length receptor, the mutant receptors were found to be similar in several respects to the full-length receptor. These parameters included receptor localization, stability in the absence of EGF, receptor half-life in the presence of EGF, EGF binding, extent of EGF-dependent autophosphorylation in vitro, and EGF-dependent phosphorylation of an exogenous substrate in vitro. Therefore, the C-terminal 63 amino acids of the human receptor have no detectable influence on EGF-dependent early events. We conclude that in contrast
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