Integrin-mediated Cell Adhesion Promotes Tyrosine Phosphorylation of p130
, a Src Homology 3-containing Molecule Having Multiple Src Homology 2-binding Motifs (*)
- Yoshihisa Nojima(1)(§),
- Noritsugu Morino(1),
- Toshihide Mimura(1),
- Ken Hamasaki(1),
- Hiroko Furuya(1),
- Ryuichi Sakai(2),
- Toshiya Sato(3),
- Kouichi Tachibana(3),
- Chikao Morimoto(3),
- Yoshio Yazaki(1) and
- Hisamaru Hirai(1)
- From the (1) Third Department of Internal Medicine, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113 Japan, the
- (2)Molecular Biology Division, Jichi Medical School, 3311-1 Yakushiji, Minamikawachi-machi, Kawachi-gun, Tochigi 329-04, Japan, and the
- (3)Division of Tumor Immunology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
- § To whom correspondence should be addressed: The Third Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113, Japan. Tel.: 81-03-3815-5411; Fax: 81-03-5684-3987.
Abstract
p130
(Cas) has been recently identified as a 130-kDa protein that is highly phosphorylated on tyrosine residues and is stably
associated with p47
(v-Crk) and p60
(v-Src) oncogene products in cells transformed by the respective genes. Cas is a novel signaling molecule having a single
Src homology (SH) 3 domain and a cluster of multiple SH2-binding motifs. While the tight association of Cas with v-Crk and
v-Src is strongly suggestive of a significant role in regulating cellular transformation, the function of Cas in normal untransformed
cells is totally unknown. We report here that cell adhesion to fibronectin rapidly promotes tyrosine phosphorylation of Cas
in human and rat fibroblast cell lines. The response was equally induced by cell adhesion to plates coated with vitronectin,
laminin, and collagen but not by cell attachment to nonspecific substrate poly-L-lysine. The kinetic profile of Cas phosphorylation
was almost identical with that of tyrosine phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase pp125
(Fak), which is well known to be activated subsequent to integrin-mediated cell adhesion. Adhesion-dependent Cas phosphorylation
was completely inhibited by treating cells with cytochalasin D, an agent that disrupts polymerization of actin stress fibers.
These results suggest that tyrosine phosphorylation of Cas is stimulated by normal cell adhesion in close association with
Fak phosphorylation and the formation of actin stress fibers. In v-Src- or v-Crk-transformed cells, however, the tyrosine
phosphorylation of Cas is markedly increased in an adhesion-independent manner that is insensitive to treatment with cytochalasin
D. Thus, Cas plays a role in signaling pathways mediated by cell adhesion as well as by transformation. We propose that Cas
may amplify and propagate integrin-mediated signals by interacting with SH2-containing molecule(s).
Footnotes
-
↵* The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
-
↵1 The abbreviations used are:
- MAP
-
mitogen-activated protein
- HSF
-
human skin fibroblast
- FN
-
fibronectin
- PLL
-
poly-L-lysine
- SH
-
Src homology
- Tyr(P)
-
phosphotyrosine.
-
↵2K. Tachibana, T. Sato, N. D'Avirro, and C. Morimoto, unpublished results.











