Abstract

ELK is a member of the Eph-related tyrosine kinase family that includes receptors signaling axonal guidance, neuronal bundling, and angiogenesis. We recently identified ELK expression in human renal microvascular endothelial cells and sought to identify intracellular proteins through which it signals responses. The cytoplasmic domain of ELK was used as "bait" in a yeast two-hybrid screen to identify interactive proteins expressed from a randomly primed embryonic murine library (E9.5-10.5). Among interactive products of 76 cDNAs characterized, 10 nonidentical, overlapping clones encoded the SH2 domain of the recently reported Grb10 adapter protein, and an additional 3 encoded Grb2. A self-phosphorylated recombinant, baculovirus-expressed GST-ELKcy fusion protein bound Grb10 and Grb2 from human renal microvascular endothelial cell extracts, while the unphosphorylated fusion form did not. Site-directed mutation identified Tyr-929 as a putative phosphorylation site required for Grb10, but not Grb2, interaction in yeast and recombinant protein assays. The ELK ligand, LERK-2/Fc, stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of ELK, and recruitment of Grb10 and Grb2 to endothelial ELK receptors recovered by wheat germ agglutinin lectin and immunoprecipitation. These findings define ligand-activated interaction between ELK and the SH2 domains of Grb2 and the newly identified Grb10 protein that shares homology with a Caenorhabditis elegans gene product implicated in neural cell migration.

Highlights

  • Members of the Eph-related receptor tyrosine kinase family have been assigned important roles in signaling axonal guidance, neuronal bundling, and, more recently, angiogenesis [1,2,3,4]

  • Interaction Screening of an Embryonic Mouse Library with the Cytoplasmic Domain of ELK (ELKcy)—To identify ELK-interactive protein (EIP) expressed in an embryonic (E9.5–10.5) murine library [15], we utilized a yeast two-hybrid system

  • The yeast reporter strain L40 was initially transformed with the pLexA-ELKcy sequences encoding the entire ELK cytoplasmic domain (ELKcybait) protein fused to the LexA DNA-binding domain (LexBD)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Members of the Eph-related receptor tyrosine kinase family have been assigned important roles in signaling axonal guidance, neuronal bundling, and, more recently, angiogenesis [1,2,3,4]. Two-hybrid Screen—The yeast reporter strain L40, containing the reporter genes lacZ and HIS3 downstream of a LexA promoter, was sequentially transformed with the pLexA-ELKcy (or derivative) plasmids, with a cDNA library encoding VP16 (transcription activation domain) fusions with peptide sequences expressed in murine embryos (E9.5–10.5), using the lithium acetate method [19, 20].

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call