Abstract
Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) is involved in cellular adhesion and also in the activation and development of hematopoietic cells. Syk activation induced by genomic rearrangement has been linked to certain T-cell lymphomas, and Syk inhibitors have been shown to prolong survival of patients with B-cell lineage malignancies. Syk is activated either by its interaction with a double-phosphorylated immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (pITAM), which induces rearrangements in the Syk structure, or by the phosphorylation of specific tyrosine residues. In addition to its immunoreceptor function, Syk is activated downstream of integrin pathways, and integrins bind to the same region in Syk as does pITAM. However, it is unknown whether integrins and pITAM use the same mechanism to activate Syk. Here, using purified Syk protein and fluorescence-based enzyme assay we investigated whether interaction of the integrin β3 cytoplasmic domain with the Syk regulatory domain causes changes in Syk activity similar to those induced by pITAM peptides. We observed no direct Syk activation by soluble integrin peptide, and integrin did not compete with pITAM-induced activation even though at high concentrations, the integrin cytoplasmic domain peptide competed with Syk's substrate. However, clustered integrin peptides induced Syk activation, presumably via a transphosphorylation mechanism. Moreover, the clustered integrins also activated a Syk variant in which tyrosines were replaced with phenylalanine (Y348F/Y352F), indicating that clustered integrin-induced Syk activation involved other phosphorylation sites. In conclusion, integrin cytoplasmic domains do not directly induce Syk conformational changes and do not activate Syk via the same mechanism as pITAM.
Highlights
Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) is involved in cellular adhesion and in the activation and development of hematopoietic cells
Syk has a C-terminal tyrosine kinase domain and an N-terminal regulatory domain formed by two Src homology 2 (SH2)3 domains connected by a flexible linker region called interdomain A (IA)
This indicates that Syk has an intrinsic autophosphorylation or transphosphorylation activity that can initiate protein activation by phosphorylation of specific tyrosines residues along the structure [14]
Summary
Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) is involved in cellular adhesion and in the activation and development of hematopoietic cells. Integrin cytoplasmic domains do not directly induce Syk conformational changes and do not activate Syk via the same mechanism as pITAM. A chromosomal translocation has been found in T-cell leukemias leading to fusion of interleukin 2 inducible T-cell kinase (ITK) and SYK genes and to an aberrantly active Syk kinase [6]. This fusion has been validated as an oncogenic driver in a mouse model [7]. Syk has a C-terminal tyrosine kinase domain and an N-terminal regulatory domain formed by two Src homology 2 (SH2) domains connected by a flexible linker region called interdomain A (IA). The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest with the contents of this article
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