Abstract

The Crk family of adaptor proteins participate in diverse signaling pathways that regulate growth factor-induced proliferation, anchorage-dependent DNA synthesis, and cytoskeletal reorganization, important for cell adhesion and motility. Using kidney epithelial 293T cells for transient co-transfection studies and the nerve growth factor (NGF)-responsive PC12 cell line as a model system for neuronal morphogenesis, we demonstrate that the non-receptor tyrosine kinase c-Abl is an intermediary for NGF-inducible c-Crk II phosphorylation on the negative regulatory Tyr(222). Transient expression of a c-Crk II Tyr(222) point mutant (c-Crk Y222F) in 293T cells induces hyperphosphorylation of paxillin on Tyr(31) and enhances complex formation between c-Crk Y222F and paxillin as well as c-Crk Y222F and c-Abl, suggesting that c-Crk II Tyr(222) phosphorylation induces both the dissociation of the Crk SH2 domain from paxillin and the Crk SH3 domain from c-Abl. Interestingly, examination of the early kinetics of NGF stimulation in PC12 cells showed that c-Crk II Tyr(222) phosphorylation preceded paxillin Tyr(31) phosphorylation, followed by a transient initial dissociation of the c-Crk II paxillin complex. PC12 cells overexpressing c-Crk Y222F manifested a defect in cellular adhesion and neuritogenesis that led to detachment of cells from the extracellular matrix, thus demonstrating the biological significance of c-Crk II tyrosine phosphorylation in NGF-dependent morphogenesis. Whereas previous studies have shown that Crk SH2 binding to paxillin is critical for cell adhesion and migration, our data show that the phosphorylation cycle of c-Crk II determines its dynamic interaction with paxillin, thereby regulating turnover of multiprotein complexes, a critical aspect of cytoskeletal plasticity and actin dynamics.

Highlights

  • The Crk adaptor proteins, first described as the product of an avian oncogene, v-crk, contain Src homology 2 (SH2)1 and SH3 domains that serve as binding sites for a diverse set of signaling proteins [1,2,3]

  • We have investigated the role of Tyr222 phosphorylation in the c-Crk II adaptor protein and found that c-Crk II phosphorylation is critical for normal cytoskeletal signaling and cellular adhesion

  • Overexpression of c-Crk Y222F in cells stabilized an association between c-Crk II and paxillin and c-Abl, resulting in persistent complex formation of these proteins and hyperphosphorylation of paxillin and led to a defect in cell adhesion and neuritogenesis in PC12 cells

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Summary

Introduction

The Crk adaptor proteins, first described as the product of an avian oncogene, v-crk, contain Src homology 2 (SH2)1 and SH3 domains that serve as binding sites for a diverse set of signaling proteins [1,2,3]. To determine whether NGF-inducible paxillin tyrosine phosphorylation is dependent on c-Abl, FLAG-tagged paxillin and TrkA were transiently co-expressed with either wild-type c-Abl or the kinase-deficient mutant K290M c-Abl (Fig. 2B).

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