Abstract

Signaling by either the type α or type β receptors of platelet-derived growth factor occurs by phosphorylation of at least 10 intra-cytoplasmic tyrosine residues and their subsequent association of secondary signaling molecules with Src homology 2 (SH2) domains. Although the role of several of these secondary signaling molecules in mitogenesis has become increasingly clear, their roles in morphological transformation are not as well defined. Here we present evidence that the SHP-2 phosphatase which associates with Tyr 1009 of the type β receptor and Tyr 720 of the type α receptor may suppress transformation induced by the PDGF B chain. Cotransfection of a dominant negative mutant of the SHP-2 gene and the PDGF B chain gene into mouse fibroblasts that only poorly formed foci with the PDGF B chain alone resulted in larger and more prominent foci. Furthermore, introduction of a wild-type copy of the SHP-2 gene into a tumor cell line, U-87MG, which relies on PDGF expression to form foci in vitro, caused a reversion of phenotype.

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