An oncogenic point mutation confers high affinity ligand binding to the neu receptor. Implications for the generation of site heterogeneity
The neu protooncogene encodes a receptor tyrosine kinase homologous to the receptor for the epidermal growth factor. The oncogenic potential of neu is released upon chemical carcinogenesis, which replaces a glutamic acid for a valine residue, within the single transmembrane domain. This results in c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1992-08, Vol.267 (24), p.17304-17313 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The neu protooncogene encodes a receptor tyrosine kinase homologous to the receptor for the epidermal growth factor. The oncogenic
potential of neu is released upon chemical carcinogenesis, which replaces a glutamic acid for a valine residue, within the
single transmembrane domain. This results in constitutive receptor dimerization and activation of the intrinsic catalytic
function. To study the implications of the oncogenic mutation and the consequent receptor dimerization on the interaction
with the yet incompletely characterized ligand of p185neu, we constructed chimeric proteins between the ligand binding domain
of the epidermal growth factor receptor and the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains of the normal or the transforming Neu
proteins. The chimeric receptors displayed cellular and biochemical differences characteristic of the normal and the transforming
Neu proteins and therefore may reliably represent the ligand binding functions of the two receptor forms. Analyses of ligand
binding revealed qualitative and quantitative differences that were a result of the single mutation; whereas the normal chimera
(valine version) displayed two populations of binding sites with approximately 90% of the receptors in the low affinity state,
the transforming receptor (glutamic acid version) showed a single population of binding sites with relatively high affinity.
Kinetics measurements indicated that the difference in affinities was because of slower rates of both ligand association and
ligand dissociation from the constitutively dimerized mutant receptor. It therefore appears that the oncogenic mutation, by
permanently dimerizing the receptor, establishes a high affinity ligand binding state which is functionally equivalent to
the ligand-occupied normal receptor. Our conclusion is further supported by the rates of endocytosis of the wild-type and
the mutant receptor. Hence, these results provide the first experimental evidence from living cells which supports a model
that attributes the heterogeneity of ligand binding sites to the state of oligomerization of receptor tyrosine kinases. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0021-9258(18)41926-6 |