CATALYTIC AND NONCATALYTIC DOMAINS OF THE FUJINAMI SARCOMA-VIRUS P130GAG-FPS PROTEIN-TYROSINE KINASE DISTINGUISHED BY THE EXPRESSION OF V-FPS POLYPEPTIDES IN ESCHERICHIA-COLI
- 1 May 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 1 (2) , 181-191
Abstract
While protein-tyrosine kinases share a region of sequence identity corresponding to their kinase domains, the specific elements essential for catalysis, substrate binding and substrate specificity are largely undefined. The P130gag-fps transforming protein of Fujinami avian sarcoma virus is a cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase with a complex structure that includes a C-terminal kinase domain. To identify the precise N-terminal border of the v-fps catalytic region and to assess its interactions with non-catalytic domains, C-terminal v-fps polypeptide fragments of decreasing size were expressed in E. coli as trpE-v-fps hybrid proteins. All such polypeptides containing 263 or more residues derived from the C-terminus of P130gag-fps (i.e. residues 920-1182) were enzymatically active as tyrosine kinases. They autophosphorylated at physiological sites in vivo and phosphorylated exogenous substrates such as enolase and poly(glu,tyr) at tyrosine in vitro. Deletion of a further five amino acids from P130gag-fps residues 920-925 abolished all enzymatic activity. This deletion coincides with the predicted N-terminus of the v-fps ATP-binding site at residue 922. These data indicate that the N-terminal border of the ATP-binding site defines the start of the minimal v-fps tyrosine kinase catalytic domain, and show that this minimal domain is competent to bind substrates. More N-terminal non-catalytic sequences appear to functionally interact with the catalytic domain.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tyr 527 Is Phosphorylated in pp60
c-
src
: Implications for RegulationScience, 1986
- Mutagenesis of Fujinami Sarcoma Virus: Evidence that tyrosine phosphorylation of P130gag-fps modulates its biological activityCell, 1984
- Nucleotide sequence of Fujinami sarcoma virus: evolutionary relationship of its transforming gene with transforming genes of other sarcoma virusesCell, 1982