RSC Publishing


Publishing

 

Cover image for Molecular BioSystems, select for current issue

Molecular BioSystems

Research at the interface between chemistry and the -omic sciences and systems biology.



Subscribers

  • PDF
  • HTML article

Non-subscribers

Free access



Paper

Mol. BioSyst., 2008, 4, 643 - 653, DOI: 10.1039/b801018h


A quantitative study of the recruitment potential of all intracellular tyrosine residues on EGFR, FGFR1 and IGF1R

Alexis Kaushansky, Andrew Gordus, Bryan Chang, John Rush and Gavin MacBeath


Receptor tyrosine kinases transmit and process extracellular cues by recruiting intracellular signaling proteins to sites of tyrosine phosphorylation. Using protein microarrays comprising virtually every human SH2 and PTB domain, we generated quantitative protein interaction maps for three well-studied receptors—EGFR, FGFR1 and IGF1R—using phosphopeptides derived from every intracellular tyrosine residue on each receptor, regardless of whether or not they are phosphorylated in vivo. We found that, in general, peptides derived from physiological sites of tyrosine phosphorylation bind to substantially more SH2 or PTB domains than do peptides derived from nonphysiological sites, supporting the idea that kinases and interaction domains co-evolve and suggesting that new sites arise predominantly through selection favoring advantageous interactions, rather than through selection disfavoring unwanted interactions. We also found substantial qualitative overlap in the recruitment profiles of these three receptors, suggesting that their different biological effects arise, at least in part, from quantitative differences in their affinities for the proteins they recruit.

Graphical abstract image for this article  (ID: b801018h)