Author
Listed:
- Wuyi Meng
(Departments of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology and Cancer Biology)
- Sansana Sawasdikosol
(Harvard Medical School, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
- Steven J. Burakoff
(Harvard Medical School, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
- Michael J. Eck
(Departments of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology and Cancer Biology)
Abstract
Cbl is an adaptor protein that functions as a negative regulator of many signalling pathways that start from receptors at the cell surface1,2,3,4. The evolutionarily conserved amino-terminal region of Cbl (Cbl-N) binds to phosphorylated tyrosine residues and has cell-transforming activity. Point mutations in Cbl that disrupt its recognition of phosphotyrosine also interfere with its negative regulatory function and, in the case of v-cbl, with its oncogenic potential5. In T cells, Cbl-N binds to the tyrosine-phosphorylated inhibitory site of the protein tyrosine kinase ZAP-706. Here we describe the crystal structure of Cbl-N, both alone and in complex with a phosphopeptide that represents its binding site in ZAP-70. The structures show that Cbl-N is composed of three interacting domains: a four-helix bundle (4H), an EF-hand7 calcium-binding domain, and a divergent SH2 domain8 that was not recognizable from the amino-acid sequence of the protein. The calcium-bound EF hand wedges between the 4H and SH2 domains and roughly determines their relative orientation. In the ligand-occupied structure, the 4H domain packs against the SH2 domain and completes its phosphotyrosine-recognition pocket. Disruption of this binding to ZAP-70 as a result of structure-based mutations in the 4H, EF-hand and SH2 domains confirms that the three domains together form an integrated phosphoprotein-recognition module.
Suggested Citation
Wuyi Meng & Sansana Sawasdikosol & Steven J. Burakoff & Michael J. Eck, 1999.
"Structure of the amino-terminal domain of Cbl complexed to its binding site on ZAP-70 kinase,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 398(6722), pages 84-90, March.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:398:y:1999:i:6722:d:10.1038_18050
DOI: 10.1038/18050
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