These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: The use of Rous sarcoma virus transformation mutants with differing tyrosine kinase activities to study the relationships between vinculin phosphorylation, pp60v-src location and adhesion plaque integrity. Author: Kellie S, Patel B, Wigglesworth NM, Critchley DR, Wyke JA. Journal: Exp Cell Res; 1986 Jul; 165(1):216-28. PubMed ID: 3011478. Abstract: Tyrosine-specific phosphorylation of cellular proteins has been implicated in the neoplastic transformation of cells by Rous sarcoma virus (RSV). One of the putative substrates for the src gene product (pp60v-src) of RSV is the cytoskeletal protein vinculin, giving rise to the hypothesis that tyrosine-specific phosphorylation of vinculin disrupts adhesion plaque integrity, leading to the characteristic rounded morphology of RSV-transformed cells. We have investigated this hypothesis by analysing the properties of fibroblasts transformed by conditional and non-conditional mutants of RSV which confer different morphologies on infected cells, with respect to formation of microfilament bundles, formation of vinculin-containing adhesion plaques, the deposition of a fibronectin-containing extracellular matrix, the localization of pp60v-src and the tyrosine-specific phosphorylation of vinculin. Cells transformed by the temperature-sensitive (ts) RSV mutant LA32 cultured at 41 degrees C were morphologically normal, and contained prominent microfilament bundles and well-developed adhesion plaques. However, these cells had a fully active pp60v-src kinase, had pp60v-src concentrated in their adhesion plaques and contained vinculin which was heavily phosphorylated on tyrosine residues. Cells transformed by a recovered avian sarcoma virus, rASV 2234.3 exhibited a markedly fusiform morphology with pp60v-src concentrated in well-developed adhesion plaques and an elevation of the phosphotyrosine content of vinculin. Cells transformed by LA32 at restrictive temperature comprise morphologically normal cells, indistinguishable from untransformed CEF, yet which contain tyrosine-phosphorylated vinculin and suggest that neither tyrosine-specific phosphorylation of vinculin nor pp60v-src concentration in adhesion plaques is sufficient for the rounded morphology of RSV-transformed cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]