Article
- The EMBO Journal (1999) 18, 1748 - 1760
- doi:10.1093/emboj/18.7.1748
Tyrosine phosphorylation of p62Dok induced by cell adhesion and insulin: possible role in cell migration
Tetsuya Noguchi1, Takashi Matozaki2, Kenjiro Inagaki1, Masahiro Tsuda1, Kaoru Fukunaga1, Yukari Kitamura1, Tadahiro Kitamura1, Kozui Shii3, Yuji Yamanashi4 and Masato Kasuga1
- Second Department of Internal Medicine, Kobe University School of Medicine, Kusunoki-cho, Chuo-ku, Kobe 650-0017, Japan
- Present address: Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Osaka University Medical School, Suita 565-0871, Japan
- Hyogo Institute of Clinical Research, 13-70 Kitaohji-cho, Akashi 673-0021, Japan
- Department of Oncology, Institute of Medical Science, University of Tokyo, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108-8639, Japan
Correspondence to:
Takashi Matozaki, E-mail: matozaki@molbio.med.osaka-u.ac.jp
Received 21 October 1998; Accepted 18 February 1999; Revised 18 February 1999
Abstract
Dok, a 62-kDa Ras GTPase-activating protein (rasGAP)-associated phosphotyrosyl protein, is thought to act as a multiple docking protein downstream of receptor or non-receptor tyrosine kinases. Cell adhesion to extracellular matrix proteins induced marked tyrosine phosphorylation of Dok. This adhesion-dependent phosphorylation of Dok was mediated, at least in part, by Src family tyrosine kinases. The maximal insulin-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of Dok required a Src family kinase. A mutant Dok (Dok
PH) that lacked its pleckstrin homology domain failed to undergo tyrosine phosphorylation in response to cell adhesion or insulin. Furthermore, unlike the wild-type protein, Dok
PH did not localize to subcellular membrane components. Insulin promoted the association of tyrosine-phosphorylated Dok with the adapter protein NCK and rasGAP. In contrast, a mutant Dok (DokY361F), in which Tyr361 was replaced by phenylalanine, failed to bind NCK but partially retained the ability to bind rasGAP in response to insulin. Overexpression of wild-type Dok, but not that of Dok
PH or DokY361F, enhanced the cell migratory response to insulin without affecting insulin activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase. These results identify Dok as a signal transducer that potentially links, through its interaction with NCK or rasGAP, cell adhesion and insulin receptors to the machinery that controls cell motility.
Keywords:
- cell adhesion,
- cell migration,
- Dok,
- insulin



