|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Tyrosine phosphorylated c-Cbl regulates platelet functional responses mediated by outside-in signaling.

First Author  Buitrago L Year  2011
Journal  Blood Volume  118
Issue  20 Pages  5631-40
PubMed ID  21967979 Mgi Jnum  J:178858
Mgi Id  MGI:5300424 Doi  10.1182/blood-2011-01-328807
Citation  Buitrago L, et al. (2011) Tyrosine phosphorylated c-Cbl regulates platelet functional responses mediated by outside-in signaling. Blood 118(20):5631-40
abstractText  c-Cbl protein functions as an E3 ligase and scaffolding protein, where 3 residues, Y700, Y731, and Y774, upon phosphorylation, have been shown to initiate several signaling cascades. In this study, we investigated the role of these phospho-tyrosine residues in the platelet functional responses after integrin engagement. We observed that c-Cbl Y700, Y731 and Y774 undergo phosphorylation upon platelet adhesion to immobilized fibrinogen, which was inhibited in the presence of PP2, a pan-src family kinase (SFK) inhibitor, suggesting that c-Cbl is phosphorylated downstream of SFKs. However, OXSI-2, a Syk inhibitor, significantly reduced c-Cbl phosphorylation at residues Y774 and Y700, without affecting Y731 phosphorylation. Interestingly, PP2 inhibited both platelet-spreading on fibrinogen as well as clot retraction, whereas OXSI-2 blocked only platelet-spreading, suggesting a differential role of these tyrosine residues. The physiologic role of c-Cbl and Y731 was studied using platelets from c-Cbl KO and c-Cbl(YF/YF) knock-in mice. c-Cbl KO and c-Cbl(YF/YF) platelets had a significantly reduced spreading over immobilized fibrinogen. Furthermore, clot retraction with c-Cbl KO and c-Cbl(YF/YF) platelets was drastically delayed. These results indicate that c-Cbl and particularly its phosphorylated residue Y731 plays an important role in platelet outside-in signaling contributing to platelet-spreading and clot retraction.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

5 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression