| Literature DB >> 27686861 |
Yoko Shigeno-Nakazawa1, Takuma Kasai2, Sewon Ki3, Elina Kostyanovskaya1, Jana Pawlak1, Junya Yamagishi4, Noriaki Okimoto4, Makoto Taiji4, Mariko Okada3, Jody Westbrook5, Yoko Satta6, Takanori Kigawa2, Akira Imamoto1.
Abstract
CRK and CRKL adapter proteins play essential roles in development and cancer through their SRC homology 2 and 3 (SH2 and SH3) domains. To gain insight into the origin of their shared functions, we have investigated their evolutionary history. We propose a term, crk/crkl ancestral (crka), for orthologs in invertebrates before the divergence of CRK and CRKL in the vertebrate ancestor. We have isolated two orthologs expressed in the choanoflagellate Monosiga brevicollis, a unicellular relative to the metazoans. Consistent with its highly-conserved three-dimensional structure, the SH2 domain of M. brevicollis crka1 can bind to the mammalian CRK/CRKL SH2 binding consensus phospho-YxxP, and to the SRC substrate/focal adhesion protein BCAR1 (p130CAS) in the presence of activated SRC. These results demonstrate an ancient origin of the CRK/CRKL SH2-target recognition specificity. Although BCAR1 orthologs exist only in metazoans as identified by an N-terminal SH3 domain, YxxP motifs, and a C-terminal FAT-like domain, some pre-metazoan transmembrane proteins include several YxxP repeats in their cytosolic region, suggesting that they are remotely related to the BCAR1 substrate domain. Since the tyrosine kinase SRC also has a pre-metazoan origin, co-option of BCAR1-related sequences may have rewired the crka-dependent network to mediate adhesion signals in the metazoan ancestor.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27686861 PMCID: PMC5043372 DOI: 10.1038/srep34349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379