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Dive into the research topics where Thomas E. Smithgall is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas E. Smithgall.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

SH3-mediated Hck Tyrosine Kinase Activation and Fibroblast Transformation by the Nef Protein of HIV-1

Scott D. Briggs; Mark Sharkey; Mario Stevenson; Thomas E. Smithgall

Tyrosine kinases of the Src family are regulated via their Src homology 2 (SH2) and SH3 domains. The Nef protein of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) has previously been shown to bind with high affinity and specificity in vitro to the SH3 domain of Hck, a Src family member expressed primarily in myeloid cells. However, the effect of Nef on Hck activity in living cells is unknown. Here we show that Rat-2 fibroblasts co-expressing Hck and Nef rapidly developed transformed foci, whereas control cells expressing either protein alone did not. Nef formed a stable complex with Hck and stimulated its tyrosine kinase activity in vivo. Mutagenesis of the Nef proline-rich motif essential for SH3 binding completely blocked complex formation, kinase activation, and transformation, indicating that the Nef SH3-binding function is required for its effects on Hck. These results provide direct evidence that SH3 engagement is sufficient to activate a Src family kinasein vivo and suggest that Hck may be activated by Nef in HIV-infected macrophages.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Oligomerization of the Fes Tyrosine Kinase EVIDENCE FOR A COILED-COIL DOMAIN IN THE UNIQUE N-TERMINAL REGION

Renee D. Read; Jack M. Lionberger; Thomas E. Smithgall

The c-fes proto-oncogene encodes a non-receptor tyrosine kinase (Fes) that has been implicated in cytokine receptor signal transduction and myeloid differentiation. Previous work from our laboratory has shown that Fes autophosphorylates via an intermolecular mechanism more commonly associated with growth factor receptor tyrosine kinases. Analysis of the Fes amino acid sequence with the COILS algorithm indicates that the N-terminal region of the protein has a very high probability of forming coiled-coil structures often associated with oligomeric proteins. These findings suggest that oligomerization may be a prerequisite for trans-autophosphorylation and activation of Fes. To establish whether the active form of Fes is oligomeric, we performed gel-filtration experiments with recombinant Fes and found that it eluted as a single symmetrical peak of approximately 500 kDa. No evidence of the monomeric, 93-kDa form of the protein was observed. Deletion of the unique N-terminal domain (amino acids 1–450, including the coiled-coil homology region) completely abolished the formation of oligomers. Furthermore, co-precipitation assays demonstrated that an immobilized glutathioneS-transferase fusion protein containing the Fes N-terminal region bound to full-length Fes but not to a mutant lacking the N-terminal region. Similarly, a recombinant Fes N-terminal domain protein was readily cross-linked in vitro, whereas the SH2 and kinase domains were refractory to cross-linking. Incubation of wild-type Fes with a kinase-inactive Fes mutant or with the isolated N-terminal region suppressed Fes autophosphorylation in vitro, suggesting that oligomerization may be essential for autophosphorylation of full-length Fes. The presence of an oligomerization function in the Fes family of tyrosine kinases suggests a novel mechanism for non-receptor protein-tyrosine kinase regulation.


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 1995

SH2 and SH3 domains: potential targets for anti-cancer drug design.

Thomas E. Smithgall

Protein-tyrosine kinases interact with a diverse group of signaling molecules that share common structural elements known as Src homology 2 and 3 (SH2 and SH3) domains. SH2 domains bind with high affinity to peptide sequences within target proteins that contain phosphorylated tyrosine residues, but have no affinity for the unphosphorylated sequence. This property allows activated tyrosine kinases to initiate signal transduction by recruiting downstream effectors with SH2 domains. SH3 domains also mediate protein-protein interaction. Target sequences for SH3 domains are rich in proline and hydrophobic amino acids, but do not require phosphorylation. SH2- and SH3-mediated protein-protein interactions are required for the transmission of proliferative signals initiated by tyrosine kinases (e.g., Ras activation or stimulation of phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase activity). Peptidomimetic ligands based on the sequence of target proteins for SH2 and SH3 domains may represent new lead compounds for the therapy of proliferative diseases that are dependent upon constitutively activated tyrosine kinases (e.g., BCR/ABL in chronic myelogenous and acute lymphocytic leukemias or HER-2/Neu in breast and ovarian cancer.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Autophosphorylation of the Fes tyrosine kinase. Evidence for an intermolecular mechanism involving two kinase domain tyrosine residues.

Jim A. Rogers; Renee D. Read; Jianze Li; Kristi L. Peters; Thomas E. Smithgall

The human c-fes proto-oncogene encodes a cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase (Fes) that is associated with multiple hematopoietic cytokine receptors. Fes tyrosine autophosphorylation sites may regulate kinase activity and recruit downstream signaling proteins with SH2 domains. To localize the Fes autophosphorylation sites, full-length Fes and deletion mutants lacking either the unique N-terminal or SH2 domain were autophosphorylated in vitro and analyzed by CNBr cleavage. Identical phosphopeptides of 10 and 4 kDa were produced with all three proteins, localizing the tyrosine autophosphorylation sites to the C-terminal kinase domain. Substitution of kinase domain tyrosine residues 713 or 811 with phenylalanine resulted in a loss of the 10- and 4-kDa phosphopeptides, respectively, identifying these tyrosines as in vitro autophosphorylation sites. CNBr cleavage analysis of Fes isolated from 32PO4-labeled 293T cells showed that Tyr-713 and Tyr-811 are also autophosphorylated in vivo. Mutagenesis of Tyr-713 reduced both autophosphorylation of Tyr-811 and transphosphorylation of Bcr, a recently identified Fes substrate, supporting a major regulatory role for Tyr-713. Wild-type Fes transphosphorylated a kinase-inactive Fes mutant on Tyr-713 and Tyr-811, suggesting that Fes autophosphorylation occurs via an intermolecular mechanism analogous to receptor tyrosine kinases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

SH2-Kinase Linker Mutations Release Hck Tyrosine Kinase and Transforming Activities in Rat-2 Fibroblasts

Scott D. Briggs; Thomas E. Smithgall

Biochemical and structural studies of Src and related kinases demonstrate that two intramolecular interactions suppress kinase activity. These interactions involve binding of the SH2 domain to a phosphotyrosine residue in the C-terminal tail and association of the SH3 domain with a polyproline type II helix formed by amino acids linking the SH2 and kinase domains. Recent studies have shown that high affinity interaction of the SH3 domain of Hck with the human immunodeficiency virus type I Nef protein activates Hck tyrosine kinase and biological activities, suggesting a mechanism that involves disruption of the SH3-linker interaction. To test the role of this interaction in the regulation of Hck kinase activity in living cells, we substituted alanines for prolines 225 and 228 in the linker region and observed that the resulting mutant (Hck-2PA) demonstrated strong transforming activity in a Rat-2 fibroblast focus-forming assay. Hck-2PA also exhibited elevated tyrosine kinase activity in terms of autophosphorylation, endogenous substrate phosphorylation, and in anin vitro kinase assay. The transforming and kinase activities of Hck-2PA were remarkably similar to those observed with a Hck mutant activated by Phe substitution of the conserved tail Tyr residue and with wild-type Hck following co-expression with human immunodeficiency virus Nef. Introduction of the 2PA and tail mutations into a single Hck expression construct did not increase kinase or transforming activity relative to the individual mutations. These data provide new evidence that SH3-linker interaction may represent the dominant mechanism controlling Hck tyrosine kinase activity in vivo.


Journal of Molecular Neuroscience | 1998

The role of neuroD as a differentiation factor in the mammalian retina

Iqbal Ahmad; Harsha R. Acharya; Jim A. Rogers; Annemarie Shibata; Thomas E. Smithgall; Constance M. Dooley

NeuroD, a vertebrate homolog of Drosophila atonal gene, plays an important role in the differentiation of neuronal precursors (Lee et al., 1995). We have investigated whether NeuroD subserves a similar function in mammalian retinal neurogenesis. Expression of NeuroD is detected in successive stages of retinal neurogenesis and is associated with a differentiating population of retinal cells. The association of NeuroD predominantly with postmitotic precursors in early as well as late neurogenesis suggests that NeuroD expression plays an important role in the terminal differentiation of retinal neurons. This notion is supported by observations that overexpression of NeuroD during late neurogenesis promotes premature differentiation of late-born neurons, rod photoreceptors, and bipolar cells, and that NeuroD can interact specifically with the E-box element in the proximal promoter of the phenotype-specific gene, opsin.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Fibroblast Transformation by Fps/Fes Tyrosine Kinases Requires Ras, Rac, and Cdc42 and Induces Extracellular Signal-regulated and c-Jun N-terminal Kinase Activation

Jianze Li; Thomas E. Smithgall

The small GTP-binding proteins Ras, Rac, and Cdc42 link protein-tyrosine kinases with mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling cascades. Ras controls the activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs), while Rac and Cdc42 regulate the c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs). In this study, we investigated whether small G protein/MAPK cascades contribute to signal transduction by transforming variants of c-Fes, a nonreceptor tyrosine kinase implicated in cytokine signaling and myeloid differentiation. First, we investigated the effects of dominant-negative small G proteins on Rat-2 fibroblast transformation by a retroviral homolog of c-Fes (v-Fps) and by c-Fes activated via N-terminal addition of the v-Src myristylation signal (Myr-Fes). We observed that dominant-negative Ras, Rac, and Cdc42 inhibited v-Fps- and Myr-Fes-induced growth of Rat-2 cells in soft agar, indicating that activation of these small GTP-binding proteins is required for fibroblast transformation by Fps/Fes tyrosine kinases. To determine whether MAPK pathways are activated downstream of these small G proteins, we measured ERK and JNK activity in the v-Fps- and Myr-Fes-transformed Rat-2 cells. Both ERK and JNK activities were elevated in the transformed cells, suggesting that these pathways are involved in cellular transformation. Dominant-negative mutants of Ras (but not Rac or Cdc42) specifically inhibited ERK activation by v-Fps and Myr-Fes, demonstrating that ERK activation occurs exclusively downstream of Ras. All three dominant-negative small G proteins inhibited JNK activation by v-Fps and Myr-Fes, indicating that JNK activation by these tyrosine kinases requires both Ras and Rho family GTPases. These data demonstrate that multiple small G protein/MAPK cascades are involved in downstream signal transduction by Fps/Fes tyrosine kinases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Co-expression with BCR Induces Activation of the FES Tyrosine Kinase and Phosphorylation of Specific N-terminal BCR Tyrosine Residues

Jianze Li; Thomas E. Smithgall

The human BCR gene encodes a protein with serine/threonine kinase activity and regulatory domains for the small G-proteins RAC and CDC42. Previous work in our laboratory has established that BCR is a substrate for c-FES, a non-receptor tyrosine kinase linked to myeloid growth and differentiation. Tyrosine phosphorylation led to the association of BCR with the RAS guanine nucleotide exchange complex GRB2-SOS in vivo via the GRB2 SH2 domain, linking BCR to RAS signaling (Maru, Y., Peters, K. L., Afar, D. E. H., Shibuya, M., Witte, O. N., and Smithgall, T. E. (1995) Mol. Cell. Biol. 15, 835-842). In the present study, we demonstrate that BCR Tyr-246 and at least one of the closely spaced tyrosine residues, Tyr-279, Tyr-283, and Tyr-289 (3Y cluster), are phosphorylated by FES both in vitro and in 32Pi-labeled cells. Mutagenesis of BCR Tyr-177 to Phe completely abolished FES-induced BCR binding to the GRB2 SH2 domain, identifying Tyr-177 as an additional phosphorylation site for FES. Co-expression of BCR and FES in human 293T cells stimulated the tyrosine autophosphorylation of FES. By contrast, tyrosine phosphorylation of BCR by FES suppressed BCR serine/threonine kinase activity toward the 14-3-3 protein and BCR substrate, BAP-1. These data show that tyrosine phosphorylation by FES affects the interaction of BCR with multiple signaling partners and suggest a general role for BCR in non-receptor protein-tyrosine kinase regulation and signal transduction.


Cellular Signalling | 1999

Tyrosine phosphorylation enhances the SH2 domain-binding activity of Bcr and inhibits Bcr interaction with 14-3-3 proteins.

Kristi L. Peters; Thomas E. Smithgall

The cellular Bcr protein consists of an N-terminal serine/threonine kinase domain, a central guanine nucleotide exchange factor homology region and a C-terminal GTPase-activating protein domain. Previous work in our laboratory established that Bcr is a major transformation-related substrate for the v-Fps tyrosine kinase, and tyrosine phosphorylation of Bcr induces Bcr-Grb-2/SOS association in vivo through the Src homology 2 (SH2) domain of Grb-2. In the present study, we mapped the region of Bcr tyrosine phosphorylation by c-Fes, the human homologue of v-Fps, to Bcr N-terminal amino acids 162-413 by using a baculovirus/Sf-9 cell co-expression system. Tyrosine phosphorylation of Bcr by Fes greatly enhanced the binding of Bcr to the SH2 domains of multiple signalling molecules in vitro, including Grb-2, Ras GTPase activating protein, phospholipase C-gamma, the 85,000 M(r) subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, and the Abl tyrosine kinase. In contrast with SH2 binding, tyrosine phosphorylation of Bcr reduced its ability to associate with the 14-3-3 protein Bap-1 (Bcr-associated protein-1), a Bcr substrate and member of a family of phosphoserine-binding adaptor proteins. These experiments provide in vitro evidence that tyrosine phosphorylation may modulate the interaction of Bcr with multiple growth-regulatory signalling pathways.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1996

Phosphorylation-dependent human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection and nuclear targeting of viral DNA

Alice G. Bukrinskaya; Anuja Ghorpade; Nina K. Heinzinger; Thomas E. Smithgall; Robert E. Lewis; Mario Stevenson

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Scott D. Briggs

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Jianze Li

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Jim A. Rogers

University of South Florida

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Jack M. Lionberger

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Kristi L. Peters

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Mario Stevenson

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Renee D. Read

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Richard Jove

City of Hope National Medical Center

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