A ligand-inducible anaplastic lymphoma kinase chimera is endocytosis impaired

2004 
Ligand-induced membrane trafficking of the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) was studied using a chimeric receptor in which the extracellular and transmembrane domain of ALK was substituted for the corresponding regions of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Wild-type EGFR, EGFR/ALK and an EGFR/ALK kinase negative mutant were independently expressed in mouse NR6 fibroblasts. The capacity of EGFR/ALK to mediate [ 125 I]-EGFinternalization, receptor degradation and downregulation, which has never been previously described, was assayed. The rate of [ 125 I]-EGF-induced internalization mediated by the cytoplasmic domain of ALK was reduced several fold compared with the wildtype EGFR. The low rate of EGF internalization promoted by EGFR/ALK correlated with an impaired degradation and downregulation of the receptor and indicate that ALK is not subject to traditional mechanisms used to regulate receptor tyrosine kinase function. Accordingly, ALK-activated intracellular domain does not associate in vivo with c-cbl and does not undergo ligand-mediated ubiquitination. The current study provides new insight into the function and regulation of ALK suggesting that the relative long membrane residence of activated ALK might confers a more potent and prolonged signaling activity. Indeed NR6-EGFR/ALK cells exhibited a B3-fold increase in a maximal mitogenic response than NR6-EGFR.
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