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      p130Cas mediates the transforming properties of the anaplastic lymphoma kinase.

      Blood
      Animals, Cell Line, Cell Movement, physiology, Cell Transformation, Neoplastic, metabolism, Crk-Associated Substrate Protein, Cytoskeleton, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Humans, Immunoblotting, Immunoprecipitation, Lymphoma, Large B-Cell, Diffuse, Mass Spectrometry, Mice, Oncogene Proteins, Fusion, Phosphorylation, Protein-Tyrosine Kinases, Receptor Protein-Tyrosine Kinases, Tumor Cells, Cultured

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          Abstract

          Translocations of the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) gene have been described in anaplastic large-cell lymphomas (ALCLs) and in stromal tumors. The most frequent translocation, t(2;5), generates the fusion protein nucleophosmin (NPM)-ALK with intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity. Along with transformation, NPM-ALK induces morphologic changes in fibroblasts and lymphoid cells, suggesting a direct role of ALK in cell shaping. In this study, we used a mass-spectrometry-based proteomic approach to search for proteins involved in cytoskeleton remodeling and identified p130Cas (p130 Crk-associated substrate) as a novel interactor of NPM-ALK. In 293 cells and in fibroblasts as well as in human ALK-positive lymphoma cell lines, NPM-ALK was able to bind p130Cas and to induce its phosphorylation. Both of the effects were dependent on ALK kinase activity and on the adaptor protein growth factor receptor-bound protein 2 (Grb2), since no binding or phosphorylation was found with the kinase-dead mutant NPM-ALK(K210R) or in the presence of a Grb2 dominant-negative protein. Phosphorylation of p130Cas by NPM-ALK was partially independent from Src (tyrosine kinase pp60c-src) kinase activity, as it was still detectable in Syf-/- cells. Finally, p130Cas-/- (also known as Bcar1-/-) fibroblasts expressing NPM-ALK showed impaired actin filament depolymerization and were no longer transformed compared with wild-type cells, indicating an essential role of p130Cas activation in ALK-mediated transformation.

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