QM, a putative tumor suppressor, regulates proto-oncogene c-yes.

Article Details

Citation

Oh HS, Kwon H, Sun SK, Yang CH

QM, a putative tumor suppressor, regulates proto-oncogene c-yes.

J Biol Chem. 2002 Sep 27;277(39):36489-98. Epub 2002 Jul 22.

PubMed ID
12138090 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The QM gene encodes a 24.5 kDa ribosomal protein L10 known to be highly homologous to a Jun-binding protein (Jif-1), which inhibits the formation of Jun-Jun dimers. Here we have carried out screening with the c-Yes protein and found that a QM homologous protein showed interactions with c-Yes and other Src family members. We have found that two different regions of QM protein were associated with the SH3 domain of c-Yes. The QM protein does not contain canonical SH3 binding motifs or previously reported amino acid fragments showing interaction with SH3 domains. Several c-Yes kinase activity assays indicated that the QM protein reduced c-Yes kinase activity by 70% and that this suppression is related not only to the two SH3 binding regions but also to the C-terminal region of QM. Moreover, our autophosphorylation assays clarified that this regulation resulted from the inhibition of c-Yes autophosphorylation. Immunofluorescence studies showed that the QM proteins and c-Yes are able to interact in various tumor cell lines in vivo. The increases of the c-Yes protein and mRNA levels were detected when the QM was transfected. These results suggest that the QM protein might be a regulator for various signal transduction pathways involving SH3 domain-containing membrane proteins.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
60S ribosomal protein L10P27635Details