Crkl is the major tyrosine-phosphorylated protein in neutrophils from patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia

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Abstract

The Philadelphia chromosome (Ph1), detected in virtually all cases of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), is formed by a reciprocal translocation between chromosome 9 and 22 that fuses Bcr-encoded sequences upstream of exon 2 of c-Abl. This oncogene produces a fusion protein, p210(bcr-abl), in which the Abl tyrosine kinase activity is elevated. Using anti-phosphotyrosine immunoblotting, we have compared the pattern of phosphotyrosine-containing proteins from freshly prepared neutrophils of patients in the stable phase of CML to normal controls. The only consistent difference was the presence of a 39-kDa tyrosine-phosphorylated protein in 18 out of 18 neutrophil samples from CML patients that was not seen in normal controls. This same protein, as assessed by two-dimensional anti-phosphotyrosine immunoblotting, was also present in cell lines expressing p210(bcr-abl), including K562 cells. Using K562 cells as a source of protein, the 39-kDa protein was purified and identified by microsequencing as Crkl, an SH2/SH3 adaptor protein related to the crk oncogene of the avian sarcoma virus, CT10. A direct interaction between Crkl and Abl has also been shown using a yeast two-hybrid screen.

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Oda, T., Heaney, C., Hagopian, J. R., Okuda, K., Griffin, J. D., & Druker, B. J. (1994). Crkl is the major tyrosine-phosphorylated protein in neutrophils from patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 269(37), 22925–22928. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0021-9258(17)31596-x

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