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Fig. 1. Clustering chimeric receptors expressing wild-type integrin ß
cytoplasmic domains induces tyrosine phosphorylation of p130CAS and paxillin.
(A) Amino acid sequences of the homologous ß1 and ß3 cytoplasmic
domains, as well as the alternatively spliced form ß3B, expressed in the
context of chimeric receptors containing the extracellular and transmembrane
domains (TM) of the tac subunit of the IL-2 receptor (tac chimeras). The
ß4 cytoplasmic domain (not shown) is considerably larger and shares no
homology with other integrin ß cytoplasmic domains. (B) Transiently
transfected normal human fibroblasts expressing chimeras containing either the
ß1, ß3, ß3B or ß4 cytoplasmic domains, or expressing the
control receptor lacking a cytoplasmic domain (CR), were incubated in
clustering assays for 40 minutes. Lysates (10 µg/lane) were separated by
SDS-PAGE, western blotted for phosphotyrosine (upper panel) and reprobed for
p130CAS (lower panel). (C) In separate clustering experiments, p130CAS was
immunoprecipitated from 200 µg of lysates prepared from human fibroblasts
expressing either the control receptor (CR) or the tac-ß1 chimera.
Immunoprecipitates (IP) and 10 µg of cell lysates (lys) were separated by
SDS-PAGE, western blotted for phosphotyrosine (upper panel) and reprobed for
p130CAS and FAK (lower panels). (D) Similarly, paxillin was immunoprecipitated
from 300 µg of lysates prepared from REF52 cells expressing either the
control receptor (CR) or the tac-ß1 chimera. The IP and 10 µg of cell
lysates (lys) were separated by SDS-PAGE, western blotted for phosphotyrosine
(upper panel) and reprobed for paxillin (lower panel). P130, p130CAS; pax,
paxillin.
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