The Role of v-Fgr Myristoylation and the Gag Domain in Membrane Binding and Cellular Transformation

  • Baker, Stacey J.
  • Cosenza, Stephen C.
  • Reddy, E.Premkumar
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Publication date
September 1998
Publisher
Academic Press.
ISSN
0042-6822
Citation count (estimate)
6

Abstract

AbstractThev-fgroncogene encodes a chimeric oncoprotein composed of feline sarcoma virus (FeSV)-derived gag and cellular-derived actin and c-Fgr sequences. v-Fgr is myristoylated and membrane bound, two criteria which must be met forsrckinases to induce cellular transformation. Although inhibition of myristoylation resulted in a decreased ability of v-Fgr to sediment with membranes from an NIH-3T3 P100 fraction, deletion of the gag domain caused nearly all of the protein to remain unbound and cytosolic. Systematic deletions within gag indicate that while amino acids 3 through 9 are critical determinants of myristoylation and/or define a domain which directs membrane localization, these residues cooperate with additional gag sequences when a...

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