The Dominant W42 Spotting Phenotype Results from a Missense Mutation in the c-kit Receptor Kinase

JC Tan, K Nocka, P Ray, P Traktman, P Besmer - Science, 1990 - science.org
JC Tan, K Nocka, P Ray, P Traktman, P Besmer
Science, 1990science.org
The murine white spotting locus (W) is allelic with the proto-oncogene c-kit, which encodes a
transmembrane tyrosine protein kinase receptor for an unknown ligand. Mutations at the W
locus affect various aspects of hematopoiesis and the proliferation and migration of
primordial germ cells and melanoblasts during development to varying degrees of severity.
The W 42 mutation has a particularly severe effect in both the homozygous and the
heterozygous states. The molecular basis of the W 42 mutation was determined. The c-kit …
The murine white spotting locus (W) is allelic with the proto-oncogene c-kit, which encodes a transmembrane tyrosine protein kinase receptor for an unknown ligand. Mutations at the W locus affect various aspects of hematopoiesis and the proliferation and migration of primordial germ cells and melanoblasts during development to varying degrees of severity. The W42 mutation has a particularly severe effect in both the homozygous and the heterozygous states. The molecular basis of the W42 mutation was determined. The c-kit protein products in homozygous mutant mast cells were expressed normally but displayed a defective tyrosine kinase activity in vitro. Nucleotide sequence analysis of mutant complementary DNAs revealed a missense mutation that replaces aspartic acid with asparagine at position 790 in the c-kit protein product. Aspartic acid-790 is a conserved residue in all protein kinases. These results provide an explanation for the dominant nature of the W42 mutation and provide insight into the mechanism of c-kit-mediated signal transduction.
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