©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Different Effects on Mitogenesis and Transformation of a Mutation at Tyrosine 1251 of the Insulin-like Growth Factor I Receptor (*)

(Received for publication, March 23, 1995; and in revised form, July 7, 1995)

Masahiko Miura Ewa Surmacz Jean-Luc Burgaud Renato Baserga (§)

From the Jefferson Cancer Center, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107

ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES

ABSTRACT

The wild type insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) receptor has both mitogenic and transforming activities. We have examined the effect of point mutations at tyrosine residues 1250 and 1251 on these two properties of the receptor. For this purpose, we stably transfected plasmids expressing mutant and wild type receptors into R cells, which are 3T3-like cells, derived from mouse embryos with a targeted disruption of the IGF-I receptor genes, and therefore devoid of endogenous IGF-I receptors. A tyrosine to phenylalanine mutation of either the 1250 or 1251 residue, or both, has no effect on the ability of the receptor to transmit a mitogenic signal. However, the tyrosine 1251 mutant receptor and the double mutant have lost the ability to transform R cells (colony formation in soft agar), even when the receptors are expressed at very high levels, while the Y1250F mutant is fully transforming. These experiments show that the 1251 tyrosine residue is required for the transforming activity of the IGF-I receptor.


INTRODUCTION

Overexpression and constitutive activation of the insulin-like growth factor I receptor (IGF-IR) (^1)in a variety of cell types leads to ligand-dependent growth in serum-free medium and to the establishment of a transformed phenotype (Kaleko et al., 1990; McCubrey et al., 1991; Liu et al., 1993a; Sell et al., 1994; Coppola et al., 1994). Conversely, 3T3-like mouse embryo cells with a targeted disruption of the IGF-IR genes (Liu et al., 1993b; Baker et al., 1993) are refractory to transformation by SV40 large T antigen, an activated Ras or a combination of both, that readily transform cells from wild type littermate embryos or other 3T3-like cells (Sell et al., 1993, 1994). The important role of the IGF-IR in the establishment and maintenance of the transformed phenotype is also supported by other findings, indicating that antisense oligodeoxynucleotides or antisense expression plasmids against IGF-II (Christophori et al., 1994), IGF-I (Trojan et al., 1992, 1993), or the IGF-I receptor (Sell et al., 1993; Baserga et al., 1994; Resnicoff et al., 1994a and 1994b), antibodies to the IGF-IR (Arteaga, 1992; Kalebic et al., 1992), and dominant negative mutants of the IGF-IR (Prager et al., 1994; Li et al., 1994), can all reverse the transformed phenotype, inhibit tumorigenesis, and induce loss of the metastatic phenotype (Long et al., 1995).

Our laboratory has been investigating the role that various tyrosine residues of the IGF-IR have on two of its properties, mitogenic activity and ability to transform mouse embryo cells, using R cells (Sell et al., 1993, 1994; Coppola et al., 1994) established by a 3T3-like protocol from mouse embryos with a targeted disruption of the IGF-IR genes (Liu et al. 1993b, Baker et al. 1993). The absence of an endogenous background of IGF-IRs in these cells facilitates a mutational analysis. R cells grow in 10% serum, albeit at a reduced rate in comparison with cells from wild type littermate embryos (W cells), fail to grow in serum-free medium (SFM) supplemented with the growth factors that sustain the growth of other 3T3-like cells (Sell et al., 1994; Valentinis et al., 1994), and, as mentioned above, cannot be transformed by SV40 T antigen and/or an activated and overexpressed Ras. The growth phenotype of R cells, including their resistance to transformation, returns to normal (i.e. like W cells or other 3T3-like cells) when they are stably transfected with a plasmid expressing a wild type human IGF-IR cDNA (Ullrich et al., 1986) but not when transfected with a human receptor with a point mutation at the ATP-binding site (Sell et al., 1994; Coppola et al., 1994). Liu et al. (1993a) have previously reported that C-terminal truncations of a constitutively activated Gag-IGF-IR hybrid construct affected its transforming activity. This was confirmed in a more rigorous way and extended by our own findings that a human IGF-IR lacking the C-terminal 108 amino acids (Surmacz et al. 1995) and an overexpressed insulin receptor (see below) cannot transform R cells. We therefore investigated in the present paper the mitogenic and transforming activities of the IGF-IR with point mutations at tyrosine residues 1250 and 1251 that are absent in the IR (Ullrich et al., 1986). Our principal aim was to determine whether these two tyrosine residues are necessary for mitogenesis and transformation of R cells. A secondary aim was to determine other properties of the mutant receptors, such as ability to phosphorylate cellular substrates in vivo.

We show that a receptor with a mutation at Tyr-1251, but not at Tyr-1250, cannot transform R cells, while both mutant receptors are fully mitogenic. Several indications suggest that this preservation of a mitogenic response with loss of transforming activity is not simply due to a quantitative deficit of the Y1251F mutant receptor. The identification of a receptor mutant that is fully mitogenic but nontransforming opens the possibility of identifying new transformation pathways that can be separated from the mitogenic pathways.


MATERIALS AND METHODS

Mutagenesis of Human IGF-IR cDNA

The Tyr-1250, Tyr-1251, and double tyrosine mutants were derived from the wild type human IGF-IR cDNA with the complete coding sequence (Ullrich et al., 1986). A PCR-assisted in vitro mutagenesis method was used to create the tyrosine mutants of the IGF-IR, in which the tyrosine codon was substituted by the phenylalanine codon.

The first PCR was performed using a pBluescript SK IGF-IR (a pBluescript SK phagemid (Stratagene) in which an XbaI-BamHI fragment including the whole IGF-IR cDNA was inserted) as a template, a 5`-primer (mutagenic primer), and a 3`-primer as follows. 5`-primers (mutagenic primers) were 5`-GGCTTtCGcGAGGTCTCCTTCTTCTACAG-3` (1250F), 5`-GGCTTtCGcGAGGTCTCCTTCTACTTCAG-3` (1251F), and 5`-GGCTTtCGcGAGGTCTCCTTCTTCTTCAG-3` (1250F/1251F); the 3`-primer was 5`-GTAAAACGACGGCCAGT-3` (M13-20 primer, whose sequence is in the pBluescript SK).

The first 5`-nucleotide of the mutagenic primers followed a thymine residue in the template sequence to avoid problems with template-independent incorporation of an adenine at the 3`-termini of the amplified products. All three primers were designed to create a NruI site with silent mutations. The mutated sites in the codon corresponding to amino acid position 1250 or 1251, are underlined, while the silent mutations are shown in lowercase type. This first PCR product contains a unique BamHI site located 6 base pairs past the stop codon of the IGF-IR cDNA. The second PCR was performed using the same template to the first PCR, a 5`-primer, and the first PCR product as a 3`-primer (an antisense strand actually serves as a 3`-primer). The 5`-primer was designed to locate beyond the unique HindIII site as follows: 5`-ACAGTGAACGAGGCCGCAAG-3`.

The second PCR product was subcloned into a TA cloning vector, pCRII (Invitrogen), and the correct mutation was confirmed by digestion with NruI and by dideoxy sequencing (not shown). A wild type HindIII-BamHI fragment of a pBluescript SK Sal-Bam IGF-IR (a pBluescript SK phagemid containing a SalI-BamHI fragment of the whole IGF-IR cDNA) was replaced by the mutant HindIII-BamHI fragment from the pCRII containing the second PCR product, and a SalI-NotI fragment including the mutated, whole IGF-IR cDNA was subcloned into a XhoI-NotI site of a pBPV expression vector (Pharmacia Biotech Inc.) to generate the pBPV Y1250F, pBPV Y1251F, and pBPV Y1250F/Y1251F expression plasmids.

Cell Lines

R cells (Sell et al., 1993; Sell et al., 1994) are 3T3-like cells originating from mouse embryos with a targeted disruption of the IGF-IR genes (Liu et al. 1993b, Baker et al. 1993). R cells are R cells stably transfected with a plasmid expressing the wild type human IGF-IR cDNA under the control of a metallothionein promoter (Sell et al., 1994; Coppola et al., 1994).

A cell sorting method by flow cytometry was used to establish cell lines expressing the Y1250F, Y1251F, or Y1250F/Y1251F mutant as follows: R cells were co-transfected with a pBPV Y1250F, pBPV Y1251F, or pBPV Y1250F/Y1251F plasmid and a pPDV6 plasmid, which encodes the puromycin resistance gene (de la Luna et al., 1988), and selected with puromycin (Coppola et al., 1994). The resultant clones were passaged a few times. After the cells were trypsinized and washed with phosphate-buffered saline, they were incubated with anti-IGF-IR antibody (1:10) (Oncogene Science) at 4 °C for 20 min. After washing with phosphate-buffered saline, the cells were incubated with anti-mouse IgG conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate (1:50) (Oncogene Science) at 4 °C for 20 min. The cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline, the intensity distribution of the fluorescence was analyzed with flow cytometry (Coulter), and the upper 5% of the population was sorted under sterile conditions. The sorted cells were washed and allowed to grow in the incubator. The receptor number was determined by Scatchard analysis as described below.

To generate R/IR clones, R cells were co-transfected with an expression plasmid encoding a human IR cDNA (pBPV-IR, a kind gift of Dr. Derek LeRoith, National Institutes of Health) and the plasmid encoding the puromycin resistance gene (see above). After selection in 2.5 µg/ml of puromycin, several clones overexpressing the IR were identified on a single point binding assay with I-insulin (DuPont NEN).

To determine a possible dominant negative effect of the mutant receptors, C6 rat glioblastoma cells (Trojan et al., 1993; Resnicoff et al., 1994a) that form colonies in soft agar were co-transfected with the mutant receptors and the plasmid for neo-resistance, After selection, the number of IGF-IRs in several clones was determined by Scatchard analysis, as described below.

Scatchard Analysis

The number of IGF-IRs in each cell line was determined by Scatchard analysis as described by Miura et al.(1994) with modifications. Cells grown on 6-well plates were washed with Hanks' balanced salt solution, and incubated for 6 h at 4 °C with binding buffer (Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium plus 25 mM Hepes, pH 7.4, and 1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin) containing 0.5 ng/ml of I-IGF-I and increasing concentrations of cold IGF-I. After washing with cold Hanks' balanced salt solution, cells were lysed with 0.03% SDS, and cell-associated radioactivities were measured by an autowell counter. Specific binding was expressed by the subtraction of nonspecific binding as determined in the presence of 400 ng/ml of cold IGF-I. Data were converted to Scatchard plots by plotting total specific cell-associated IGF-I concentration against the ratio of bound to free concentration of IGF-I. Total bound IGF-I concentration (B) was determined as follows, assuming that I-labeled and unlabeled IGF-I have the same affinity for the IGF-IR: B = B* + C(B*/F*)/(1 + B*/F*), where B*, F*, and C represent bound and free radioactive IGF-I concentration and added cold IGF-I concentration, respectively. Receptor numbers were calculated by plotting (B, B/F) to obtain a regression line and regression equation, the latter one giving the values of the x and y intercepts.

The same procedure was used to determine receptor number in R cells stably transfected with the plasmid expressing the IR, except that the ligand was I-insulin (0.18 nM (1 ng/ml)), the amount of unlabeled insulin varied from 0 to 7 nM, and nonspecific binding was determined with 0.2 µM unlabeled insulin.

Cell Growth Assay

Cells were usually plated in 6-well plates at a concentration of 5 times 10^4 cells, and the growth medium was replaced with serum-free medium (Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium plus 2.5 µM FeSO(4) and 1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin) supplemented with 50 ng/ml IGF-I, 6 h after plating. In some experiments, seeding density varied from 10^4 to 10^5 cells/well. The cell numbers were measured using a hemocytometer 48 h after the medium replacement.

Soft Agar Assay

The possibilities of anchorage-independent growth in various cell lines were determined by a soft agar assay as described previously (Sell et al., 1993, 1994). One thousand cells in growth medium (10% serum) containing 0.2% agarose (Difco) were plated in 35-mm dishes underlaid with 0.5% agarose-containing growth medium. The cells were allowed to grow in the soft agar for 2 weeks at 37 °C. Anchorage-independent growth was assessed by scoring the number of colonies larger than 125 µm.

Phosphorylation of IGF-IR, IRS-I, and Shc

Cells grown in the growth medium were placed in serum-free medium (Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium plus 2.5 µM FeSO(4) and 1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin), and protein phosphorylation was measured after 20 h as described previously (Sell et al., 1993, 1994). Unstimulated cells or cells stimulated with 20 ng/ml of IGF-I for 5 min were lysed, and the protein contents were determined by Bio-Rad protein assays. For the detection of the phosphorylation of IGF-IR and IRS-I, equal amounts of proteins were subject to gradient SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the separated proteins were electroblotted to nitrocellulose filters for immunoblot with a monoclonal anti-phosphotyrosine antibody (PY20) conjugated with a horseradish peroxidase (Transduction Laboratories). The signals were visualized with the ECL detection system (Amersham Corp.). For Shc phosphorylation, equal amounts of proteins were immunoprecipitated with a polyclonal anti-Shc antibody (Transduction Laboratory) and treated as described above.


RESULTS

An Overexpressed Insulin Receptor Does Not Transform RCells

Although there is extensive homology between the insulin and the IGF-I receptors, the IGF-IR is 10 times more mitogenic than the insulin receptor (Lammers et al., 1989). However, an overexpressed insulin receptor (IR) makes 3T3 cells grow in SFM supplemented solely with insulin (Randazzo et al., 1990) and induces the transformed phenotype (Giorgino et al., 1991). Since we had shown in previous experiments that overexpressed epidermal growth factor or platelet-derived growth factor receptors cannot transform R cells (cells with a targeted deletion of the IGF-IR genes), although they can transform wild type cells (Coppola et al., 1994; DeAngelis et al., 1995), we inquired in preliminary experiments whether an overexpressed IR could transform R cells. For this purpose, R cells were transfected with a plasmid expressing the human IR (Ullrich et al., 1985), and a number of clones were selected and analyzed for insulin receptor number (Table 1) and for ability to grow in soft agar. Confirming the previous report by Randazzo et al.(1990), these clones were capable of growing in SFM supplemented solely with insulin (not shown). However, like the parental R cells, four different clones of R cells overexpressing the IR could not form colonies in soft agar (Table 1). On the contrary, R cells, stably transfected with and overexpressing a wild type human IGF-IR (R cells), form colonies in soft agar (Table 1). Clones 2 and 9 have a number of IRs of 100,000 or 500,000/cell, respectively; at these levels of IGF-IR expression, 3T3-like cells are fully transformed (Sell et al., 1994; Coppola et al., 1994).



Characterization of Mutants at Tyrosines 1250 and 1251

The preliminary experiments described above, the report by Tartare et al.(1994) that substitution of the IGF-IR C terminus with the IR C terminus decreased its ability to induce DNA synthesis, and the findings by Liu et al. (1993a) and by Surmacz et al.(1995) all suggested that the C terminus end of the IGF-IR may play an important role in its transforming activity. While there are obviously other candidates, the tyrosine residues at 1250 and 1251 (as mentioned above, absent in the C terminus of the IR), seem to be reasonable candidates for a mutational analysis of function. Mutant receptors, where the tyrosine residue was mutated to phenylalanine by site-directed mutagenesis, as described under ``Materials and Methods,'' were transfected into R cells, and the transfectants were characterized for receptor content. Fig. 1shows a Scatchard analysis of three cell lines, and Table 2summarizes the receptor content of these cell lines. All these cell lines expressed more than 10^6 receptors/cell, more than adequate since, in previous experiments, we had established that 10^5 receptors/cell (or more) are sufficient for growth in SFM supplemented solely with IGF-I as well as for the establishment of the transformed phenotype (Pietrzkowski et al., 1992a; Coppola et al., 1994). Cellular clones with lower numbers of receptors were also established (see below), but most of the subsequent studies were carried out on the cell lines with high receptor numbers.


Figure 1: Scatchard analysis of cell lines with mutant IGF-I receptors. R cells were transfected with plasmids expressing human IGF-I receptor cDNAs with the indicated mutations at Tyr-1250, Tyr-1251, or both. Cell lines were selected and analyzed as described under ``Materials and Methods.'' bullet, Y1250F; up triangle, Y1251F; , Y1250F/Y1251F.





Mutations at Tyr-1250 and Tyr-1251 Do Not Affect the Mitogenic Signaling

The cell lines listed in Table 2were tested for growth in SFM supplemented solely with IGF-I (50 ng/ml). The results of separate experiments are summarized in Fig. 2; R cells, Y1250F cells, Y1251F cells, and the double mutant Y1250F/Y1251F, all grow in SFM plus IGF-I, differences among the cell lines being negligible. These experiments were repeated four times, and because growth of cells often depends on seeding density, we even used different seeding densities (see ``Materials and Methods''). In no instance could we detect a statistical difference between R cells (wild type receptor) and the cells expressing the mutant receptors. Therefore, mutations at Tyr-1250 and Tyr-1251 have no significant effect on the ability of the IGF-IR to transmit a mitogenic signal.


Figure 2: Growth of R-derived cells in IGF-I. The various cell lines were plated in serum-supplemented medium overnight, then transferred to serum-free medium supplemented solely with IGF-I (50 ng/ml). The cell number was determined 48 h. after changing growth medium to serum-free medium plus IGF-I. The cell lines are described under ``Results''.



A Mutation at Tyr-1251 (but Not at Tyr-1250) Abolishes the Transforming Activity of the IGF-I Receptor

The same cell lines were then tested for their ability to form colonies in soft agar. Fig. 3shows a microphotograph of the soft agar assay. Following an accepted convention, we counted only colonies >125 µm in diameter; both R cells and Y1250F cells form colonies (panelsB and C, respectively). R cells form no colonies and remain as single cells up to the termination of the experiment (panelA). Y1251F cells only formed tiny clusters of cells (panelD), mostly 50-60 µm in diameter, that only occasionally reached the canonical size. The results are summarized in Table 3. The ability to form colonies in soft agar is dramatically impaired in Y1251F cells, and in the double mutant Y120F/Y1251F cells, while Y1250F cells are definitely transformed, although the number of colonies in soft agar is somewhat less than with R cells. The finding of the impaired ability of Y1251F cells to grow in soft agar is especially significant, considering the very high number of mutant receptors. In separate experiments, we also tested Y1251F expressing cells with lower receptor numbers (about 10^5), to rule out a possible paradoxical effect, but these cells, too, failed to form colonies in soft agar (not shown).


Figure 3: Growth in soft agar of R cells and their derivatives. Microphotographs of soft agar assays are shown. A, R cells; B, R cells; C, Y1250F cells; D, Y1251F cells. The bar in panelA is 200 µm.





The Y1251F Mutant Receptor Acts as a Dominant Negative

Mutants of the IGF-IR have been reported to act as dominant negatives (Prager et al., 1994b; Li et al., 1994) in transformation and/or tumorigenesis. We transfected the Y1251F and Y1250F mutant receptors in C6 cells, which are rat glioblastoma cells capable of producing colonies in soft agar (Resnicoff et al., 1994a; Coppola et al., 1994). Three clones were selected for each transfection, which expressed an increased number of receptors over the wild type cells (see Table 4), and whose growth in monolayer was not significantly inhibited (data not shown). Their ability to form colonies in soft agar is shown in Table 4. C6 cells expressing the Y1251F receptor formed fewer colonies in soft agar than the parental cells, the inhibition ranging from 75 to 100%. On the contrary, the growth in soft agar of C6 cells expressing the Y1250F mutant was not inhibited; in fact, if anything, the number of colonies was increased over the parent cell line.



Phosphorylation of Mutant Receptors and Shc

There is no apriori reason why the common signal-transducing pathway of the IGF-IR (the so called Ras pathway) should be impaired in cells expressing the two mutant receptors, since these receptors are fully mitogenic in response to IGF-I only. Nevertheless, we inquired whether these receptors had deficits at the very beginning of the pathway. Fig. 4A shows that the mutant receptors are autophosphorylated after stimulation by IGF-I. The technique used is semiquantitative, and the purpose of this experiment is simply to show that mutations at tyrosines 1250 and 1251 do not grossly affect the autophosphorylation of the IGF-IR. No precise conclusion ought to be reached in terms of the contribution of these two tyrosines to the total phosphorylation of the receptor. Fig. 4A also shows that the mutations at 1250 and 1251 do not seem to affect to any significant extent the tyrosyl phosphorylation of the p185 protein, generally accepted as the IRS-1 protein. In other experiments, we have immunoprecipitated IRS-1 from lysates with a specific antibody (a kind gift of Drs. Lienhard and Keller, Dartmouth Medical School), and still we could not find any significant differences in the extent of IRS-1 tyrosyl phosphorylation between wild type and mutant receptors (not shown).


Figure 4: Autophosphorylation of the IGF-I receptors and Shc phosphorylation in the various cell lines. A, whole cell lysates were immunoblotted with a phosphotyrosine antibody. The upperarrow indicates the p185 protein band (putative IRS-1); the lowerarrow indicates the beta subunit of the IGF-I receptor. B, lysates were immunoprecipitated with an anti-Shc antibody and stained with a phosphotyrosine antibody. The arrow indicates 52-kDa Shc. The aspecific band is the IgG used in the procedure. Oddnumberedlanes are unstimulated cells; evennumberedlanes are cells stimulated for 5 min with IGF-I (20 ng/ml). Lanes1 and 2, R cells; lanes3 and 4, Y1250F cells; lanes5 and 6, Y1251F cells; lanes7 and 8, Y1250F/Y1251F cells.



In Fig. 4B, we have examined Shc phosphorylation. In Y1250F cells Shc is phosphorylated (lane4) at least as efficiently as in R cells, whereas Shc phosphorylation is slightly decreased in Y1251F cells (lanes5 and 6) and in the double mutant cells (lanes7 and 8). However, it is clear that even the Y1251F mutant can phosphorylate Shc, although perhaps less efficiently than the Y1250F mutant (the cell lines with the mutant receptors have approximately the same number of receptors (Table 2)).


DISCUSSION

In these experiments, our main goal was to determine whether the two tyrosine residues at 1250 and 1251 of the IGF-IR are required for mitogenesis and transformation. The results indicate that 1) both tyrosines can be mutated (to Phe), without affecting the ability of the IGF-IR to induce IGF-I-mediated cell proliferation; and 2) a Y1251F mutation severely impairs the transforming activity of the IGF-IR, while a Y1250F mutation does not. Secondary findings include the fact that 1) there is no gross alteration in the extent of autophosphorylation of the mutant receptors or the tyrosyl phosphorylation of the p185 protein (the mutant receptors are fully mitogenic); and 2) the Y1251F mutant is somewhat less efficient in phosphorylating Shc than the Y1250F mutant after IGF-I stimulation.

The most important finding in the present paper is that the Y1251F mutant, overexpressed, is functional enough to transmit an IGF-I-mediated mitogenic signal but, even at very high levels of receptor expression, does not support transformation, as measured by colony formation in soft agar. A mutation at Tyr-1250 does not affect the transforming ability of the IGF-IR.

A number of studies have investigated the mitogenicity of the IGF-IR (Lammers et al., 1989; Kato et al., 1993, Sasaoka et al., 1994; Kato et al. 1994), but until recently, very few studies had addressed its role in transformation (see the Introduction). In the case of transformation, other IGF-IR mutants have already been shown to have lost the ability to induce IGF-I-mediated mitogenesis and to transform cells, for instance, a triple tyrosine mutant at Tyr-1131, -1135, -1136 (Li et al. 1994), and the Y950F mutant (Miura and Baserga, 1995), indicating that these two domains are required both for cell proliferation and for transformation. Our present results clearly show that neither Tyr-1250 nor Tyr-1251 can be enumerated among the domains of the IGF-IR necessary for mitogenesis, since, at the receptor levels we have investigated, both mutant receptors are fully mitogenic. However, the Y1251F mutant (but not the Y1250F mutant) has a markedly decreased transforming activity. An important point is whether the failure of the Y1251F mutant to transform mouse embryo cells is due to a qualitative or a quantitative deficit. In the latter case, one could think that a receptor that is weakly active may be sufficient for transmission of a mitogenic signal but not adequate for the establishment of the transformed phenotype; alternatively, the Tyr-1251 residue may be specifically required for transformation, although in association with other domains of the receptor that are needed for the mitogenic signal. Two observations argue against the first alternative: 1) the Y1251F mutant is nontransforming at receptor levels that are 19-fold the levels of wild type receptor sufficient for the establishment and maintenance of the transformed phenotype (Pietrzkowski et al., 1992a, 1992b; Coppola et al., 1994); 2) the Y1251F mutant acts as a dominant negative in a cell type that has 500,000 endogenous IGF-IRs. It would be difficult to explain how the additional input from a receptor transmitting a weak but otherwise normal signal could reverse the signal of a wild type receptor. Indeed, the Y1250F mutant receptor not only does not inhibit soft agar growth of C6 cells but actually augments it, as one would expect from an additive effect.

The mechanism is, of course, the next important question. Not surprisingly, our experiments do not show gross differences in tyrosyl phosphorylation of the IGF-IR or IRS-1, which are involved in insulin and IGF-I-mediated mitogenesis (Waters et al.(1993), Rose et al.(1994), Yamauchi and Pessin(1994), and see review by White and Kahn(1994)). We say not surprisingly, because both mutant receptors are fully mitogenic, and, therefore, there is no apriori reason why the known mitogenic pathways of the IGF-IR should be affected. For the same reason, we have not explored in this paper the pathways downstream of IRS-1 and Shc. The difference between the wild type receptor and the Y1251F mutant receptor is in their ability to confer a transformed phenotype (colony formation in soft agar). However, soft agar assays are done in 10% serum, which also activates other growth factor receptors that use the Ras pathway, and this precludes a simple analysis at this point. The same criticism can be applied to an explanation involving Shc, which is known to be a transforming protein (Pelicci et al., 1992; Skolnik et al., 1993; White and Kahn, 1994). Indeed, the Y1251F mutant receptor seems to be somewhat less efficient in its ability to phosphorylate Shc, at least in comparison with the Y1250F mutant (Fig. 4), which makes this explanation a still viable one, especially since we obtained the same results with the C terminus truncated receptor (Surmacz et al., 1995). But again, Shc phosphorylation was determined in serum-free medium supplemented with IGF-I, whereas the transformation assay is done in 10% serum, which contains other growth factors capable of activating Shc (White and Kahn, 1994). Also one cannot ignore some recent reports that there is some kind of balance between IRS-1 and Shc that is important for the stimulation of DNA synthesis by the IR (Yamauchi and Pessin, 1994), and that a transmembrane mutant of the v-ros oncogene that had lost its transforming activity still retained its ability to phosphorylate Shc (Zong and Wang, 1994).

Indeed, the fact that a combination of SV 40 T antigen and an activated, overexpressed Ras fail to transform R-cells (Sell et al. 1994, Surmacz et al. 1995), clearly indicates that one of the transforming pathways of the IGF-IR is Ras-independent. While there is no question that the Ras pathway is required for transformation (see for instance McCormick(1993) and Medema and Bos (1993)), another pathway that the IGF-IR does not share with the platelet-derived growth factor and epidermal growth factor receptors has to be hypothesized, a conclusion supported by other independent findings (Falco et al., 1988; Aaronson, 1991; Matuoka et al., 1993; Silvennoinen et al., 1993). In previous papers (Coppola et al. 1994, DeAngelis et al. 1995), we showed that an overexpressed epidermal growth factor or platelet-derived growth factor receptor cannot transform R cells, although they are capable of transforming wild type cells from littermate mouse embryos. The requirement for a functional IGF-IR for transformation seems to be true also in the case of the IR (this paper), despite the fact of the extensive homology between the two receptors (Ullrich et al., 1986) and the sharing of signal-transducing pathways (for a review, see Tavaré and Siddle(1993) and White and Kahn(1994)). Again, these findings indicate that the IGF-IR has at least another transforming pathway, which it does not share with the other three receptors.

Our experiments do not tell us whether tyrosine phosphorylation is actually necessary for the transforming activity of the IGF-IR. We have avoided addressing this question at this point, and we prefer to state that a Tyr to Phe mutation at 1251 (but not at Tyr-1250) almost completely abolishes the transforming activity of the IGF-IR, leaving unresolved whether this is due to the lack of Tyr-1251 phosphorylation or to a conformational change. Neither do our experiments say that Tyr-1251 is the exclusive depository of the information for a transforming signal. What they say is that a functional Tyr-1251 is required for the transforming ability of the receptor.

The secondary findings have been reported here mainly to indicate that certain functions of the mutant receptors are not grossly impaired, as in the case of the ATP-binding site mutant (Kato et al., 1993), which has lost most of its functions and is neither mitogenic nor transforming (Kato et al., 1993; Sell et al., 1994; Coppola et al., 1994).

In conclusion, our experiments, while confirming the importance of the IGF-IR in the establishment and maintenance of transformation, have shown that tyrosine residues 1250 and 1251 are not necessary for IGF-I-mediated mitogenesis but that tyrosine 1251 is required for IGF-IR-dependent transformation. The dissociation of mitogenesis and transformation at the level of the receptor itself opens intriguing possibilities about the roles of the signal-transducing pathways in the two processes, regardless of whether the dissociation is qualitative, quantitative, or due to a prolongation of the stimulus (Marshall, 1995). Another obvious question to be addressed is whether the transforming activity of the IGF-IR correlates with its ability to protect cells from apoptosis (Harrington et al., 1994; Sell et al. 1995).


FOOTNOTES

*
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants GM 33694 and CA 53484. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked ``advertisement'' in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

§
To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel.: 215-955-4507; Fax: 215-923-0249.

(^1)
The abbreviations used are: IGF-IR, IGF-I receptor; IGF-I and IGF-II, insulin-like growth factors I and II, respectively; IR, insulin receptor; IRS-1, insulin receptor substrate-1; SFM, serum-free medium; PCR, polymerase chain reaction.


REFERENCES

  1. Aaronson, S. (1991) Science 254,1146-1153 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  2. Arteaga, C. L. (1992) Breast Cancer Res. Treat 22,101-106 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  3. Baker, J., Liu, J. P., Robertson, E. J., and Efstratiadis, A. (1993) Cell 75,73-82 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  4. Baserga, R., Sell, C., Porcu, P., and Rubini, M. (1994) Cell. Prolif. 27,63-71 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  5. Christophori, G., Naik, P., and Hanahan, D. (1994) Nature 369,414-418 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  6. Coppola, D., Ferber, A., Miura, M., Sell, C., D'Ambrosio, C., Rubin, R., and Baserga, R. (1994) Mol. Cell. Biol. 14,4588-4595 [Abstract]
  7. DeAngelis, T., Ferber, A., and Baserga, R. (1995) J. Cell. Physiol. 164,214-221 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  8. de la Luna, S., Soria, I., Pulido, D., Ortín, J., and Jiménez, A. (1988) Gene (Amst.) 62,121-126 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  9. Falco, J. P., Taylor, W. G., DiFiore, P. P., Weissman, B. E., and Aaronson, S. A. (1988) Oncogene 2,573-578 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  10. Giorgino, F., Belfiore, A., Milazzo, G., Costantino, A., Maddux, B., Whittaker, J., Goldfine, I. D., and Vigneri, R. (1991) Mol. Endocrinol. 5,452-459 [Abstract]
  11. Harrington, E. A., Bennett, M. R., Fanidi, A., and Evan, G. I. (1994) EMBO J. 14,3286-3295
  12. Kalebic, T., Tsokos, M., and Helman, L. J. (1994) Cancer Res. 54,5531-5554 [Abstract]
  13. Kaleko, M., Rutter, W. J., and Miller, A. D. (1990) Mol. Cell. Biol. 10,464-473 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  14. Kato, H., Faria, T. N., Stannard, B., Roberts, C. T., Jr., and LeRoith, D. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268,2655-2661 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  15. Kato, H., Faria, T. N., Stannard, B., Roberts, C. T., Jr., and LeRoith, D. (1994) Mol. Endocrinol. 8,40-50 [Abstract]
  16. Lammers, R., Gray, A., Schlessinger, J., and Ullrich, A. (1989) EMBO J. 8,1369-1375 [Abstract]
  17. Li, S., Ferber, A., Miura, M., and Baserga, R. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269,32558-32564 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  18. Liu, D., Zong, C., and Wang, L. H. (1993a) J. Virol. 67,6835-6840 [Abstract]
  19. Liu, J. P., Baker, J., Perkins, A. S., Robertson, E. J., and Efstratiadis, A. (1993b) Cell 75,59-72 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  20. Long, L., Rubin, R., Baserga, R., and Brodt, P. (1995) Cancer Res. 55,1006-1009 [Abstract]
  21. Marshall, C. J. (1995) Cell 80,179-185 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  22. Matuoka, K., Shibasaki, F., Shibata, M., and Takenawa, T. (1993) EMBO J. 12,3467-3473 [Abstract]
  23. McCormick, F. (1993) Nature 363,15-16 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  24. McCubrey, J. A., Stillman, L. S., Mayhew, M. W., Algate, P. A., Dellow, R. A., and Kaleko, M. (1991) Blood 78,921-929 [Abstract]
  25. Medema, R. H., and Bos, J. L. (1993) Crit. Rev. Oncog. 4,615-661 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  26. Miura, M., Li, S. W., Dumenil, G., and Baserga, R. (1994) Cancer Res. 54,2472-2477 [Abstract]
  27. Miura, M., Li, S., and Baserga, R., (1995) Cancer Res. 55,663-667 [Abstract]
  28. Pelicci, G., Lanfrancone, L., Grignani, F., McGlade, J., Cavallo, F., Forni, G., Nicoletti, I., Grignani, F., Pawson, T., and Pelicci, P. G. (1992) Cell 70,93-104 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  29. Pietrzkowski, Z., Sell, C., Lammers, R., Ullrich, A., and Baserga, R. (1992a) Mol. Cell. Biol. 12,3883-3889 [Abstract]
  30. Pietrzkowski, Z., Lammers, R, Carpenter, G., Soderquist, A. M., Limardo, M., Phillips, P. D., Ullrich, A., and Baserga, R. (1992b) Cell Growth & Differ. 3,199-205
  31. Prager, D., Li, H. L., Asa, S., and Melmed, S. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 91,2181-2185 [Abstract]
  32. Randazzo, P. A., Morey, V. A., Polishook, A. K., and Jarett, L. (1990) Exp. Cell Res. 190,25-30 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  33. Resnicoff, M., Sell, C., Rubini, M., Coppola, D., Ambrose, D., Baserga, R., and Rubin, R. (1994a) Cancer Res. 54,2218-2222 [Abstract]
  34. Resnicoff, M., Coppola, D., Sell, C., Rubin, R., Ferrone, S., and Baserga, R. (1994b) Cancer Res. 54,4848-4850 [Abstract]
  35. Rose, D. W., Satiel, A. R., Majumdar, M., Decker, S. J., and Olefsky, J. M. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 91,797-801 [Abstract]
  36. Sasaoka, T., Rose, D. W., Jhun, B. H., Saltiel, A. R., Draznin, B., and Olefsky, J. M. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269,13689-13694 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  37. Sell, C., Rubini, M., Rubin, R., Liu, J. P., Efstratiadis, A., and Baserga, R. (1993) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 90,11217-11221 [Abstract]
  38. Sell, C., Dumenil, G., Deveaud, C., Miura, M., Coppola, D., DeAngelis, T., Rubin, R., Efstratiadis, A., and Baserga, R. (1994) Mol. Cell. Biol. 14,3604-3612 [Abstract]
  39. Sell, C., Baserga, R., and Rubin, R. (1995) Cancer Res. 55,303-306 [Abstract]
  40. Silvennoinen, O., Schindler, C., Schlessinger, J., and Levy, D. E. (1993) Science 261,1736-1739 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  41. Skolnik, E. Y., Lee, C-H., Batzer, A., Vicentini, L. M., Zhou, M., Daly, R., Myers, M. J., Jr., Backer, J. M., Ullrich, A., White, M. F., and Schlessinger, J. (1993) EMBO J. 12,1929-1936 [Abstract]
  42. Surmacz, E., Sell, C., Swantek, J., Kato, H., Roberts, C. T., Jr., LeRoith, D., and Baserga, R. (1995) Exp. Cell Res. 218,370-380 [CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  43. Tartare, S., Mothe, I., Kowalski-Chauvel, A., Breittmayer, J. P., Ballotti, R., and Van Obberghen, E. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269,11449-11455 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  44. Tavaré, J. M., and Siddle, K. (1993) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1178,21-39 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  45. Trojan, J., Blossey, B. K., Johnson, T. R., Rudin, S. D., Tykocinski, M., Ilan, M., and Ilan, J. (1992) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 89,4874-4878 [Abstract]
  46. Trojan, J., Johnson, T. R., Rudin, S. D., Ilan, M., Tykocinski, M. L., and Ilan, J. (1993) Science 259,94-97 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  47. Ullrich, A., Gray, A., Tam, A. W., Yang-Feng, T., Tsubokawa, M., Collins, C., Henzel, W., Le Bon, T., Kathuria, S., Chen, E., Jakobs, S, Francke, U., Ramachandran, J., and Fujita-Yamaguchi, Y. (1986) EMBO J. 5,2503-2512 [Abstract]
  48. Valentinis, B., Porcu, P., Quinn, K., and Baserga, R. (1994) Oncogene 9,825-831 [Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
  49. Waters, S. B., Yamauchi, K., and Pessin, J. E. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268,22231-22234 [Abstract/Free Full Text]
  50. White, M. F., and Kahn, C. R. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269,1-4 [Free Full Text]
  51. Yamauchi, K., and Pessin, J. E. (1994) Mol. Cell. Biol. 14,4427-4434 [Abstract]
  52. Zong, C. S., and Wang, L. H. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 91,10982-10986 [Abstract/Free Full Text]

©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.