We have now identified all of the major constitutively phosphorylated P-tyr proteins in primary CML blasts and KL-stimulated normal blasts. Two of the most prominently phosphorylated proteins have been identified as novel docking proteins, p62dok-1 and p56dok-2. Both proteins bind to rasGAP when tyrosine is phosphorylated and display additional characteristics of docking proteins, including an N-terminal pleckstrin homology domain and multiple PXXP motifs.
Recently we have identified 2 other P-tyr proteins as SH2-domain-containing phosphatidylinositol polyphosphate 5-phosphatases, SHIP1 (p140), and SHIP2 (p155). Like SHIP1, SHIP2 selectively hydrolyzes the 5'-phosphate from PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 in vitro but, unlike SHIP1, it does not hydrolyze Ins(1,3,4,5)P4. Both P-tyr SHIP1 and P-tyr SHIP2 bind to the PTB domain of SHC but not to its SH2 domain. SHIP2 selectively binds to the SH3 domain of ABL; whereas SHIP1 selectively binds to the SH3 domain of SRC. Moreover, in contrast to SHIP1, SHIP2 does not bind to either the N-terminal or C-terminal SH3 domains of GRB2.
These findings suggest that SHIP1 and SHIP2 may have a different hierarchy of binding SH3-containing proteins and therefore may modulate different signaling pathways and/or localize to different cellular compartments and, moreover, that they may be substrates for tyrosine phosphorylation by different tyrosine kinases. There is now good evidence that both P1(3,4,5)P3 and P1(3,4)P2 are implicated in cytokine-mediated signaling; and the observation that both SHIP1 and SHIP2 are constitutively phosphorylated in primary CML progenitors suggests they may have important roles in p210bcr/abl-mediated myeloid expansion.