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Helicobacter pylori CagA oncoprotein interacts with SHIP2 to increase its delivery into gastric epithelial cells.

Yumiko FujiiNaoko Murata-KamiyaMasanori Hatakeyama
Published in: Cancer science (2020)
Chronic infection with Helicobacter pylori cagA-positive strains is causally associated with the development of gastric diseases, most notably gastric cancer. The cagA-encoded CagA protein, which is injected into gastric epithelial cells by bacterial type IV secretion, undergoes tyrosine phosphorylation at the Glu-Pro-Ile-Tyr-Ala (EPIYA) segments (EPIYA-A, EPIYA-B, EPIYA-C, and EPIYA-D), which are present in various numbers and combinations in its C-terminal polymorphic region, thereby enabling CagA to promiscuously interact with SH2 domain-containing host cell proteins, including the prooncogenic SH2 domain-containing protein tyrosine phosphatase 2 (SHP2). Perturbation of host protein functions by aberrant complex formation with CagA has been considered to contribute to the development of gastric cancer. Here we show that SHIP2, an SH2 domain-containing phosphatidylinositol 5'-phosphatase, is a hitherto undiscovered CagA-binding host protein. Similar to SHP2, SHIP2 binds to the Western CagA-specific EPIYA-C segment or East Asian CagA-specific EPIYA-D segment through the SH2 domain in a tyrosine phosphorylation-dependent manner. In contrast to the case of SHP2, however, SHIP2 binds more strongly to EPIYA-C than to EPIYA-D. Interaction with CagA tethers SHIP2 to the plasma membrane, where it mediates production of phosphatidylinositol 3,4-diphosphate [PI(3,4)P2 ]. The CagA-SHIP2 interaction also potentiates the morphogenetic activity of CagA, which is caused by CagA-deregulated SHP2. This study indicates that initially delivered CagA interacts with SHIP2 and thereby strengthens H. pylori-host cell attachment by altering membrane phosphatidylinositol compositions, which potentiates subsequent delivery of CagA that binds to and thereby deregulates the prooncogenic phosphatase SHP2.
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