
Imamoto A and Soriano P
Disruption of the csk gene, encoding a negative regulator of Src family tyrosine kinases, leads to neural tube defects and embryonic lethality in mice.
Cell 1993 Jun 18;73(6):1117-24
ABSTRACT
All Src family non-receptor tyrosine kinases are negatively
regulated by phosphorylation at a carboxy-terminal tyrosine. To
analyze the significance of this regulation during development, we
have generated mice deficient in Csk, a kinase that phosphorylates
this tyrosine, by gene targeting in embryonic stem cells. Homozygous
mutant embryos exhibit a complex phenotype that includes defects in
the neural tube and die between day 9 and day 10 of gestation. Cells
derived from these embryos exhibit an order of magnitude increase in
activity of Src and the related Fyn kinase. Phosphorylation at the
carboxy-terminal tyrosine of Src was reduced but not eliminated and
was accompanied by increased phosphorylation at another key tyrosine
residue. These results demonstrate that Src family kinase activity
is critically dependent on phosphorylation by Csk and suggest that
the regulation of kinase activity may be essential during
embryogenesis.