The issue of specificity in tyrosine kinase intracellular
signaling mediated by src homology 2 (SH2) domains has
great importance in the understanding how individual signals
maintain their mutual exclusivity and affect downstream
responses. Several proteins contain tandem SH2 domains
that, on interacting with their ligand, provide a higher
level of specificity than can be afforded by the interaction
of a single SH2 domain. In this study, we focus on the
comparison of two proteins ZAP70 and the p85 subunit of
PI 3-kinase, which although distinctly different in function
and general structure, possess tandem SH2 domains separated
by a linker region and which bind to phosphorylated receptor
molecules localized to the cell membrane. Binding studies
using isothermal titration calorimetry show that these
two proteins interact with peptides mimicking their physiological
ligands in very different ways. In the case of the SH2
domains from ZAP70, they interact with a stoichiometry
of unity, while p85 is able to make two distinct interactions,
one with a stoichiometry of 1:1 and the other with two
p85 molecules interacting with one receptor. The observation
of two different modes of binding of p85 might be important
in providing different cellular responses based on fluctuating
intracellular concentration regimes of this protein. Thermodynamic
data on both proteins suggest that a conformational change
occurs on binding. On investigation of this structural
change using a truncated form of p85 (including just the
two SH2 domains and the inter-SH2 region), both NMR and
circular dichroism spectroscopic studies failed to show
significant changes in secondary structure. This suggests
that any conformational change associated with binding
is small and potentially limited to loop regions of the
protein.