Engagement of integrin receptors with extracellular ligands activates formation of complex multi-protein structures that link the ECM to the cytoplasmic actin cytoskeleton and signaling proteins including talin, α-actinin, vinculin, zyxin, paxillin and FAK (PTK2). Signaling through these complexes and focal adhesions regulates a number of key cellular processes including growth factor-induced mitogenic signals, cell survival, cell proliferation and migration, cell locomotion and regulation of cell cycle. FAK is a non-receptor cytosolic protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) with a central catalytic domain flanked by large N- and C-terminal domains that indirectly localize to sites of integrin receptor clustering through interation with integrin-associated proteins. FAK contains three domains: an amino terminal domain that binds to the cytoplasmic tail of β-integrin subunits and the intracellular domain of EGFR, a central tyrosine kinase domain, and a carboxy terminal domain that consists of two proline rich motifs and a FAT sequence that associate with other focal adhesion proteins including paxillin and talin.Clustering of integrins leads to the rapid recruitment of FAK to the focal adhesion complex and its concurrent phosphorylation at Tyr397...