Difference between revisions of "Phosphatase Subfamily PPP4C"

From PhosphataseWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Functions)
(References)
Line 18: Line 18:
 
=== References ===
 
=== References ===
 
<biblio>
 
<biblio>
 +
#chen14 pmid=25215539
 +
#sato14 pmid=25340746
 
</biblio>
 
</biblio>

Revision as of 18:08, 5 January 2015

Phosphatase Classification: Fold MTDP: Superfamily MTDP: Family PPP: Subfamily PPP4C

Evolution

PPP4C is found in opisthokonta and amoebazoa, often one copy per genome.

Domain

PPP4C has a single domain - phosphatase domain.

Functions

PPP4C, catalytic subunit of Protein Phosphatase 4 (PP4) holoenzyme, is closely related to PPP2C, the catalytic subunit of PP2A holoenzyme. Like PP1 and PP2A, holoenzyme PP4 consists of the catalytic subunit and one or two regulatory subunits. At least 6 different holoenzyme complexes have been found.

Mammal PP4 participates in a number of processes essential for normal cellular physiology, including microtubule organization, homologous recombination (HR)-mediated DNA repair, the DNA damage response, histone modification, apoptosis, immunoglobulin (Ig) VDJ recombination, pre-TCR signaling, TNF signaling, Toll-like receptor (TLR)-4 signaling, and NF-κB regulation. Germline deletion of PP4 in mice is embryonic lethal, and conditional deletion of PP4 specifically in murine T cells severely impairs T cell development. We previously ablated PP4 specifically in developing B cells using the mb-1/cre/loxP system and generated mb-1/cre/PP4F/F mice (see introduction in [1]).

PP4 dephoshorylate the phophorylated histone 2A variant, γ-H2AX, a marker for DNA damage and cell-cycle arrest. Interestingly, PP2A also dephosphorylates γ-H2AX.

PP4 in C. elegans is involved in M prophase, perhaps through dephosphorylate SUN-1 protein that is normally phosphorylated during the transition zone and early pachytene [2].

References

Error fetching PMID 25215539:
Error fetching PMID 25340746:
  1. Error fetching PMID 25215539: [chen14]
  2. Error fetching PMID 25340746: [sato14]
All Medline abstracts: PubMed | HubMed