Difference between revisions of "Phosphatase Subfamily PPM1G"
(→Functions) |
|||
| Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
=== Evolution === | === Evolution === | ||
| − | PPM1G emerged in [[holozoa]], usually single copy per genome. | + | PPM1G emerged in [[holozoa]], usually single copy per genome. Human has a single PPM1G (PP2CG/PP2Cγ/FIN13). |
=== Domain === | === Domain === | ||
| − | PPM1G has a single structural domain, the phosphatase domain of PPM fold. | + | PPM1G has a single structural domain, the phosphatase domain of PPM fold. Unlike any other known phosphatase, PPM1G has a highly acidic domain: 75% of the 54 residues are glutamate or aspartate <cite>Travis97</cite>. |
=== Functions === | === Functions === | ||
| − | PPM1G inactivates monomeric WWP2 and promotes the assembly of WWP2-WWP1 heterodimeric complex <cite>Chaudhary14</cite>. | + | Northern blot analysis shows that human PPM1G is widely expressed, and is most abundant in testis, skeletal muscle, and heart <cite>Travis97</cite>. RNA-seq data from GTEx also shows its broad expression in different tissues and particularly abundant in testis. |
| + | |||
| + | Like known PPM (PP2Cs), recombinant PPM1G requires Mg2+ or Mn2+ for activity <cite>Travis97</cite>. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Human PPM1G has the substrates below: | ||
| + | * Deubiquitylation enzyme USP7/HAUSP. PPM1G dephosphorylates USP7S which leads to USP7S downregulation, followed by Mdm2 downregulation and accumulation of p53 <cite>Khoronenkova12</cite>. | ||
| + | |||
| + | * 4E binding protein 1 (4E-BP1). PPM1G regulates protein translation and cell growth by dephosphorylating 4E binding protein 1 (4E-BP1), which binds to translation initiation factor 4E and inhibits cap-dependent translation in a phosphorylation-dependent manner <cite>Liu13</cite>. | ||
| + | |||
| + | PPM1G inactivates monomeric the E3 ligase WWP2 and promotes the assembly of two E3 ligases WWP2-WWP1 heterodimeric complex <cite>Chaudhary14</cite>. It is unclear whether PPM1G dephosphorylates WWP1 or WWP2. | ||
PPM1G is associated with alcohol use disorder <cite>Ruggeri15</cite>. | PPM1G is associated with alcohol use disorder <cite>Ruggeri15</cite>. | ||
| Line 15: | Line 24: | ||
=== References === | === References === | ||
<biblio> | <biblio> | ||
| + | #Chaudhary14 pmid=25071155 | ||
| + | #Khoronenkova12 pmid=22361354 | ||
| + | #Liu13 pmid=23814053 | ||
#Ruggeri15 pmid=25982659 | #Ruggeri15 pmid=25982659 | ||
| + | #Travis97 pmid=9276438 | ||
</biblio> | </biblio> | ||
Revision as of 05:25, 31 May 2015
Phosphatase Classification: Fold PPM (PP2C): Superfamily PPM (PP2C): Family PPM (PP2C): Subfamily PPM1G
Evolution
PPM1G emerged in holozoa, usually single copy per genome. Human has a single PPM1G (PP2CG/PP2Cγ/FIN13).
Domain
PPM1G has a single structural domain, the phosphatase domain of PPM fold. Unlike any other known phosphatase, PPM1G has a highly acidic domain: 75% of the 54 residues are glutamate or aspartate [1].
Functions
Northern blot analysis shows that human PPM1G is widely expressed, and is most abundant in testis, skeletal muscle, and heart [1]. RNA-seq data from GTEx also shows its broad expression in different tissues and particularly abundant in testis.
Like known PPM (PP2Cs), recombinant PPM1G requires Mg2+ or Mn2+ for activity [1].
Human PPM1G has the substrates below:
- Deubiquitylation enzyme USP7/HAUSP. PPM1G dephosphorylates USP7S which leads to USP7S downregulation, followed by Mdm2 downregulation and accumulation of p53 [2].
- 4E binding protein 1 (4E-BP1). PPM1G regulates protein translation and cell growth by dephosphorylating 4E binding protein 1 (4E-BP1), which binds to translation initiation factor 4E and inhibits cap-dependent translation in a phosphorylation-dependent manner [3].
PPM1G inactivates monomeric the E3 ligase WWP2 and promotes the assembly of two E3 ligases WWP2-WWP1 heterodimeric complex [4]. It is unclear whether PPM1G dephosphorylates WWP1 or WWP2.
PPM1G is associated with alcohol use disorder [5].
References
Error fetching PMID 22361354:
Error fetching PMID 23814053:
Error fetching PMID 25982659:
Error fetching PMID 9276438:
- Error fetching PMID 9276438:
- Error fetching PMID 22361354:
- Error fetching PMID 23814053:
- Error fetching PMID 25071155:
- Error fetching PMID 25982659: