Phosphatase Family PTP

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Phosphatase Classification: Fold CC1: Superfamily CC1: Family PTP

The Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Family (PTP) is the major tyrosine-specific family of phosphatases, present throughout animals and consisting of both transmembrane receptors (rPTPs) and non-receptor phosphatases (nrPTP), in several distinct subfamilies. This subfamily is known as High Molecular Weight Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase (HMWPTP) in the SCOP database. Compared to the related DSP and PTEN families, it has an extension to the beta-sheet of 3 antiparallel strands before strand 4.

Contents

Subfamilies

PTPRA

A vertebrate specific family including human PTPRA and PTPRE.

PTPRC (CD45)

A vertebrate specific family involved in lymphocyte activation.

PTPRD (LAR)

A holozoan subfamily functions in nervous systems.

PTPRG

An eumetazoan subfamily functions in nervous system, interacting with other PTPs, such as PTPRD.

PTPRK

A vertebrate subfamily that regulates cell-cell adhesion. It is involved in human cancer. It also functions in nervous system.

PTPRB

A metazoan-specific subfamily which is diverse in function. They functions in nervous system and immune systems. They are putative tumor suppressors. They have distinct substrates, e.g. PTPRQ is lipid phosphatase rather than tyrosine phosphatase.

PTPRN

PTPRN and PTPRN2

PTPN5

The N5 subfamily has three human members: N5, N7 and RR, (also called STEP, HEPTP and PTP-SL, respectively). A 16-residue KIM motif distinguishes them from other PTPs. N5 and RR have predicted transmembrane regions, as does the single copy in sponge. However, the single Drosophila copy has no predicted transmembrane region. N5 members selectively bind to ERK1/2 and p38 (other substrates have been reported, too). ERK1/2 can phosphorylate Thr residue of KIM. PKA phoshorylates Ser23 of the KIM and reduces the affinity for ERK1/2 and p38. This subfamily is metazoan-specific.

PTPN6

PTPN6, PTPN11

PTPN3

PTPN3, PTPN4

PTPN14

PTPN14 is a cytoskeletal-associated phosphatase with roles in cell migration and adhesion, EGFR signaling and regulation of the Hippo pathway.

PTPN13

PTPN13. Single copy in each organism. It has FERM and multiple PDZ domains in addition to phosphatase domain. It is conserved from Monosiga to human but lost in sponge, C. elegans and fly. Mice homozygous for its null allele exhibit abnormal T-helper cell differentiation. Its presence in Monosiga and absence is various organisms suggests its basal but non-essential function.

PTPN20

PTPN20. It is vertebrate specific. It has two copies in human, PTPN20A and PTPN20B. Their sequences are almost identical. Their function is unclear.

PTPN1
PTPN23
PTPN9

The N9 subfamily consists of one gene in humans (PTPN9/PTP-MEG2), and homologs throughout metazoans. The protein has a Sec14 domain N-teminal of the PTP domain, which targets the protein to the membrane of secretory vesicles (PMID: 15322554), where it regulates vesicle fusion. PTPN9 desphosphorylates and activates NSF (N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor), a regulator of vesicle fusion.

The human gene is also implicated in signaling between insulin receptor (InsR) and the FoxO transcription factor (PMID: 16679294).

PTPN12

Three copies in human, PTPN12, PTPN18 and PTPN22. They have a phosphatase domain and C-terminal PEST motif involved in protein degradation. PTPN12 has various substrates, including tyrosine kinases cABL of Abl kinase family and PYK2 of FAK kinase family. PTPN18 can dephoshorylate ErbB2 of EGFR kinase family. The N12 subfamily is found from Monosiga to human, as is the Abl kinase family. The other two kinase families FAK and EGFR are conserved from sponge to human.

Ptp69D

A metazoan RPTP family similar to PTPRD, involved in neuronal pathfinding, but absent from vertebrates.