Difference between revisions of "Pseudophosphatases (obsolete)"

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(Functions)
(References)
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#Caromile10 pmid=20097759
 
#Caromile10 pmid=20097759
 
#denHertog02 pmid=12376545
 
#denHertog02 pmid=12376545
 +
#Gingras09 pmid=19340315
 
#Kharitidi13 pmid=24064037
 
#Kharitidi13 pmid=24064037
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#Lin11 pmid=21724833
 
</biblio>
 
</biblio>

Revision as of 05:06, 11 March 2015

Functions

  • Receptor PTPs. Most receptor PTPs have two tandem phosphatase domains. The 2nd phosphatase domain has no or negligible activity. The 2nd domain can interact with 1st domain in both intra- and intermolecular manners [1].

Well-recognized pseudophosphatases

More to be added.

MTMR5 (SBF1) and MTMR13 (SBF2)

Pending.

Controversial pseudophosphatases

PTPRN (IA-2) and PTPRN2

Human PTPRN and PTPRN2 have been proposed to be enzymatically inactive due to mutations at catalytic Cx5R motif and WPD motif [2]. However, PTPRN2 has been reported to be phosphatidylinositol phosphatase [3].

PTPN23 (HD-PTP)

PTPN23 was reported to be catalytically inactive, - no phosphatase activity toward tyrosine or lipid. It was proposed that serine at position 1452 within Cx5R catalytic motif caused the inactivity. Replacing serine with alanine, which is found in catalytically active PTPs, can restore the phosphatase activity [4].

However, another study found SRC, E-cadherin, and beta-catenin are direct substrates of PTPN23 [5].

References

  1. Blanchetot C, Tertoolen LG, Overvoorde J, and den Hertog J. Intra- and intermolecular interactions between intracellular domains of receptor protein-tyrosine phosphatases. J Biol Chem. 2002 Dec 6;277(49):47263-9. DOI:10.1074/jbc.M205810200 | PubMed ID:12376545 | HubMed [denHertog02]
  2. Kharitidi D, Manteghi S, and Pause A. Pseudophosphatases: methods of analysis and physiological functions. Methods. 2014 Jan 15;65(2):207-18. DOI:10.1016/j.ymeth.2013.09.009 | PubMed ID:24064037 | HubMed [Kharitidi13]
  3. Caromile LA, Oganesian A, Coats SA, Seifert RA, and Bowen-Pope DF. The neurosecretory vesicle protein phogrin functions as a phosphatidylinositol phosphatase to regulate insulin secretion. J Biol Chem. 2010 Apr 2;285(14):10487-96. DOI:10.1074/jbc.M109.066563 | PubMed ID:20097759 | HubMed [Caromile10]
  4. Gingras MC, Zhang YL, Kharitidi D, Barr AJ, Knapp S, Tremblay ML, and Pause A. HD-PTP is a catalytically inactive tyrosine phosphatase due to a conserved divergence in its phosphatase domain. PLoS One. 2009;4(4):e5105. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0005105 | PubMed ID:19340315 | HubMed [Gingras09]
  5. Lin G, Aranda V, Muthuswamy SK, and Tonks NK. Identification of PTPN23 as a novel regulator of cell invasion in mammary epithelial cells from a loss-of-function screen of the 'PTP-ome'. Genes Dev. 2011 Jul 1;25(13):1412-25. DOI:10.1101/gad.2018911 | PubMed ID:21724833 | HubMed [Lin11]
All Medline abstracts: PubMed | HubMed