4.6 Article

Weak oligomerization of low-molecular-weight protein tyrosine phosphatase is conserved from mammals to bacteria

Journal

FEBS JOURNAL
Volume 276, Issue 16, Pages 4346-4357

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2009.07139.x

Keywords

low-molecular-weight protein tyrosine phosphatase (lmwPTP); phosphatase regulation; protein oligomerization; signaling pathways; supramolecular proenzyme

Funding

  1. the Spanish Ministry of Education [BIO2007-63458]
  2. Spanish Ministerio de Education y Ciencia
  3. Spanish Ministry of Education
  4. IRB by the Generalitat de Catalunya

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The well-characterized self-association of a mammalian low-molecular-weight protein tyrosine phosphatase (lmwPTP) produces inactive oligomers that are in equilibrium with active monomers. A role of the inactive oligomers as supramolecular proenzymes has been suggested. The oligomerization equilibrium of Yw1E, a lmwPTP from Bacillus subtilis, was studied by NMR. Chemical shift data and NMR relaxation confirm that dimerization takes place through the enzyme's active site, and is fully equivalent to the dimerization previously characterized in a eukaryotic low-molecular-weight phosphatase, with similarly large dissociation constants. The similarity between the oligomerization of prokaryotic and eukaryotic phosphatases extends beyond the dimer and involves higher order oligomers detected by NMR relaxation analysis at high protein concentrations. The conservation across different kingdoms of life suggests a physiological role for lmwPTP oligomerization in spite of the weak association observed in vitro. Structural data suggest that substrate modulation of the oligomerization equilibrium could be a regulatory mechanism leading to the generation of signaling pulses. The presence of a phenylalanine residue in the dimerization site of Yw1E, replacing a tyrosine residue conserved in all eukaryotic lmwPTPs, demonstrates that lmwPTP regulation by oligomerization can be independent from tyrosine phosphorylation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available