1. Academic Validation
  2. Intracellular substrates of brain-enriched receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase rho (RPTPrho/PTPRT)

Intracellular substrates of brain-enriched receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase rho (RPTPrho/PTPRT)

  • Brain Res. 2006 Oct 20;1116(1):50-7. doi: 10.1016/j.brainres.2006.07.122.
Julie A Besco 1 Rob Hooft van Huijsduijnen Adrienne Frostholm Andrej Rotter
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pharmacology, The Ohio State University, 333 W 10th Ave., Columbus, OH 43210, USA. besco.1@osu.edu
Abstract

Receptor protein tyrosine Phosphatase rho (RPTPrho/PTPRT) is a transmembrane protein that is highly expressed in the developing and adult central nervous system. It is a member of the RPTP R2B subfamily, which includes PTPkappa, PTPmu and PCP-2. Glutathione-S-transferase (GST) pulldown assays were used to show that RPTPrho interacts with several adherens junctional proteins in brain, including E-cadherin, N-Cadherin, VE-cadherin (Cadherin-5), desmoglein, alpha, beta and gamma catenin, p120(ctn) and alpha-actinin. With the exception of E-cadherin and alpha-actinin, binding was considerably reduced at high sodium concentrations. Furthermore, immunoprecipitation Phosphatase assays indicated that E-cadherin, and to a far lesser extent p120(ctn), were tyrosine dephosphorylated by a recombinant RPTPrho intracellular fragment, and thus, were likely to be primary substrates for RPTPrho. The interaction of RPTPrho with adherens junctional components suggests that this Phosphatase may transduce extracellular signals to the actin Cytoskeleton and thereby play a role in regulating cadherin-mediated cell adhesion in the central nervous system.

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