4.6 Article

TULA-2 Protein Phosphatase Suppresses Activation of Syk through the GPVI Platelet Receptor for Collagen by Dephosphorylating Tyr(P)346, a Regulatory Site of Syk

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 291, Issue 43, Pages 22427-22441

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.743732

Keywords

platelet; protein phosphorylation; signaling; spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk); tyrosine-protein kinase (tyrosine kinase); tyrosine-protein phosphatase (tyrosine phosphatase); GPVI receptor; ITAM; TULA-2

Funding

  1. American Heart Association [13IRG14230008]
  2. National Institutes of Health [HL93231, HL118593, HL110860]

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Protein-tyrosine phosphatase TULA-2 has been shown to regulate receptor signaling in several cell types, including platelets. Platelets are critical for maintaining vascular integrity; this function is mediated by platelet aggregation in response to recognition of the exposed basement membrane collagen by the GPVI receptor, which is non-covalently associated with the signal-transducing FcR polypeptide chain. Our previous studies suggested that TULA-2 plays an important role in negatively regulating signaling through GPVI-FcR and indicated that the tyrosine-protein kinase Syk is a key target of the regulatory action of TULA-2 in platelets. However, the molecular basis of the down-regulatory effect of TULA-2 on Syk activation via FcR remained unclear. In this study, we demonstrate that suppression of Syk activation by TULA-2 is mediated, to a substantial degree, by dephosphorylation of Tyr(P)(346), a regulatory site of Syk, which becomes phosphorylated soon after receptor ligation and plays a critical role in initiating the process that yields fully activated Syk. TULA-2 is capable of dephosphorylating Tyr(P)(346) with high efficiency, thus controlling the overall activation of Syk, but is less efficient in dephosphorylating other regulatory sites of this kinase. Therefore, dephosphorylation of Tyr(P)(346) may be considered an important checkpoint in the regulation of Syk activation process. Putative biological functions of TULA-2-mediated dephosphorylation of Tyr(P)(346) may include deactivation of receptor-activated Syk or suppression of Syk activation by suboptimal stimulation.

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