4.5 Article

Protein tyrosine phosphatase φ regulates paxillin tyrosine phosphorylation and mediates colony-stimulating factor 1-induced morphological changes in macrophages

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 5, Pages 1795-1809

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.5.1795-1809.2001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA26504, CA32551, R01 CA026504, P30 CA013330, R01 CA032551, P-30-CA13330, R37 CA026504] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM38511, R01 GM061034, R01 GM038511] Funding Source: Medline

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Removal of colony-stimulating factor 1 (CSF-1) causes macrophages to round up and to increase their expression of protein tyrosine phosphatase phi (PTP phi). This is accompanied by the disruption of focal complexes and the formation of ruffles. Here,ve have overexpressed wild-type (WT) PTP phi and a phosphatase-inactive (C325S) mutant in a macrophage cell line in the presence and absence of CSF-1. In the presence of CSF-1, WT PTP phi induces cell rounding and ruffle formation, while C325S PTP phi has no effect. In contrast, in CSF-l-starved cells, C325S PTP phi behaves in a dominant negative fashion, preventing rounding and ruffling. Furthermore, C325S PTP phi increases adhesion in cycling cells, while WT PTP phi enhances motility. In WT PTP phi -overexpressing cells, the focal contact protein paxillin is selectively depleted from focal complexes and specifically dephosphorylated on tyrosine. In contrast, paxillin is hyperphosphorylated in C325S PTP phi -expressing cells. Moreover, a complex containing PTP phi, paxillin, and a paxillin-associated tyrosine kinase, Pyk2, can be immunoprecipitated from macrophage lysates, and the catalytic domain of PTP phi selectively binds paxillin and Pyk2 in vitro. Although PTP phi and Pyk2 do not colocalize with paxillin in focal complexes, all three proteins are colocalized in dorsal ruffles. The results suggest that paxillin is dephosphorylated by PTP phi in dorsal ruffles, using Pyk2 as a bridging molecule, resulting in a reduced pool of tyrosine-phosphorylated paxillin available for incorporation into focal complexes, thereby mediating CSF-1 regulation of macrophage morphology, adhesion, and motility.

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