4.6 Article

N-(cyclohexanecarboxyl)-O-phospho-L-serine, a minimal substrate for the dual-specificity protein phosphatase IphP

Journal

ARCHIVES OF BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS
Volume 376, Issue 2, Pages 439-448

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1006/abbi.2000.1750

Keywords

N-benzoyl-O-phosphoserine; protein-tyrosine phosphatase; naphthyl phosphate; Cdc14; PTP-1B; PTP-H1; VHR

Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01GM55067] Funding Source: Medline

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Three dual-specific phosphatases [DSPs], IphP, VHR, and Cdc14, and three protein-tyrosine phosphatases [PTPs], PTP-1B, PTP-H1, and Tc-PTPa, were challenged with a set of low molecular weight phosphoesters to probe the factors underlying the distinct substrate specificities displayed by these two mechanistically homologous families of protein phosphatases. It was observed that beta-naphthyl phosphate represented an excellent general substrate for both PTPs and DSPs. While DSPs tended to hydrolyze alpha-naphthyl phosphate at rates comparable to that of the beta-isomer, the PTPs PTP-1B and Tc-PTPa did not. PTP-H1, however, displayed high alpha-naphthyl phosphatase activity. Intriguingly, PTP-H1 also displayed much higher protein-serine phosphatase activity in vitro, 0.2-0.3% that toward equivalent tyrosine phosphorylated proteins, than did PTP-1B or Tc-PTPa. The latter two PTPs discriminated between the serine- and tyrosine-phosphorylated forms of two test proteins by factors of greater than or equal to 10(4)-10(6). While free phosphoserine represented an extremely poor substrate for all of the DSPs examined, the addition of a hydrophobic handle to form N-(cyclohexanecarboxyl)-O-phospho-L-serine produced a compound that was hydrolyzed by IphP with high efficiency, i.e., at a rate comparable to that of free phosphotyrosine or p-nitrophenyl phosphate, VHR also hydrolyzed N-(cyclohexanecarboxyl) -O-phospho-L-serine (1 mM) at a rate approximately one-tenth that of beta-naphthyl phosphate, None of the PTPs tested exhibited significant activity against this compound. However, N-(cyclohexanecarboxyl) O-phospho-L-serine did not prove to be a universal substrate for DSPs as Cdc14 displayed little propensity to hydrolyze it. (C) 2000 Academic Press.

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