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Both Intrinsic Substrate Preference and Network Context Contribute to Substrate Selection of Classical Tyrosine Phosphatases.


ABSTRACT: Reversible tyrosine phosphorylation is a widespread post-translational modification mechanism underlying cell physiology. Thus, understanding the mechanisms responsible for substrate selection by kinases and phosphatases is central to our ability to model signal transduction at a system level. Classical protein-tyrosine phosphatases can exhibit substrate specificity in vivo by combining intrinsic enzymatic specificity with the network of protein-protein interactions, which positions the enzymes in close proximity to their substrates. Here we use a high throughput approach, based on high density phosphopeptide chips, to determine the in vitro substrate preference of 16 members of the protein-tyrosine phosphatase family. This approach helped identify one residue in the substrate binding pocket of the phosphatase domain that confers specificity for phosphopeptides in a specific sequence context. We also present a Bayesian model that combines intrinsic enzymatic specificity and interaction information in the context of the human protein interaction network to infer new phosphatase substrates at the proteome level.

SUBMITTER: Palma A 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5377807 | biostudies-literature | 2017 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Both Intrinsic Substrate Preference and Network Context Contribute to Substrate Selection of Classical Tyrosine Phosphatases.

Palma Anita A   Tinti Michele M   Paoluzi Serena S   Santonico Elena E   Brandt Bernd Willem BW   Brandt Bernd Willem BW   Hooft van Huijsduijnen Rob R   Masch Antonia A   Heringa Jaap J   Schutkowski Mike M   Castagnoli Luisa L   Cesareni Gianni G  

The Journal of biological chemistry 20170203 12


Reversible tyrosine phosphorylation is a widespread post-translational modification mechanism underlying cell physiology. Thus, understanding the mechanisms responsible for substrate selection by kinases and phosphatases is central to our ability to model signal transduction at a system level. Classical protein-tyrosine phosphatases can exhibit substrate specificity <i>in vivo</i> by combining intrinsic enzymatic specificity with the network of protein-protein interactions, which positions the e  ...[more]

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