1r6h

From Proteopedia

Revision as of 12:47, 21 February 2008 by OCA (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

1r6h

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Solution Structure of human PRL-3

Overview

Phosphatases and kinases are the cellular signal transduction enzymes that control protein phosphorylation. PRL phosphatases constitute a novel class of small (20 kDa), prenylated phosphatases with oncogenic activity. In particular, PRL-3 is consistently overexpressed in liver metastasis in colorectal cancer cells and represents a new therapeutic target. Here, we present the solution structure of PRL-3, the first structure of a PRL phosphatase. The structure places PRL phosphatases in the class of dual specificity phosphatases with closest structural homology to the VHR phosphatase. The structure, coupled with kinetic studies of site-directed mutants, identifies functionally important residues and reveals unique features, differentiating PRLs from other phosphatases. These differences include an unusually hydrophobic active site without the catalytically important serine/threonine found in most other phosphatases. The position of the general acid loop indicates the presence of conformational change upon catalysis. The studies also identify a potential regulatory role of Cys(49) that forms an intramolecular disulfide bond with the catalytic Cys(104) even under mildly reducing conditions. Molecular modeling of the highly homologous PRL-1 and PRL-2 phosphatases revealed unique surface elements that are potentially important for specificity.

About this Structure

1R6H is a Single protein structure of sequence from Homo sapiens. Active as Protein-tyrosine-phosphatase, with EC number 3.1.3.48 Full crystallographic information is available from OCA.

Reference

Structural insights into molecular function of the metastasis-associated phosphatase PRL-3., Kozlov G, Cheng J, Ziomek E, Banville D, Gehring K, Ekiel I, J Biol Chem. 2004 Mar 19;279(12):11882-9. Epub 2004 Jan 1. PMID:14704153

Page seeded by OCA on Thu Feb 21 14:47:35 2008

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

OCA

Personal tools