Cloning of hOST-PTP: the only example of a protein-tyrosine-phosphatase the function of which has been lost between rodent and human
Pseudogene
Conserved sequence
Cloning (programming)
DOI:
10.1016/j.bbrc.2004.06.137
Publication Date:
2004-07-21T12:36:14Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
Protein-tyrosine-phosphatases (PTP-ases), in concert with protein tyrosine kinases, control various biological activities such as cell growth and differentiation. In rodents, around 40 PTP-ases have been described. Functional orthologue for each of these PTP-ases have been identified in human, except for OST-PTP. OST-PTP is a transmembrane PTP-ase with a restricted tissue distribution. In silico analysis on public sequence databases reveals a human OST-PTP gene orthologue that encompasses 21 kb on chromosome 1q32.1. Using RT-PCR we isolated a 4 kb hOST-PTP transcript. hOST-PTP cDNA sequence exhibits numerous disablements indicating that it does not code for a PTP-ase but is rather a pseudogene with unique features. Indeed, (i) it has no "functional" parent in the human genome, (ii) it has retained an "intron-exon" structure, and (iii) it is transcribed in a regulated manner. Interestingly, we found two ESTs, from domesticated pig and from cow that exhibit ORF that would predict a functional OST-PTP orthologue in Artiodactyls. Taken together, these results indicate that OST-PTP is the only PTP-ase the function of which has been lost during the evolution process between rodents and human.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (23)
CITATIONS (33)
EXTERNAL LINKS
PlumX Metrics
RECOMMENDATIONS
FAIR ASSESSMENT
Coming soon ....
JUPYTER LAB
Coming soon ....