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Bacterially expressed, dual specificity phosphatase VHR protein
induced germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) when microinjected into
Xenopus oocytes, albeit with slower kinetics than that
observed in progesterone- or insulin-induced maturation. A mutant VHR
protein missing an essential cysteine residue for its in vitro phosphatase activity completely lacked activity in injected
oocytes. VHR injection done in conjunction with progesterone or insulin
treatment resulted in highly synergized GVBD responses showing much
faster kinetics than that produced by VHR or either hormone alone. The
delayed kinetics of VHR-induced GVBD and the synergistic responses
obtained in the presence of hormones suggested that this protein may be
promoting G
Various experimental observations
are consistent with such a role for the injected VHR in oocytes: 1) as
opposed to hormone-treated oocytes, histone H1 kinase activation is not
preceded by MAPK activation in the process of GVBD in VHR-injected
oocytes; 2) incubation of purified VHR with highly concentrated
cell-free extracts of untreated oocytes resulted in activation of
histone H1 kinase activity in the lysates; 3) coinjection of VHR with
activated Ras proteins resulted in synergized responses, faster than
those produced by either protein alone; 4) coinjection of VHR with the
purified amino-terminal SH2 domain of the p85 subunit of
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (which blocks insulin-induced GVBD) does
not affect VHR-induced maturation.
The biological actions of VHR in
oocytes clearly distinguish it from other dual specificity
phosphatases, which have shown inhibitory effects when tested in
oocytes. We speculate that VHR may represent a dual specificity
phosphatase responsible for activation of cdk-cyclin complex(es) at a
still undetermined stage of the cell cycle.
Volume 270,
Number 23,
Issue of June 9, pp. 14229-14234, 1995
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
/M transition by weakly mimicking the action of
cdc25, the dual specificity phosphatase that physiologically activates
the maturation promotion factor.
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M. J. Wishart, J. M. Denu, J. A. Williams, and J. E. Dixon A Single Mutation Converts a Novel Phosphotyrosine Binding Domain into a Dual-specificity Phosphatase J. Biol. Chem., November 10, 1995; 270(45): 26782 - 26785. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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