Domain structure of pleiotrophin required for transformation

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Abstract

The pleiotrophin (PTN) gene (Ptn) is a potent protooncogene that is highly expressed in many primary human tumors and constitutively expressed in cell lines derived from these tumors. The product of the Ptn gene is a secreted 136-amino acid heparin binding cytokine with distinct lysine-rich clusters within both the N- and C-terminal domains. To seek domains of PTN functionally important in neoplastic transformation, we constructed a series of mutants and tested their transforming potential by four independent criteria. Our data establish that a domain within PTN residues 41 to 64 and either but not both the N- or C-terminal domains are required for transformation; deletion of both the N and C termini abolishes the transformation potential of PTN. Furthermore, deletion of two internal 5- amino acid residue repeats enhances the transformation potency of PTN 2- fold. Our data indicate that PTN residues 41-64 contain an essential domain for transformation and suggest the hypothesis that this domain requires an additional interaction of the highly basic clusters of the N or C terminus of PTN with a negatively charged 'docking' site to enable the transforming domain itself to engage and initiate PTN signaling through its cognate receptor.

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Zhang, N., Zhong, R., & Deuel, T. F. (1999). Domain structure of pleiotrophin required for transformation. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 274(19), 12959–12962. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.274.19.12959

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