Protein-tyrosine phosphatase PTPD1 regulates focal adhesion kinase autophosphorylation and cell migration

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Abstract

PTPD1 is a cytosolic nonreceptor tyrosine phosphatase and a positive regulator of the Src-epidermal growth factor transduction pathway. We show that PTPD1 localizes along actin filaments and at adhesion plaques. PTPD1 forms a stable complex via distinct molecular modules with actin, Src tyrosine kinase, and focal adhesion kinase (FAK), a scaffold protein kinase enriched at adhesion plaques. Overexpression of PTPD1 promoted cell scattering and migration, short hairpin RNA-mediated silencing of endogenous PTPD1, or expression of PTPD1 mutants lacking either catalytic activity (PTPD1C1108S) or the FERM domain (PTPD1Δ1-325) significantly reduced cell motility. PTPD1 and Src catalytic activities were both required for epidermal growth factor-induced FAK autophosphorylation at its active site and for downstream propagation of ERK1/2 signaling. Our findings demonstrate that PTPD1 is a component of a multivalent scaffold complex nucleated by FAK at specific intracellular sites. By modulating Src-FAK signaling at adhesion sites, PTPD1 promotes the cytoskeleton events that induce cell adhesion and migration. © 2008 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Carlucci, A., Gedressi, C., Lignitto, L., Nezi, L., Villa-Moruzzi, E., Avvedimento, E. V., … Feliciello, A. (2008). Protein-tyrosine phosphatase PTPD1 regulates focal adhesion kinase autophosphorylation and cell migration. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 283(16), 10919–10929. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M707248200

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