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Review

Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases: Emerging Regulators of Apoptosis

Maxime Hallé, Michel L. Tremblay and Tzu-Ching Meng

volume 6 | issue 22

15 November 2007
Pages: 2773 - 2781

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Apoptosis is a precisely controlled physiological mechanism that is required for the elimination of cells during embryonic development, in response to stress and infection as well as in the maintenance of homeostasis. Since the outcome of several of these biological processes is regulated by signaling events involving tyrosine phosphorylation, members of the protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) gene family are expected to be of primary importance. Here, we summarize the current literature linking the activities of classical PTPs with the regulation of apoptosis. The recent discovery of caspase-cleavage mediated modulation of a member of this family, PTP-PEST, indicates that other PTPs could be modulated in a similar manner. In light of this, we present an analysis of all murine and human PTPs gene for the presence of putative caspase cleavage motifs. Additional studies linking the activity of PTPs to their own regulation during programmed cell death initiation should provide important insight into the understanding of this fundamental physiological phenomenon.

Authors

Maxime Hallé

McGill University; Montreal, Quebec Canada

Michel L. Tremblay

McGill University; Montreal, Quebec Canada

Tzu-Ching Meng

Academia Sinica; Taipei, Taiwan


This is an open-access article

 Download PDF

If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.