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Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 2002, p. 3404-3414, Vol. 22, No. 10
0270-7306/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.22.10.3404-3414.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Regulation of Cell Growth Laboratory, National Cancer InstituteFrederick, Frederick, Maryland 21702,1 Program in Molecular Biology and Cancer, Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute, Mount Sinai Hospital, M5G 1X5 Toronto, Ontario, Canada2
Received 28 November 2001/ Returned for modification 7 January 2002/ Accepted 12 February 2002
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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PTPs can be classified into four subfamilies based on function, structure, and sequence: classic tyrosine-specific phosphatases, VH1-like dual specificity PTPs, the Cdc25 phosphatase, and the low-molecular-weight phosphatase (21). Low-molecular-weight protein tyrosine phosphatases (LMW-PTPs) are cytoplasmic enzymes found in most species from prokaryotes to mammals (65, 66). LMW-PTPs have a conserved signature motif, CXXXXXRS/T, in their active site (75) but lack most other sequences conserved among PTPs. Several isoforms of LMW-PTP have been identified in mammals and are believed to result from alternative splicing (18, 19, 46, 50, 53, 78). These isoforms may have different kinetic characteristics and substrate specificities (15, 71).
LMW-PTP has been shown to interact with several RTKs, including epidermal growth factor receptor (64), platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR) (9, 10), and an Eph receptor (74). Upon PDGF stimulation of fibroblasts, a cytoplasmic pool of LMW-PTP interacts with and dephosphorylates the PDGFR, resulting in reduction of proliferation (9, 10). However, the insoluble LMW-PTP pool acts on cytoskeletal proteins such as Rho-GAP, suggesting that LMW-PTP plays multiple roles in PDGFR-mediated mitogenesis (14). While LMW-PTP is generally considered to inhibit growth factor-induced cell proliferation, in some instances LMW-PTP functions as a positive regulator. For example, in v-Ha-Ras-transformed cells, LMW-PTP increases the cell proliferation rate (65, 66). LMW-PTP has also been implicated as a positive regulator in the Eph receptor system, in which the recruitment of LMW-PTP to Eph receptor complexes was shown to be important for promotion of endothelial capillary-like assembly and cell adhesion. Mutation of the LMW-PTP binding site in Eph B1 causes failure of endothelial cells to adhere to fibronectin, suggesting that interaction of LMW-PTP with Eph B1 may be necessary for cell adhesion and plays a positive role in this event (74).
A number of growth factors have been implicated in establishing the primary germ layers during early Xenopus laevis development. Members of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family control mesoderm production and maintenance as well as morphogenetic movements during gastrulation in Xenopus embryos. Several lines of evidence support this concept. For example, in ectodermal explant tissue, overexpression of embryonic FGF (eFGF) or treatment with basic FGF (bFGF) induces mesoderm (38, 73). In embryos, a C-terminally truncated FGF receptor 1 (FGFR1) (XFD) has been demonstrated to inhibit the formation of most mesodermal tissue and to cause gastrulation defects (2). In contrast, constitutively activated forms of FGFR1 induce mesoderm in ectodermal explants (animal caps) (57). Mesoderm is maintained via a positive feedback loop in which Xbra, a pan-mesodermal marker induced by FGF signaling, activates eFGF expression, which in turn aids in the maintenance of Xbra expression (35, 72). After mesoderm induction, FGFR is implicated in a series of coordinated cell movements involving the three established germ layers that leads to the extension of the anterior-posterior (A-P) axis (convergent extension) (2, 3, 37, 40).
FGF triggers dimerization and autophosphorylation of FGFR, and this leads to the recruitment of several SH2-containing molecules such as phospholipase C-
(54), Crk (45), and possibly the Src kinase (44, 89). However, association of the FGFR with the docking protein SNT1/FRS-2 is not dependent upon receptor phosphorylation (39, 84). These associated signaling molecules play specific roles in FGFR activity. Activation of phospholipase C-
(55) and Crk (27) does not appear to affect mesoderm induction in Xenopus ectodermal explants. Upon tyrosine phosphorylation, SNT1/FRS-2 promotes the activation of Ras via recruitment of SH2-containing signaling molecules such as Grb2, which associates with Sos, Gab1, and SHP-2 (60). Phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase enters the complex by association with Gab1 (61). Dominant-negative forms of the SH2/SH3 adapter Grb2 and Nck inhibit FGF-induced mesoderm in ectodermal explants (27). Moreover, expression of a dominant-negative variant of the PTP SHP-2 causes severe posterior truncations of Xenopus embryos, a similar phenotype to that induced by XFD (79). Once Ras is activated, it in turn activates the Raf-MEK-mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway. Both the Raf-MEK-MAP kinase and phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase pathways are essential for proper mesoderm development (7, 24, 29, 41, 48, 82, 86).
While significant progress has been made in delineating the FGFR signaling pathway, the number of components in the pathway has not been completely elucidated, with additional positive and negative regulators acting between the receptor and Ras still being identified. For example, in Drosophila melanogaster, Dof (downstream of FGFR) is necessary for MAP kinase activation and acts upstream of Ras (83), while Sprouty potentially blocks activation of Ras by binding to Drk and Gap1 (8). In Xenopus, however, Sprouty2 is reported to inhibit FGF-induced calcium release and Activin-induced convergent extension while having no effect on MAP kinase activity or mesoderm induced by FGF (59). There may also be additional protein tyrosine kinases involved downstream of FGFR activation. For example, Laloo is a Src-like kinase that acts downstream of the FGFR and is an essential component of the FGF signaling pathway (85).
In this study, we have isolated two isoforms of XLPTP1, whose expression is remarkably similar to that of FGFR1. A loss-of-function strategy employing antisense morpholino oligonucleotides revealed that XLPTP1 is required for FGF-induced mesoderm formation in Xenopus ectodermal explants and during embryogenesis. Further, we present evidence that XLPTP1 is a functional component of the FGFR1 complex and acts as a positive regulator of the Ras-MAP kinase pathway.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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5'UTR and XLPTP1b
5'UTR, a Kozak consensus sequence was introduced by PCR at the start codon of both XLPTP1a and -1b using the primer 5'-CGA ATT CGC CAC CAT GGC GCA GCA GGG GAA CGG C-3'. All PCR products were verified by sequencing.
Preparation of Xenopus embryos, oocytes, synthetic RNA, and animal cap explants.
For all embryo injections and manipulations, wild-type X. laevis embryos were obtained by artificial insemination after induction of females with 500 IU of human chorionic gonadotropin (49). Developmental stages were designated according to the method of Nieuwkoop and Faber (58). All capped mRNA was made by using the SP6 mMessage mMachine kit as specified by the manufacturer (Ambion). pCS2+ plasmids containing XLPTP1a and -1b, XLPTP1a
5'UTR and XLPTP1b
5'UTR, eFGF, FGFR1WT (wild type), and FGFR1K562E (an activated FGFR1) were linearized with NotI. pSP64T containing FGFR1C289R (an activated FGFR1) was linearized with XbaI. FGFR1KD in pSP64T3 was linearized with BamHI. Constitutively activated Ras and Raf in pSP64T were linearized with BamHI and EcoRI, respectively. Constitutively activated Mek in pSP64A was linearized with EcoRI. All FGF-related cDNAs were generous gifts from R. Friesel. Control morpholino antisense and XLPTP antisense morpholino oligonucleotides complementary to the 5' untranslated region (UTR) of XLPTP1 cDNAs were obtained from Gene Tools, LLC. Embryos were injected into both blastomeres at the two-cell stage with indicated amounts of RNAs or antisense morpholino oligonucleotides. Oocytes were prepared as described previously (20). For stimulation of FGFR1WT, human recombinant bFGF (Promega) was applied to oocyte medium (300 ng/ml). Animal cap explants were made using forceps or a Gastromaster (Xenotek Engineering) at stage 8. The explants were cultured as described previously (49). For Activin treatment, explants were incubated in 0.5x modified Barths solution with human recombinant Activin (50 ng/ml) until the indicated stages.
Whole-mount in situ hybridization. A pBluescript SK(+) plasmid containing XLPTP1b was linearized with EcoRI, and digoxigenin-labeled riboprobe was synthesized using T3 polymerase (MegaScript kit; Ambion). Plasmids containing Xenopus Ap-2 (Xap-2) (87) and Nrp-1 (67) were linearized (Xap-2 with HindIII and Nrp-1 with BamHI), and digoxigenin-labeled riboprobes were synthesized using T7 and T3 polymerase, respectively. Whole-mount in situ hybridization was essentially done as described by Harland (28), with a modification (49). For detection, BM Purple (Roche) was used as a chromogenic substrate. When staining became apparent, the reaction was stopped and the embryos were refixed in MEMPFA (0.1 M MOPS [pH 7.4], 2 mM EGTA, 1 mM MgSO4, and 4% paraformaldehyde) for 1 h. When pigmented embryos were used, embryos were bleached with a solution containing 1% H2O2, 5% formamide, and 0.5x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate) (52) after staining. Photographs were taken under a dissecting microscope (Nikon SMZ1500) with a DKC-5000 digital camera system (Sony), and digital images were processed using Adobe Photoshop.
Whole-mount immunostaining. Whole-mount immunostaining was done essentially as described by Hemmati-Brivanlou and Harland (31). Embryos fixed with MEMPFA were blocked with 10% goat serum in phosphate-buffered saline containing 0.1% Tween 20 (PTw). The 12/101 antibody (developmental studies hybridoma bank) and Tor-70 antibody (a generous gift from R. Harland) were used at a 1:500 dilution. Incubation with the secondary antibody, a goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G-horseradish peroxidase conjugate (UBI), was done at a 1:100 dilution at 4°C overnight. After extensive washing with PTw, embryos were placed in 0.5 mg of diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride solution per ml. The colorimetric reaction was stopped by replacing diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride solution with PTw. Embryos stained with Tor-70 were cleared with benzoate-benzyl alcohol (1:2 [vol/vol]).
RT-PCR assay.
Total RNA from staged embryos was extracted using Trizol (Gibco BRL). cDNA was synthesized from 1 µg of total RNA using SuperScriptII (Gibco BRL). PCR for XLPTP1a and XLPTP1b was performed in 50 µl of solution containing 1 µl of cDNA, 1x Taq buffer, 1.5 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM (each) dNTPs, 350 ng of each isoform-specific primer, and 1 U of AmpliTaq DNA polymerase (Perkin Elmer). Following PCR, 10 µl of sample was loaded on a 1% agarose gel. Primers and cycle number used for XLPTP1a and XLPTP1b were as follows: XLPTP1a, 5'-AGC CTG CAT GAA GAA GCA TG-3' and 5'-GAG CAT CGG ATA CAT TGC TG-3' for 30 cycles at 58°C; and XLPTP1b, 5'-CAT AGA CAG CGC TGC AAC TTC-3' and 5'-CTG CAC CTG GCT ACC TCT TC-3' for 27 cycles at 62°C. Extraction of total RNA from animal cap explants and reverse transcription (RT)-PCR assays were performed as described previously (49). The primer sequences and conditions for Xbra and EF-1
(32) have been previously published. Histone H4 primer sequences were posted at the Xenbase web page (http://cbrmed.ucalgary.ca/pvize/html/methods/RT-PCR.html).
Immunoprecipitation and Western blot analysis. Embryo or oocyte lysates were prepared with ice-cold lysis buffer (20 mM Tris [pH 8.0], 150 mM NaCl, 1% Nonidet P-40 containing 1:50-diluted Calbiochem Protease Inhibitor Cocktail Set III) as previously described (12), followed by extraction with Freon (Sigma) at a 1:1 (vol/vol) ratio. Immunoprecipitation was conducted on 20 oocyte equivalents with the indicated antibodies for 4 h and protein-A/G agarose (Santa Cruz) for an additional 1 h. Following three washes with lysis buffer, immunoprecipitates were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (8%). After the proteins were transferred to a membrane (Immobilon-P; Millipore), the membrane was blocked with 5% nonfat dry milk in Tris-buffered saline containing 0.1% Tween 20 and was incubated with primary antibodies anti-HA (Covance), anti-phosphoMAP kinase (Sigma), and anti-FGFR1 (a generous gift from R. Friesel). Proteins were visualized using an appropriate secondary antibody coupled to horseradish peroxidase (UBI), followed by application of enhanced chemiluminescence reagents as specified by the manufacturer (Amersham). For phosphorylated MAP kinase (phosphoMAP kinase) analysis, lysates were prepared with buffer A (42). One embryo equivalent was examined for direct lysate analysis.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. XLPTP1a (accession number AY039214) and XLPTP1b (accession number AY039215) cDNA sequences have been submitted to GenBank.
| RESULTS |
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Loss of XLPTP1 function causes posterior truncation and shortening of the A-P axis.
Before determining whether a relationship exists between XLPTP1 and FGFR1 signaling, it is important to understand the role of endogenous XLPTP1 during Xenopus development. A loss-of-function strategy was undertaken using XLPTP1 antisense morpholino oligonucleotides (XLPTP-AS) corresponding to the 5' UTR of XLPTP1 (Fig. 3a). Targeting this region should block the translation of all XLPTP1 isoforms. These oligonucleotides were injected into the animal pole region of both blastomeres of two-cell-stage embryos (70 ng/embryo) and control morpholino oligonucleotides were also injected (70 ng/embryo). Embryos injected with XLPTP-AS developed normally until gastrulation and later showed severe truncation of posterior structures and shortening of the A-P axis in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 3e). The gross anterior structures, including the cement gland, appeared to develop normally (Fig. 3c and e). Embryos injected with control morpholino oligonucleotides developed normally (Fig. 3b and e). To confirm that the XLPTP-AS-induced phenotype is specifically caused by blocking the XLPTP1 signal, we performed a morphological and biochemical rescue by coinjecting XLPTP-AS with XLPTP1 RNAs lacking the 5' UTR sequence that is complementary to the antisense oligonucleotides (XLPTP1a
5'UTR or XLPTP1b
5'UTR). Either single expression (not shown) or coexpression of XLPTP1a
5'UTR and XLPTP1b
5'UTR (Fig. 3d) efficiently rescued elongation of the A-P axis and posterior structures that were blocked by XLPTP-AS (XLPTP1a rescue, 74% [n = 50]; XLPTP1b rescue, 78% [n = 48]; XLPTP1a and -1b rescue, 81% [n = 47]). Specificity of XLPTP-AS was also biochemically confirmed by injecting HA-tagged XLPTP1a or -1b RNAs alone or with XLPTP-AS. The embryos were harvested at stage 9 and the expression of XLPTP1 was analyzed by Western blot analysis with anti-HA antibody. XLPTP-AS efficiently blocked expression of both XLPTP1 isoforms (Fig. 3f, left panel), while expression of XLPTP1a
5'UTR or XLPTP1b
5'UTR remained unaffected (Fig. 3f, right panel). One additional specificity control was the use of one other antisense morpholino oligonucleotide complementary to the sequence 5' of XLPTP-AS which yielded the same phenotype (not shown). These results indicate that XLPTP-AS specifically and efficiently blocks XLPTP1 function.
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5'UTR and XLPTP1b
5'UTR RNAs. Whole-mount immunostaining for Tor-70 clearly indicates that exogenous XLPTP1 can restore notochord formation (Fig. 4i and j). These results suggest that XLPTP1 may be involved in the development of mesoderm-derived structures.
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XLPTP1 function is essential for FGF-induced MAP kinase activation.
Having established that XLPTP1 makes a valuable contribution to the morphological structures and gene expression associated with FGFR activity, we tested the biochemical events linked to FGF signaling. Since the Ras-MAP kinase pathway plays a critical role in FGF-mediated mesoderm induction (24, 41, 48, 86), we tested whether XLPTP-AS could influence FGF-induced activation of MAP kinase. Embryos were injected with eFGF (5 pg/embryo) or FGFR1 act RNA (50 pg/embryo) either alone or with XLPTP-AS (70 ng/embryo). Whole embryonic lysates were prepared at stage 7 because this represents a period when endogenous MAP kinases are not activated (13, 17, 25). Since, phosphorylation of MAP kinase correlates with its activity, the phophorylation state of MAP kinase was assessed by Western blotting with anti-phosphoMAP kinase antibody. Consistent with Xbra expression, activation of MAP kinase in response to eFGF and FGFR1 act was almost completely blocked by XLPTP-AS (Fig. 6a). Moreover, this MAP kinase inhibition was rescued by the reintroduction of XLPTP1a
5'UTR and XLPTP1b
5'UTR RNAs (Fig. 6b), again suggesting that XLPTP-AS specifically blocks translation of the endogenous XLPTP1. To further define the position of XLPTP1 in the FGF signaling pathway, activated Ras was tested for the ability to rescue the XLPTP-AS block of eFGF-mediated MAP kinase activation. eFGF RNA was coinjected into embryos with activated Ras (Ras act) (50 pg/embryo) plus XLPTP-AS. Activated Ras (Fig. 6b) rescued the XLPTP-AS-mediated inhibition of MAP kinase. As expected, XLPTP-AS did not inhibit activation of MAP kinase induced by activated Raf (Raf act) (500 pg/embryo) or Mek (Mek act) (700 pg/embryo) (Fig. 6c). We also tested whether there was an obvious effect of overexpressing XLPTP1 or inhibiting XLPTP1 expression on tyrosine phosphorylation of FGFR1. Embryos were injected with FGFR1 act (2 ng/embryo) alone or with XLPTP-AS (70 ng/embryo) or XLPTP1a plus -1b (2 ng of each per embryo). Whole lysates were immunoprecipitated with anti-FGFR1 antibody and tyrosine phosphorylation of FGFR1 was analyzed by Western blotting with antiphosphotyrosine antibody. Loss or overexpression of XLPTP1 did not change the observed amount of tyrosine phosphorylated FGFR1 (Fig. 6d), suggesting that FGFR1 may not be the substrate of XLPTP1. Collectively, the above results suggest that XLPTP1 may serve as a positive component of FGF signaling that acts upstream of or parallel to Ras and downstream of FGFR1.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Appropriate elongation of the A-P body axis is dependent upon coordinated cell movements, and a possible role for XLPTP1 in cell migration is supported by a previous study in NIH 3T3 fibroblasts. In that study, LMW-PTP has been proposed to dephosphorylate tyrosine phosphorylated p190Rho-GAP in response to PDGF stimulation, leading to activation of Rho (11). Rho has been suggested to control actin rearrangement (80) and thus cell movement and shape changes during gastrulation in Xenopus and Drosophila (5, 62). Therefore, increased tyrosine phosphorylation of p190Rho-GAP caused by the depletion of XLPTP1 may down-regulate Rho, resulting in disruption of the actin rearrangement and impairment of cell movement. Whether this proposed signaling cascade is playing a role during Xenopus development will require further studies.
Disruption of FGF or PDGF signaling causes posterior truncation of Xenopus embryos. For example, expression of a truncated FGFR1 suppresses mesoderm induction and inhibits convergent extension during gastrulation, resulting in posterior truncation and lack of blastopore closure (2, 3). Loss of XLPTP1 causes a trunk and posterior truncation phenotype, but blastopore closure was not completely prevented (Fig. 3c). One possible explanation is that loss of XLPTP1 may also modulate the other RTK signaling pathways such as PDGFR, allowing embryos to close the blastopore. Evidence in support of this idea comes from studies in fibroblasts showing that LMW-PTP can down-regulate PDGFR activity. During Xenopus gastrulation, PDGF signaling has been shown to regulate adhesion of involuting mesoderm to the overlying ectoderm (4). Therefore, loss of XLPTP1 may inappropriately modulate the PDGFR during gastrulation, which may compensate for inhibition of the FGFR signaling. Another possibility may be that other XLPTP1-related PTPs are not inhibited by XLPTP-AS and these proteins may provide partial redundancy. Regardless of the molecular events that allow blastopore closure in the presence of XLPTP-AS oligonucleotides, the morphological and molecular data presented here strongly suggest that loss of XLPTP1 causes A-P shortening and posterior truncations.
Although the loss of XLPTP1 in embryos caused certain phenotypic defects that are consistent with reduced FGF signaling (reduction of posterior neural tissue and mesoderm-derived tissues), other defects are also observed, like poor development of anterior neural tissue and partial blastopore closure (Fig. 4). These additional phenotypic defects suggest that XLPTP1 may play a significant role in other signal transduction pathways and may not be restricted to a role only in the FGF signaling pathway. Regardless, the similarity in expression patterns between XLPTP1 (Fig. 2b to j), FGFR1 (Fig. 2k and l) (23), and XLPTP-AS-induced disruption of mesoderm-derived tissues in embryos (Fig. 4e to h) suggested the possibility that XLPTP1 might play a role in mesoderm induction in response to FGF. Using ectodermal explants, we have determined that loss of XLPTP1 expression inhibits eFGF or activated FGFR1-induced Xbra expression (Fig. 5a) and partially inhibits Activin induction of this mesodermal gene marker (Fig. 5b). These results support a role for XLPTP1 in FGF signaling. Most, but not all, mesoderm differentiation is lost in the absence of FGF signaling (2, 3), while blocking most TGF-ß family signals prevents the formation of any mesoderm (33). Interestingly, inhibition of FGF signaling prevents continuous expression of most other mesodermal properties in response to Activin, and FGF signaling may provide a permissive environment in which Activin can fully elicit and maintain its signals (43). The partial reduction in Activin-induced Xbra expression caused by XLPTP-AS may be due to incomplete inhibition of all FGFR signaling, since only a basal level of activity is needed to allow Activin-induced mesoderm formation (43). Alternatively, Xbra may be transiently induced in the absence of XLPTP1 function, similar to other studies showing that mesoderm-specific marker genes are transiently activated by Activin in the presence of a truncated FGFR. These studies suggest that FGF has a role in mesoderm maintenance rather than induction in response to Activin (35, 72). Additional support for this concept comes from a recent study showing that the transmembrane protein, Sef, inhibits Xbra expression in response to FGF but not Activin (81).
In addition to mesoderm induction, FGF causes animal cap tissue to elongate. Loss of XLPTP1 function blocks mesoderm formation in caps and therefore may block the corresponding elongation movements. However, recent data indicate that the pathways controlling mesoderm induction and elongation in response to FGF may be at least partially separable. Activated forms of SHP-2 preferentially activate a pathway(s) downstream of the Xenopus FGFR that leads to animal cap elongation (62), and Xsprouty-2, an endogenous inhibitor of FGF signaling, blocks elongation but not Xbra or MAP kinase activation (59). We provide evidence that loss of XLPTP1 function substantially reduces the elongation movements induced by the FGF signal transduction pathway (Fig. 5c).
Since loss of XLPTP1 inhibits FGF-induced mesoderm induction and accompanying elongation movements, it is important to consider the functional position of XLPTP1 in the FGF signal transduction pathway. The induction of mesoderm via FGF is dependent upon signals from the Ras-MAP kinase pathway (44). The introduction of XLPTP-AS efficiently blocked FGF-induced MAP kinase activation (Fig. 6a), suggesting that XLPTP1 may function at a point between the FGFR1 and MAP kinase. Introduction of activated Ras completely rescued the XLPTP-AS-induced block to FGF-mediated MAP kinase activation (Fig. 6b and c). Tyrosine phosphorylation of FGFR1 was not obviously affected by XLPTP-AS or XLPTP1 (Fig. 6d). These data provide evidence that XLPTP1 may act as a positive component, upstream or parallel to Ras and downstream of FGFR1, in the FGF signaling pathway.
Evidence placing XLPTP1 in a complex with FGFR1 came from experiments in the Xenopus oocyte expression system showing that XLPTP1 physically interacts with FGFR1, but this interaction requires an activated receptor and the presence of XSNT1 (Fig. 7a and b). Xenopus oocytes were used in this experiment because the full mediation of FGF signaling by endogenous SNT1 is somewhat limited in the oocyte when compared to the embryo (K. Mood and I. O. Daar, unpublished results). We have taken advantage of this system because it allows us to test whether the association between XLPTP1 and FGFR1 is dependent upon SNT1. Interestingly, SNT1/FRS-2 has been shown to constitutively associate with FGFR1 independent of receptor activation (60). However, recruitment of other signaling molecules requires phosphorylation induced by FGFR. Growing evidence suggests that SNT1/FRS-2 has a docking function much like that of the insulin receptor substrate (63), and the above data suggest that XLPTP1 may complex with XSNT1 or one of the recruited proteins. While it is formally possible that XSNT1 activates a downstream signal that allows XLPTP1 to directly bind the FGFR1, evidence suggests that this is unlikely. In embryos coexpressing an activated FGFR1 and XLPTP1, no detectable decrease in tyrosine phosphorylation of FGFR1 was observed (Fig. 6d). It is also possible that XLPTP1 may modulate the activity and/or recruitment of a protein within the FGFR1 complex. SNT1 is unlikely to be such a protein because we observe no obvious change in the tyrosine phosphorylation state of SNT1 in the presence of an activated FGFR1, regardless of whether XLPTP1 is present (data not shown). These data do not support a model in which FGFR1 is the target of XLPTP1 but do support the concept that XLPTP1 acts as a positive component of the FGF signaling pathway. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that XLPTP1 may act at other points in the signaling pathway and play a subsequent role in termination of FGF signaling.
In the case of another PTP, SHP-2, there is evidence supporting both a positive and negative role in PDGF signaling (69). For example, the SHP-2 binding site (Tyr1009) of PDGFR-ß is important for down-regulation of the PDGFR (16, 47), suggesting a negative role. However, SHP-2 has also been shown to act as a positive component of PDGF signaling, where mutations in the SHP-2 binding sites, Tyr763 and Tyr1009, inhibited chemotaxis and reduced PDGF-induced Ras and MAP kinase activation (68). Interestingly, an in vitro study has shown that LMW-PTP binds to and efficiently dephosphorylates a phosphopeptide containing Tyr1009 derived from PDGFR-ß (6), suggesting that SHP-2 and LMW-PTP may share a common target(s). SHP-2 also has been shown to play a positive role in FGF-mediated mesoderm induction during Xenopus development (62, 79).
Our finding that XLPTP1 plays a positive role in the FGF signaling pathway identifies another component of this signaling pathway. However, the precise mechanism by which XLPTP1 and SHP-2 act as positive regulators in the FGF signal transduction pathway remains to be determined. A small but growing number of positive and negative regulators that act between FGFR and Ras are being identified, for instance, Sprouty, Dof, Laloo, and Sef (22, 81). Defining the protein target(s) of XLPTP1 and understanding the relationship of XLPTP to the other identified regulators will be a necessary step toward understanding the FGF signaling pathway.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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