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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America logoLink to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
. 1994 Aug 2;91(16):7477–7481. doi: 10.1073/pnas.91.16.7477

Src kinase associates with a member of a distinct subfamily of protein-tyrosine phosphatases containing an ezrin-like domain.

N P Møller 1, K B Møller 1, R Lammers 1, A Kharitonenkov 1, I Sures 1, A Ullrich 1
PMCID: PMC44424  PMID: 7519780

Abstract

A 6.2-kb full-length clone encoding a distinct protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP; EC 3.1.3.48), PTPD1, was isolated from a human skeletal muscle cDNA library. The cDNA encodes a protein of 1174 amino acids with N-terminal sequence homology to the ezrin-band 4.1-merlin-radixin protein family, which also includes the two PTPs H1 and MEG1. The PTP domain is positioned in the extreme C-terminal part of PTPD1, and there is an intervening sequence of about 580 residues without any apparent homology to known proteins separating the ezrin-like and the PTP domains. Thus, PTPD1 and the closely related, partially characterized, PTPD2 belong to the same family as PTPH1 and PTPMEG1, but because of distinct features constitute a different PTP subfamily. Northern blot analyses indicate that PTPD1 and PTPD2 are expressed in a variety of tissues. In transient coexpression experiments PTPD1 was found to be efficiently phosphorylated by and associated with the src kinase pp60src.

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