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Featured researches published by Robert L. Van Etten.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Regulation of the EphA2 Kinase by the Low Molecular Weight Tyrosine Phosphatase Induces Transformation

Keith D. Kikawa; Derika R. Vidale; Robert L. Van Etten; Michael S. Kinch

Intracellular signaling by protein tyrosine phosphorylation is generally understood to govern many aspects of cellular behavior. The biological consequences of this signaling pathway are important because the levels of protein tyrosine phosphorylation are frequently elevated in cancer cells. In the classic paradigm, tyrosine kinases promote tumor cell growth, survival, and invasiveness, whereas tyrosine phosphatases negatively regulate these same behaviors. Here, we identify one particular tyrosine phosphatase, low molecular weight tyrosine phosphatase (LMW-PTP), which is frequently overexpressed in transformed cells. We also show that overexpression of LMW-PTP is sufficient to confer transformation upon non-transformed epithelial cells. Notably, we show that the EphA2 receptor tyrosine kinase is a prominent substrate for LMW-PTP and that the oncogenic activities of LMW-PTP result from altered EphA2 expression and function. These results suggest a role for LMW-PTP in transformation progression and link its oncogenic potential to EphA2.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1990

Purification and characterization of a low-molecular-weight acid phosphatase—A phosphotyrosyl-protein phosphatase from bovine heart

Zhong Yin Zhang; Robert L. Van Etten

A low-molecular-weight acid phosphatase that is representative of a group recently shown to be phosphotyrosyl protein phosphatases was purified to homogeneity from bovine heart. The enzyme was a monomer with a molecular mass of 18 kDa and had an isoelectric point of 7.0. The absorption coefficient, E1% 1cm was 9.65 at 280 nm. The enzyme had pH optima of 5.3 and 6.0 with the substrates p-nitrophenyl phosphate and tyrosine phosphate, respectively. When measured at pH 5 and 37 degrees C, the enzyme had specific activities of 114 and 86 mumol min-1 mg-1 for p-nitrophenyl phosphate and tyrosine O-phosphate, respectively, while the Km values were 0.38 and 14 mM. The enzyme was highly specific for aryl monophosphate esters and showed little or no activity toward aliphatic phosphate esters, with the remarkable exception of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and certain of its structural analogs. As shown by 31P NMR data, the activity toward FMN was due to the hydrolysis of one of the eight components present in the (commercial) sample. Both molybdate and vanadate were potent inhibitors, with inhibition constants of 37 and 29 microM, respectively; tartrate and fluoride had little effect on enzymatic activity. A two-stage reversible denaturation of the enzyme by guanidine HCl was observed with midpoints of 0.25 and 1.75 M, respectively. The amino acid composition was homologous to the low-molecular-weight acid phosphatases from other tissue. The enzyme showed immunological cross-reactivity against low-molecular-weight human liver acid phosphatase. There were 7 or 8 accessible cysteines on the monomeric protein and at least one was essential for enzyme activity. The enzyme also had phosphotransferase activity, for example transferring phosphate from p-nitrophenyl phosphate to a wide variety of alcohol acceptors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

HCPTPA, a Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase That Regulates Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-mediated Signal Transduction and Biological Activity

Liwen Huang; Sabita Sankar; Charles Lin; Christopher D. Kontos; Alfred D. Schroff; Eugene H. Cha; Shu-Mang Feng; Su-Feng Li; Zhiming Yu; Robert L. Van Etten; Michael A. Blanar; Kevin G. Peters

Angiogenesis is a tightly controlled process in which signaling by the receptors for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) plays a key role. In order to define signaling pathways downstream of VEGF receptors (VEGFR), the kinase domain of VEGFR2 (Flk-1) was used as a bait to screen a human fetal heart library in the yeast two-hybrid system. One of the signaling molecules identified in this effort was HCPTPA, a low molecular weight, cytoplasmic protein tyrosine phosphatase. Although HCPTPA possesses no identifiable phosphotyrosine binding domains (i.e. SH2 or phosphotyrosine binding domains), it bound specifically to active, autophosphorylated VEGFR2 but not to a mutated, kinase-inactive VEGFR2. Recombinant VEGFR2 and endogenous VEGFR2 were substrates for recombinant HCPTPA, and HCPTPA was co-expressed with VEGFR2 in endothelial cell lines, suggesting that HCPTPA may be a negative regulator of VEGFR2 signal transduction. To pursue this possibility, an adenovirus directing the expression of HCPTPA was constructed. When used to infect cultured endothelial cells, this adenovirus directed high level expression of HCPTPA that resulted in impairment of VEGF-mediated VEGFR2 autophosphorylation and mitogen-activated protein kinase activation. Adenovirus-mediated overexpression of HCPTPA also inhibited VEGF-induced cellular responses (endothelial cell migration and proliferation) and inhibited angiogenesis in the rat aortic ring assay. Taken together, these findings indicate that HCPTPA may be an important regulator of VEGF-mediated signaling and biological activity. Potential interactions with other signaling pathways and possible therapeutic implications are discussed.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1982

Human liver acid phosphatases: purification and properties of a low-molecular-weight isoenzyme.

Eulazio M. Taga; Robert L. Van Etten

A low-molecular-weight human liver acid phosphatase was purified 2580-fold to homogenity by a procedure involving ammonium sulfate fractionation, acid treatment, and SP-Sephadex ion-exchange chromatography with ion-affinity elution. The purified enzyme contains a single polypeptide chain and has a molecular weight of 14,400 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The amino acid composition of this enzyme (E) is reported. A pH dependence study using p-nitrophenyl phosphate as a substrate (S) revealed the effect of substrate ionization (pKa 5.2) and the participation of a group in the ES complex having a pKa value of 7.8. The enzyme is readily inactivated by sulfhydryl reagents such as heavy metal ions. Alkylation of the enzyme with iodoacetic acid and iodoacetamide causes complete inactivation of the enzyme and this inactivation is prevented by the presence of phosphate ion. The enzyme is also inactivated by treatment with diethyl pyrocarbonate; protection against this reagent is afforded by phosphate ion. The substrate specificity of this enzyme is unusual for an acid phosphatase. Of the many alkyl and aryl phosphomonoesters tested, the only possibly physiological substrate hydrolyzed by this enzyme was flavin mononucleotide, which exhibits a V which is 3-fold larger at pH 5.0 and 6-fold larger at pH 7.0 than that for p-nitrophenyl phosphate. However, the enzyme also catalyzes the hydrolysis of acetyl phosphate at pH 5.0 with a velocity eight times larger than that reported for an acyl phosphatase from human erythrocytes.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1981

The low-molecular-weight acid phosphatase from bovine liver: Isolation, amino acid composition, and chemical modification studies☆

Gary L. Lawrence; Robert L. Van Etten

Abstract The smallest of the three molecular weight forms of acid phosphatase from bovine liver was purified to a specific activity of 100 μmol min−1 mg−1 (measured at pH 5.5 and 37 °C with p-nitrophenyl phosphate). Using several chromatographie and electrophoretic methods, no evidence of heterogeneity was detected. The enzyme was characterized with respect to its stability as a function of pH, molecular weight, amino acid composition, steady-state kinetic parameters in the pH range 4–7 and inhibition by common acid phosphatase inhibitors at pH 5.5. The amino acid composition differed somewhat from a previous literature report. The enzyme was stoichiometrically inactivated upon incubation with Hg2+, Ag+, and iodoacetate. Inactivation also occurred upon photoinactivation in the presence of Rose Bengal but no inactivation occurred with diethyl pyrocarbonate. The alkylation of one of five cysteine residues by iodoacetate was shown to cause complete inactivation of the enzyme. This alkylation was prevented by the presence of phosphate ion. A tryptic dipeptide containing this essential cysteine was isolated following inactivation with iodo[2-14C]acetate.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1978

A homogeneous isoenzyme of human liver acid phosphatase.

Mohan S. Saini; Robert L. Van Etten

Abstract An isoenzyme of human liver acid phosphatase (orthophosphoric monoester phosphohydrolase (acid optimum), EC 3.1.3.2) has been purified 4560-fold to homogeneity. The purification procedure includes ammonium sulfate fractionation, acid treatment, ion exchange chromatography on O-(carboxymethyl)-cellulose and DEAE-cellulose, Sephacryl S-200 chromatography, and affinity chromatography on Concanavalin A-Sepharose 4B. The homogeneous enzyme is a glycoprotein having 4% carbohydrate by weight in the form of mannose and glucosamine. In polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under varied conditions of pH and cross-linking, the purified enzyme displays a single protein band coincident with activity. The native enzyme has a molecular weight of 93,000 as determined by gel elution chromatography and consists of two equivalent polypeptide chains. The subunit weight is 50,000–52,000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. l -(+)-Tartrate is a strong competitive inhibitor of the enzyme; Ki is 4.3 × 10−7 m at pH 4.8 in 50 m m sodium acetate/100 m m sodium chloride. Ki values for a number of other inhibitors are given. Although it catalyzes the hydrolysis of a variety of phosphomonoesters, this isoenzyme of human liver acid phosphatase does not hydrolyze adenosine 5′-diphosphate, adenosine 5′-triphosphate, pyrophosphate, or choline phosphate at a detectable rate. The values of V differ with different alcohol or phenol leaving groups. The pH dependence of Km and V values for the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate have been determined together with the pH dependence of Ki for l -(+)-tartrate. The pH dependence of both Km and V indicate the effect of substrate ionization (pK ~ 5.2) and the involvement of a group in the EScomplex having a pKa value of approximately 6–7 which is ascribed either to a phosphoryl-enzyme intermediate or to the ionization of substrate in the ES-complex. An irreversible modification of the enzyme and a rapid loss of enzymic activity occurs upon treatment of the enzyme with Woodwards reagent K. The enzyme is protected against inactivation by the presence of competitive inhibitors. These and other data suggest that at least one carboxylic acid group plays an important role in catalysis.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1975

Purification and properties of a homogeneous aryl sulfatase A from rabbit liver.

Gary D. Lee; Robert L. Van Etten

Abstract Aryl sulfatase A (aryl sulfate sulfohydrolase EC 3.1.6.1) has been purified > 10,000-fold from rabbit liver; by disc gel electrophoresis the enzyme appears homogeneous. Various properties of the enzyme have been determined and comparisons are made with other aryl sulfatases. Sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis indicates that the enzyme is made up of monomers of molecular weight ∼ 70,000. At pH 7.4 the enzyme exists as a dimer whereas a tetrameric form predominates at pH 4.8. The enzyme exhibits the anomalous kinetics often observed with aryl sulfatase A from mammalian tissues (the enzyme is modified to an inactive form while degrading substrate and the inactive form can be reactivated by sulfate ion). The enzyme activity has been studied under a variety of reaction conditions. Two pH optima are observed and neither enzyme concentration or changes in ionic strength appear to have an effect on the relative magnitudes of the optima. Aryl sulfatase A is competitively inhibited by potassium sulfate, potassium phosphate, and sodium sulfite (Ki = 2.9 × 10−3 M, 3.4 × 10−5 M, and 1.1 × 10−6 M, respectively). Kinetic constants for some substituted phenyl sulfate esters have been determined. The variation in V is not consistent with a reaction mechanism involving a rate-limiting breakdown of a common intermediate. The inactive (modified) form of the enzyme has been isolated from reaction mixtures containing aryl sulfatase A and substrate. A procedure is presented for determining the relative amount of modified and native enzyme in these preparations. In the presence of substrate, sulfate displaces the equilibrium between native and modified enzyme in favor of native enzyme. In the absence of substrate neither sulfate or phosphate have an effect on the equilibrium. A study is made of the temperature dependence of the process in which the modified enzyme is converted back to native enzyme. The relatively small entropy of activation for the conversion of the modified to the native form (ΔS‡ = −8 cal/mole deg) does not seem to be consistent with a major modification of protein conformation.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Intramolecular Dynamics of Low Molecular Weight Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase in Monomer–Dimer Equilibrium Studied by NMR: A Model for Changes in Dynamics upon Target Binding

Tomas Åkerud; Eva Thulin; Robert L. Van Etten; Mikael Akke

Low molecular weight protein tyrosine phosphatase (LMW-PTP) dimerizes in the phosphate-bound state in solution with a dissociation constant of K(d)=1.5(+/-0.1)mM and an off-rate on the order of 10(4)s(-1). 1H and 15N NMR chemical shifts identify the dimer interface, which is in excellent agreement with that observed in the crystal structure of the dimeric S19A mutant. Two tyrosine residues of each molecule interact with the active site of the other molecule, implying that the dimer may be taken as a model for a complex between LMW-PTP and a target protein. 15N relaxation rates for the monomeric and dimeric states were extrapolated from relaxation data acquired at four different protein concentrations. Relaxation data of satisfactory precision were extracted for the monomer, enabling model-free analyses of backbone fluctuations on pico- to nanosecond time scales. The dimer relaxation data are of lower quality due to extrapolation errors and the possible presence of higher-order oligomers at higher concentrations. A qualitative comparison of order parameters in the monomeric and apparent dimeric states shows that loops forming the dimer interface become rigidified upon dimerization. Qualitative information on monomer-dimer exchange and intramolecular conformational exchange was obtained from the concentration dependence of auto- and cross-correlated relaxation rates. The loop containing the catalytically important Asp129 fluctuates between different conformations in both the monomeric and dimeric (target bound) states. The exchange rate compares rather well with that of the catalyzed reaction step, supporting existing hypotheses that catalysis and enzyme dynamics may be coupled. The side-chain of Trp49, which is important for substrate specificity, exhibits conformational dynamics in the monomer that are largely quenched upon formation of the dimer, suggesting that binding is associated with the selection of a single side-chain conformer.


Phytochemistry | 1986

Purification and characterization of homogeneous sunflower seed acid phosphatase

Hye-Shin Park; Robert L. Van Etten

Abstract Acid phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.2) from sunflower seed was purified 1800-fold to homogeneity using both conventional and affinity chromatographic methods. The purified enzyme was a mixture of two enzyme forms distinguishable by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Gel exclusion chromatography, which did not distinguish between the two forms, gave an apparent M, of 103 000. Preparative PAGE permitted the separation of the two forms, and SDS-PAGE showed that they contained equivalent peptide subunits of apparent M, 56 000 and 52 000. Amino acid analysis indicated that both enzyme forms have similar amino acid compositions. Data on substrate specificity and pH dependence is presented. The kinetic constants for hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate as catalysed by sunflower seed acid phosphatase were independent of pH in the range 3-5. The enzyme was competitively inhibited by inorganic phosphate and non-competitively inhibited by phosphomycin.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1977

Phosphohistidine as a stoichiometric intermediate in reactions catalyzed by isoenzymes of wheat germ acid phosphatase.

Robert L. Van Etten; Michael E. Hickey

Abstract Burst titration experiments conducted on a highly purified isoenzyme of wheat germ acid phosphatase under conditions where [ S ] o > K m indicate that there is one titratable active site per molecule of enzyme of molecular weight 59,000. The enzyme is labeled to only a small extent with inorganic [ 32 P]phosphate ion. Incubation of wheat germ acid phosphatase with 32 P-labeled substrates such as p -nitrophenyl phosphate or inorganic pyrophosphate followed by quenching in alkali results in the stoichiometric trapping of a base-stable, acid-labile phosphorylated protein. The extent of 32 P incorporation parallels the degree of purity of the enzyme and corresponds to the incorporation of 1 mol of phosphate per mole of enzyme. The incorporation is eliminated by the simultaneous presence of excess unlabeled phosphate ion (a competitive inhibitor) and is not observed when a noncatalytic protein (such as bovine serum albumin) is substituted for the enzyme. Complete alkaline hydrolysis of the labeled protein results in the recovery of an 85% yield of τ-phosphohistidine, identified by ion-exchange chromatography, high-voltage paper electrophoresis, and comparison with a synthetic sample. A 32 P-labeled tryptic tetradecapeptide was isolated following hydrolysis of the labeled, reduced, and carboxymethylated protein with trypsin at pH 8.3, separation of the labeled peptide, and purification by two methods including a novel variant of a diagonal electrophoresis technique. The end groups and composition of the peptide are reported. The data are consistent with the interpretation that a phosphohistidine-enzyme intermediate is formed as an obligatory intermediate in the catalytic reaction involving this enzyme.

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