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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
A Human Phospholipid Phosphatase Activated By A Transmembrane Control Module, Christian R. Halaszovich, Michael G. Leitner, Angeliki Mavrantoni, Audrey Le, Ludivine Frezza, Anja Feuer, Daniela N. Schreiber, Carlos A. Villalba-Galea, Dominik Oliver
A Human Phospholipid Phosphatase Activated By A Transmembrane Control Module, Christian R. Halaszovich, Michael G. Leitner, Angeliki Mavrantoni, Audrey Le, Ludivine Frezza, Anja Feuer, Daniela N. Schreiber, Carlos A. Villalba-Galea, Dominik Oliver
School of Pharmacy Faculty Articles
In voltage-sensitive phosphatases (VSPs), a transmembrane voltage sensor domain (VSD) controls an intracellular phosphoinositide phosphatase domain, thereby enabling immediate initiation of intracellular signals by membrane depolarization. The existence of such a mechanism in mammals has remained elusive, despite the presence of VSP-homologous proteins in mammalian cells, in particular in sperm precursor cells. Here we demonstrate activation of a human VSP (hVSP1/TPIP) by an intramolecular switch. By engineering a chimeric hVSP1 with enhanced plasma membrane targeting containing the VSD of a prototypic invertebrate VSP, we show that hVSP1 is a phosphoinositide-5-phosphatase whose predominant substrate is PI(4,5)P(2). In the chimera, enzymatic activity …
Controlling The Activity Of A Phosphatase And Tensin Homolog (Pten) By Membrane Potential, Jérôme J. Lacroix, Christian R. Halaszovich, Daniela N. Schreiber, Michael G. Leitner, Francisco Bezanilla, Dominik Oliver, Carlos A. Villalba-Galea
Controlling The Activity Of A Phosphatase And Tensin Homolog (Pten) By Membrane Potential, Jérôme J. Lacroix, Christian R. Halaszovich, Daniela N. Schreiber, Michael G. Leitner, Francisco Bezanilla, Dominik Oliver, Carlos A. Villalba-Galea
School of Pharmacy Faculty Articles
The recently discovered voltage-sensitive phosphatases (VSPs) hydrolyze phosphoinositides upon depolarization of the membrane potential, thus representing a novel principle for the transduction of electrical activity into biochemical signals. Here, we demonstrate the possibility to confer voltage sensitivity to cytosolic enzymes. By fusing the tumor suppressor PTEN to the voltage sensor of the prototypic VSP from Ciona intestinalis, Ci-VSP, we generated chimeric proteins that are voltage-sensitive and display PTEN-like enzymatic activity in a strictly depolarization-dependent manner in vivo. Functional coupling of the exogenous enzymatic activity to the voltage sensor is mediated by a phospholipid-binding motif at the interface between voltage sensor …