Cheng J, Daimaru L, Fennie C, Lasky L A
Department of Molecular Oncology, Genetech Inc, South San Francisco, CA 94080, USA.
Blood. 1996 Aug 15;88(4):1156-67.
Stem cells are capable of extensive self-renewal in the absence of differentiation. The maintenance of this undifferentiated state occurs despite the fact that this cell is exposed to a milieu that is rich in a variety of growth and differentiation factors. A unifying feature of such hematopoietic factors is that they mediate their effects through the phosphorylation of tyrosine residues by various cellular kinases. Therefore, one mechanism that might inhibit such differentiation signals in the self-renewing stem cell is the dephosphorylation of tyrosine residues by protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs). We have thus investigated the types of tyrosine phosphatases expressed by murine embryonic lin(lo)CD34hiSca(hi) hematopoietic progenitor cells by using a consensus polymerase chain reaction (PCR) approach. Although many known tyrosine phosphatases were detected using this method, a novel PTP related to the previously described PTP PEST type enzymes, murine PTP PEP and murine/human PTP PEST, was also observed. Cloning of the full-length cDNA encoding this enzyme showed that it was indeed a novel new member of this family, with an amino terminal tyrosine phosphatase domain followed by a region rich in serine, threonine, and proline. The carboxy terminus of this novel PTP contained a short sequence that was homologous to a region of the murine PTP PEP that was involved with nuclear localization. Bacterial expression of the phosphatase domain showed that this enzyme could efficiently dephosphorylate tyrosines in vitro. Analysis of the expression of the novel nuclear PTP by quantitative PCR showed that the transcript disappeared as the lin(lo)CD34hiSca(hi) cells differentiated in the presence of interleukin-1, interleukin-3, erythropoietin, and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor. In agreement with its potential role in the hematopoietic progenitor cell, this novel PTP was expressed at a barely detectable level in a very limited subset of adult tissues. However, analysis of several murine hematopoietic progenitor cell lines, but not of a differentiated T-cell line, showed a high level of expression of the novel PTP. These data suggest that this novel phosphatase may play a critical role in the maintenance of the undifferentiated state of the hematopoietic stem cell.
干细胞能够在不发生分化的情况下进行广泛的自我更新。尽管这种细胞暴露于富含多种生长和分化因子的环境中,但未分化状态仍得以维持。这类造血因子的一个共同特征是,它们通过各种细胞激酶使酪氨酸残基磷酸化来介导其作用。因此,一种可能在自我更新的干细胞中抑制此类分化信号的机制是蛋白酪氨酸磷酸酶(PTP)使酪氨酸残基去磷酸化。我们因此采用一致性聚合酶链反应(PCR)方法研究了小鼠胚胎lin(lo)CD34hiSca(hi)造血祖细胞表达的酪氨酸磷酸酶类型。尽管使用该方法检测到了许多已知的酪氨酸磷酸酶,但还观察到一种与先前描述的PTP PEST型酶、小鼠PTP PEP和小鼠/人类PTP PEST相关的新型PTP。编码该酶的全长cDNA的克隆表明,它确实是这个家族的一个新成员,其氨基末端有一个酪氨酸磷酸酶结构域,后面是一个富含丝氨酸、苏氨酸和脯氨酸的区域。这种新型PTP的羧基末端包含一个与小鼠PTP PEP参与核定位的区域同源的短序列。磷酸酶结构域的细菌表达表明,该酶在体外能够有效地使酪氨酸去磷酸化。通过定量PCR分析新型核PTP的表达表明,在白细胞介素-1、白细胞介素-3、促红细胞生成素和粒细胞-巨噬细胞集落刺激因子存在的情况下,随着lin(lo)CD34hiSca(hi)细胞分化,该转录本消失。与其在造血祖细胞中的潜在作用一致,这种新型PTP在成年组织的一个非常有限的子集中表达水平极低,几乎检测不到。然而,对几种小鼠造血祖细胞系而非分化的T细胞系的分析表明,新型PTP表达水平很高。这些数据表明,这种新型磷酸酶可能在维持造血干细胞的未分化状态中起关键作用。