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Research sheds light on the role of PTPRK in tissue repair and cancer

by Medical Xpress
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Immunofluorescent images of mouse colons stained for nuclei (DAPI; blue) and tight junctions (ZO1; green). Credit: Babraham Institute

Receptor protein tyrosine phosphatases are cell membrane-localized proteins. They are regulators of cell-cell contacts and are also considered likely to be tumor suppressors, but the specifics of how they function are unknown. A member of this family, PTPRK, is implicated as a tumor suppressor in several cancer types, particularly colorectal cancer, and mutations and genetic events inactivating PTPRK are found in human colorectal cancers. PTPRK has also been linked genetically to celiac disease.

The Sharpe lab at the Babraham Institute investigated the role and signaling mechanisms of PTPRK in , growth factor signaling and tumor suppression in the mouse colon and also in human cells. Their findings, published in the Journal of Cell Science, are relevant to better understanding the cellular environments that function to repress tumor development as well as understanding the cell interactions that affect repair after injury and potentially cancer metastasis.

Dr. Katie Young, lead author on the paper who undertook this research as a Ph.D. student in the Sharpe lab, said, “Through this work we aimed to investigate the role of PTPRK in the colon, working together several observations in the field and connecting these back to the complex signaling mechanisms behind them. It’s vital that we know more about how receptor protein tyrosine phosphatases sense and transmit signals to ensure the healthy growth of our cells, as well as how errors in these mechanisms cause disease.”

Using human colorectal cancer cell lines, the team found that the deletion of PTPRK altered the appearance of the cells, compared to control cells where PTPRK was functional, and observed that the knockout cells showed impaired wound-healing response, which was likely to be due to the loss of PTPRK affecting coordinated action by cells and their neighbors and defects in cellular polarization.

Utilizing a mouse line where PTPRK had been deleted, the team uncovered a role for PTPRK in colon repair. When inflammation of the colon (colitis) was stimulated, mice lacking PTPRK showed a more severe response, demonstrating either increased susceptibility to damage or decreased repair following inflammation. The also developed larger and more invasive tumors in a colorectal cancer model compared to wild-type controls, confirming that PTPRK has a role in suppressing tumor growth and invasion.

Using a catalytic mutant, where the catalytic function of PTPRK was abolished, and a xenograft model where cancer cells were transplanted into mice, the researchers confirmed the function of PTPRK in suppressing and demonstrated that this was independent of the protein’s phosphatase activity.

Comparing between cells with and without PTPRK, the team identified genes that were affected by the loss of PTPRK. These genes are characterized in function as being related to epithelial cell identity (being involved in the epithelial to mesenchymal transition and mesenchymal cell differentiation).

The team hypothesize that PTPRK regulation could be a central factor in giving plasticity in epithelial barriers, such as lines in the intestines, to facilitate epithelial repair while providing a signal to stop the repair response.

Analyzing the xenograft tumor samples, the team quantified tyrosine phosphorylation to determine the signaling mechanisms by which PTPRK suppresses tumor development. Their work suggests that the suppression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling by PTPRK is a key factor and is mediated separately from its function as a phosphatase.

Dr. Hayley Sharpe, group leader in the Signaling research program at the Institute, said, “The goal of our research was to pull several observations together and begin to fill in the gaps of what we don’t know about PTPRK. It has been assumed that PTPs act as tumor suppressors by countering kinase activity by dephosphorylation on oncogenic phosphotyrosine modifications. Therefore, the non-catalytic role of PTPRK in signaling is really intriguing to us and how it achieves this is an important next question to fully understand its role in tumor suppression.”

More information:
Katherine A. Young et al, The receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase PTPRK promotes intestinal repair and catalysis-independent tumour suppression, Journal of Cell Science (2024). DOI: 10.1242/jcs.261914

Provided by
Babraham Institute


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Research sheds light on the role of PTPRK in tissue repair and cancer (2024, July 24)
retrieved 24 July 2024
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