Dual-specificity protein-tyrosine phosphatases (dsPTPases) have been implicated in the inactivation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs). We have identified a novel phosphoserine/threonine/tyrosine-binding protein (STYX) that is related in amino acid sequence to dsPTPases, except for the substitution of Gly for Cys in the conserved dsPTPase catalytic loop (HCXXGXXR(S/ T)). cDNA subcloning and Northern blot analysis in mouse shows poly(A ؉ ) hybridization bands of 4.6, 2.4, 1.5, and 1.2 kilobases, with highest abundance in skeletal muscle, testis, and heart. Polymerase chain reaction amplification of reverse-transcribed poly(A ؉ ) RNA revealed an alternatively spliced form of STYX containing a unique carboxyl terminus. Bacterially expressed STYX is incapable of hydrolyzing Tyr(P)-containing substrates; however, mutation of Gly 120 to Cys (G120C), which structurally mimics the active site of dsPTPases, confers phosphatase activity to this molecule. STYX-G120C mutant hydrolyzes p-nitrophenyl phosphate and dephosphorylates both Tyr(P) and Thr(P) residues of peptide sequences of MAPK homologues. The kinetic parameters of dephosphorylation are similar to human dsPTPase, Vaccinia H1-related, including inhibition by vanadate. We believe this is the first example of a naturally occurring "dominant negative" phosphotyrosine/ serine/threonine-binding protein which is structurally related to dsPTPases.
Dual-specificity phosphatases (dsPTPase)1 hydrolyze phosphoserine/threonine/tyrosine-containing substrates in vitro and exhibit a substrate preference in vitro and in vivo for diphosphorylated (Thr(P)/Tyr(P)) mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) homologues (reviewed in Ref. 1). Most dsPTPases are localized to the nucleus (2-4), and it has been suggested that they are responsible for the nuclear dephosphorylation and inactivation of MAPKs seen in vivo (5). All dsPTPases contain the sequence, HCXXGXXR(S/T), which has been shown to correspond to the active site of PTPases (6). The essential cysteine forms a thiophosphate intermediate during dsPTPasecatalyzed dephosphorylation (7,8). Several investigators have shown that substitution of this Cys, by Ser, in the dsPTPases, abolishes hydrolytic activity in vitro (7, 9 -12) and function in vivo (10,13,14). Interestingly, transient expression of the Cys to Ser mutant prolongs MAPK activation in vivo (12), suggesting that it may compete with native phosphatases for binding to phosphorylated MAPK. Moreover, the mutant dsPTPase co-immunoprecipitates with phosphorylated MAPK (10), indicating that the catalytic cysteine is not essential for substrate binding. This conclusion is also supported by PTPase crystallographic studies showing that Cys to Ser mutants bind sulfate (15) and tyrosine-phosphorylated peptide (16) in a manner identical with native enzymes. This paper describes the identification and isolation of a novel phosphoserine/threonine/tyrosine-binding protein (STYX) that is related in amino acid sequence to dsPTPases, but contains a naturally occurring Gly residue in...