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Vol. 296, Issue 2, 592-599, February 2001
Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Duke University
Medical Centers, Durham, North Carolina
To investigate the protein phosphatases that dephosphorylate TP, human
embryonic kidney cells (HEK293 cells) stably transfected with
12CA5-tagged TP were treated with TP agonist, washed, and then allowed
to recover in the presence or absence of the cell-permeable PP1 and
PP2A inhibitors calyculin or okadaic acid (OKA). After recovery, cells
were rechallenged with TP agonist and TP responsiveness was assessed by
measuring inositol trisphosphate generation. TP responsiveness
recovered over a 20-min time period. Recovery of TP responsiveness was
inhibited by calyculin and OKA and was associated with
dephosphorylation of receptor proteins. To further identify the TP
phosphatase, TP phosphorylated in the intact cell were isolated by
immunoprecipitation and were used as substrate for protein phosphatases
prepared from HEK293 cells. TP were dephosphorylated by whole-cell
homogenates. Dephosphorylation of TP was completely inhibited by the
PP1 and PP2A inhibitors calyculin and microcystin-LR, suggesting that
the decrease in TP phosphorylation was not due to receptor degradation.
TP phosphatase activity was partially blocked by 1) inhibitor 2, a
specific protein inhibitor of PP1; and 2) OKA at concentrations (1 nM)
that specifically inhibit PP2A. TP phosphatase activity did not have an
absolute requirement for divalent cations and was found primarily in
cytosolic fractions of the cell. These data suggest that PP1- and
PP2A-like protein phosphatases dephosphorylate TP. By regulating the
phosphorylation state of TP, protein phosphatases may modulate tissue
responsiveness to thromboxane.
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