Publication | Closed Access
Pleiotropic effects of zebrafish protein-tyrosine phosphatase-1B on early embryonic development.
17
Citations
34
References
1999
Year
Reproductive BiologyEmbryologySignaling PathwayZebrafish EmbryosDevelopmental GeneticsMorphogenesisEmbryonic DevelopmentCell BiologyProtein PhosphorylationProtein Tyrosine PhosphorylationBiologyLive EmbryosDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionEarly Embryonic DevelopmentNatural SciencesCellular BiochemistryMedicineCell Development
Protein tyrosine phosphorylation is an important mechanism of eukaryotic cell signalling which is regulated by protein-tyrosine kinases and protein-tyrosine phosphatases. Here we report the molecular cloning of the first zebrafish protein-tyrosine phosphatase, zf-PTP-1B, the homologue of human PTP-1B. Zf-PTP-1B was catalytically active and localised to the endoplasmic reticulum, like human PTP-1B. Zf-PTP-1B was maternally expressed in zebrafish embryos, and low ubiquitous expression was detected up to day 7 of development. Microinjection of zf-PTP-1B RNA induced pleiotropic, but reproducible developmental defects. Evaluation of the live embryos at 24 h post fertilisation indicated that zf-PTP-1B induced defects in somite formation. The phenotype was dependent on protein-tyrosine phosphatase activity of zf-PTP-1B, since embryos injected with catalytically inactive zf-PTP-1B-C213S developed normally. Co-injection of wild type and inactive zf-PTP-1B led to a rescue of the zf-PTP-1B-induced phenotype, suggesting that zf-PTP-1B-C213S had dominant negative activity. The zf-PTP-1B-induced phenotype suggests that proper tyrosine phosphorylation of key proteins is essential for early development, most notably somitogenesis.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1