AbstractsBiology & Animal Science

Global Proteomic Assessment of Classical Protein-tyrosine Phosphatases

by Robert Karisch




Institution: University of Toronto
Department:
Year: 2014
Keywords: Protein-tyrosine phosphatases; Oxidation; Mass spectrometry; Reactive oxygen species; SHP2; AP-MS
Record ID: 2029688
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/1807/65510


Abstract

Tyrosyl phosphorylation plays an important role in many fundamental cellular processes, including cell growth, differentiation and proliferation. The levels of phosphotyrosine (pY) are regulated by the opposing actions of protein-tyrosine kinases (PTKs) and protein-tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs). A limitation to understanding the roles of PTPs in physiological and pathological cell signaling has been the absence of global proteomic approaches that enable the systematic and comprehensive analysis of PTP expression, regulation and function. This dissertation describes the development and application of novel proteomic methodologies that permit the global analysis of PTP expression (qPTPome), regulation (by oxidation and nitrosylation; q-oxPTPome) and substrates/binding proteins. These methods provide a workflow to begin assessing PTP function at a systems level, rather than its current targeted format. Application of these techniques will provide invaluable information to begin bridging the gap in our understanding of PTP and PTK function in normal and malignant cell signaling.