Hypoxia-ischemia in perinatal rat brain induces the formation of a low molecular weight isoform of striatal enriched tyrosine phosphatase (STEP)

1999 
Protein tyrosine phosphatases play a critical role in controlling tyrosine phosphorylation levels of proteins. Ischemia induces changes in tyrosine phosphorylation. As part of our investigations of the mechanisms responsible for these changes, we studied the effects of cerebral hypoxia-ischemia in 7-day-old (P7) and P21 rat brains on expression of the STEP (striatal enriched phosphatase) family of protein tyrosine phosphatases. P7 and P21 rats were subjected to unilateral hypoxia-ischemia, and brains were analyzed at various intervals of recovery for the presence of STEP. Hypoxia-ischemia induced the formation of a low M r isoform of STEP, STEP 33 , in the ipsilateral (damaged) hemisphere but not in the contralateral (undamaged) side. STEP 33 produced as a result of ischemia was located exclusively in the cell soluble fraction. In P21 rats, the ischemia-induced elevation in STEP 33 was delayed relative to P7 rats. STEP 33 was produced by digestion of postsynaptic densities with calpain I and by exposure of NT2/D1 cells expressing STEP to the calcium ionophore A23187. The results suggest that ischemia-induced calcium influx results in the calcium-dependent proteolysis of membrane-associated STEP 61 and the concomitant release of STEP 33 into the cytoplasm.
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