Tumor-derived extracellular mutations of PTPRT /PTPrho are defective in cell adhesion.

2008 
Receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase T (PTPRT/PTPR) is frequently mutated in human cancers including colon, lung, gastric, and skin cancers. More than half of the identified tumor-derived mutations are located in the extracellular part of PTPR. However, the functional significance of those extracellular domain mutations remains to be defined. Here we report that the extracellular domain of PTPR mediates homophilic cell-cell aggregation. This homophilic interaction is very specific because PTPR does not interact with its closest homologue, PTPM, in a cell aggregation assay. We further showed that all five tumor-derived mutations located in the NH2-terminal MAM and immunoglobulin domains impair, to varying extents, their ability to form cell aggregates, indicating that those mutations are loss-of-function mutations. Our results suggest that PTPR may play an important role in cell-cell adhesion and that mutational inactivation of this phosphatase could promote tumor migration and metastasis. (Mol Cancer Res 2008;6(7):1106 – 13)
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