Protein tyrosine phosphatase activity of an essential virulence determinant in Yersinia.

Article Details

Citation

Guan KL, Dixon JE

Protein tyrosine phosphatase activity of an essential virulence determinant in Yersinia.

Science. 1990 Aug 3;249(4968):553-6.

PubMed ID
2166336 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Yersinia is the genus of bacteria that is the causative agent in plague or the black death, and on several occasions this organism has killed a significant portion of the world's population. An essential virulence determinant of Yersinia was shown to be a protein tyrosine phosphatase. The recombinant 50-kilodalton Yersinia phosphatase had a specificity for removal of phosphate from Tyr-containing as opposed to Ser/Thr-containing phosphopeptides and proteins. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to show that the Yersinia phosphatase possesses an essential Cys residue required for catalysis. Amino acids surrounding an essential Cys residue are highly conserved, as are other amino acids in the Yersinia and mammalian protein tyrosine phosphatases, suggesting that they use a common catalytic mechanism.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Tyrosine-protein phosphatase YopHP15273Details