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The tyrosine phosphatase PTPRD is a tumor suppressor that is frequently inactivated and mutated in glioblastoma and other human cancers
Authors:Selvaraju Veeriah  Cameron Brennan  Shasha Meng  Bhuvanesh Singh  James A Fagin  David B Solit  Philip B Paty  Dan Rohle  Igor Vivanco  Juliann Chmielecki  William Pao  Marc Ladanyi  William L Gerald  Linda Liau  Timothy C Cloughesy  Paul S Mischel  Chris Sander  Barry Taylor  Nikolaus Schultz  John Major  Adriana Heguy  Fang Fang  Ingo K Mellinghoff  and Timothy A Chan
Institution:aHuman Oncology and Pathogenesis Program; ;Departments of bNeurosurgery.;cSurgery.;dMedicine.;ePathology.;hNeurology, and ;iRadiation Oncology; and ;gComputational Biology Center, Memorial Sloan–Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Avenue, New York, NY 10065; and ;fDavid Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095
Abstract:Tyrosine phosphorylation plays a critical role in regulating cellular function and is a central feature in signaling cascades involved in oncogenesis. The regulation of tyrosine phosphorylation is coordinately controlled by kinases and phosphatases (PTPs). Whereas activation of tyrosine kinases has been shown to play vital roles in tumor development, the role of PTPs is much less well defined. Here, we show that the receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase delta (PTPRD) is frequently inactivated in glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), a deadly primary neoplasm of the brain. PTPRD is a target of deletion in GBM, often via focal intragenic loss. In GBM tumors that do not possess deletions in PTPRD, the gene is frequently subject to cancer-specific epigenetic silencing via promoter CpG island hypermethylation (37%). Sequencing of the PTPRD gene in GBM and other primary human tumors revealed that the gene is mutated in 6% of GBMs, 13% of head and neck squamous cell carcinomas, and in 9% of lung cancers. These mutations were deleterious. In total, PTPRD inactivation occurs in >50% of GBM tumors, and loss of expression predicts for poor prognosis in glioma patients. Wild-type PTPRD inhibits the growth of GBM and other tumor cells, an effect not observed with PTPRD alleles harboring cancer-specific mutations. Human astrocytes lacking PTPRD exhibited increased growth. PTPRD was found to dephosphorylate the oncoprotein STAT3. These results implicate PTPRD as a tumor suppressor on chromosome 9p that is involved in the development of GBMs and multiple human cancers.
Keywords:glioblastoma multiforme  methylation  mutation
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