FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
FB2026_01 , released March 12, 2026
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Citation
Burnett, C., Makridou, P., Hewlett, L., Howard, K. (2004). Lipid phosphate phosphatases dimerise, but this interaction is not required for in vivo activity.  BMC Biochem. 5(1): 2.
FlyBase ID
FBrf0167304
Publication Type
Research paper
Abstract
Lipid phosphate phosphatases (LPPs) are integral membrane proteins believed to dephosphorylate bioactive lipid messengers, so modifying or attenuating their activities. Wunen, a Drosophila LPP homologue, has been shown to play a pivotal role in primordial germ cell (PGC) migration and survival during embryogenesis. It has been hypothesised that LPPs may form oligomeric complexes, and may even function as hexamers. We were interested in exploring this possibility, to confirm whether LPPs can oligomerise, and if they do, whether oligomerisation is required for either in vitro or in vivo activity.We present evidence that Wunen dimerises, that these associations require the last thirty-five C-terminal amino-acids and depend upon the presence of an intact catalytic site. Expression of a truncated, monomeric form of Wunen in Drosophila embryos results in perturbation of germ cell migration and germ cell loss, as observed for full-length Wunen. We also observed that murine LPP-1 and human LPP-3 can also form associations, but do not form interactions with Wunen or each other. Furthermore, Wunen does not form dimers with its closely related counterpart Wunen-2. Finally we discovered that addition of a trimeric myc tag to the C-terminus of Wunen does not prevent dimerisation or in vitro activity, but does prevent activity in vivo.LPPs do form complexes, but these do not seem to be specifically required for activity either in vitro or in vivo. Since neither dimerisation nor the C-terminus seem to be involved in substrate recognition, they may instead confer structural or functional stability through dimerisation. The results indicate that the associations we see are highly specific and occur only between monomers of the same protein.
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
PMC319698 (PMC) (EuropePMC)
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Secondary IDs
  • FBrf0200441
Language of Publication
English
Additional Languages of Abstract
Parent Publication
Publication Type
Journal
Abbreviation
BMC Biochem.
Title
BMC Biochemistry
Publication Year
2000-
ISBN/ISSN
1471-2091
Data From Reference
Alleles (5)
Genes (1)
Cell Lines (1)
Natural transposons (1)
Experimental Tools (3)
Transgenic Constructs (5)