1. Lymphocyte Phosphatase-Associated Phosphoprotein (LPAP) as a CD45 Protein Stability Regulator.
- Author
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Kruglova NA, Mazurov DV, and Filatov AV
- Subjects
- Humans, Jurkat Cells, K562 Cells, Protein Stability, Phosphoproteins metabolism, Phosphoproteins genetics, Leukocyte Common Antigens metabolism
- Abstract
Lymphocyte phosphatase-associated phosphoprotein (LPAP) is a binding partner of the phosphatase CD45, but its function remains poorly understood. Its close interaction with CD45 suggests that LPAP may potentially regulate CD45, but direct biochemical evidence for this has not yet been obtained. We found that in the Jurkat lymphoid cells the levels of LPAP and CD45 proteins are interrelated and well correlated with each other. Knockout of LPAP leads to the decrease in the surface expression of CD45, while its overexpression, on the contrary, caused its increase. No such correlation was found in the non-lymphoid K562 cells. We hypothesize that LPAP regulates expression level of CD45 and thus can affect lymphocyte activation.
- Published
- 2024
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