Abstract

Protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor type Z (PTPRZ) is preferentially expressed in the central nervous system as two transmembrane receptor isoforms PTPRZ-A/B and one secretory isoform PTPRZ-S. Ptprz-knockout mice lacking the expression of all three isoforms show behavioral, learning, and neurological abnormalities, including increased exploratory activities to novelty, deficits in spatial and contextual learning, and reduced responses to methamphetamine, relative to wild-type mice. To investigate whether PTPRZ isoforms play distinct physiological roles, we herein performed behavioral studies on two knock-in mouse lines: One expresses the catalytically inactive Cys-1930 to Ser (CS) mutants of PTPRZ-A/B, while the other generated in the present study expresses catalytically active mutants of PTPRZ-A/B lacking the negative regulatory PTP-D2 domain and C-terminal PDZ-binding motif (ΔD2) instead of wild-type PTPRZ-A/-B. In contrast to Ptprz-knockout mice, neither increased responses to novelty in the open field nor memory impairments in the inhibitory-avoidance task were observed in Ptprz-CS or Ptprz-ΔD2 mice. However, the effects of methamphetamine on locomotor activity were significantly weaker in Ptprz-KO mice and CS mutant mice than in wild-type mice, but were normal in ΔD2 mutant mice. Furthermore, microdialysis experiments revealed that methamphetamine-evoked dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens was reduced in Ptprz-KO mice and CS mutant mice. These results suggest that the extracellular region of PTPRZ, including the secretory isoform, is crucial for behavioral responses to novelty and the formation of aversive memories, whereas the PTPase activities of PTPRZ receptor isoforms are involved in regulating the dopaminergic system.

Highlights

  • Protein tyrosine phosphorylation, one of the critical mechanisms for signal transduction, is reversibly regulated by protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) and protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs)

  • The Ptprz gene encodes three major splicing isoforms: the long receptor isoform, phosphatase receptor type Z (PTPRZ)-A consists of a carbonic anhydrase (CAH)-like domain, fibronectin type III-like domain followed by a spacer region, a membrane-spanning region, and cytoplasmic tandem PTP domains with a canonical PDZ-binding motif (-Ser-Leu-Val) at the carboxyl terminal end; the short receptor isoform, PTPRZ-B has a deletion in the extracellular spacer region from PTPRZ-A; and the secretory isoform, PTPRZ-S corresponds to the extracellular portion of PTPRZ-A

  • Ptprz-Cys-1930 to Ser (CS) mice and Ptprz-ΔD2 mice were backcrossed over ten generations with the C57BL/6J (WT) strain as well as Ptprz-KO mice

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Summary

Introduction

One of the critical mechanisms for signal transduction, is reversibly regulated by protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) and protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs). Receptor-like PTPs (RPTPs) are a diverse family of enzymes comprised of eight subfamilies [1]. In the case of R5 subfamily member including PTPRZ, the PTP-D2 domain is a catalytically inactive PTPase domain and is considered to function in the formation of the inactive “head-to-toe” dimers [2]. Protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor type Z (PTPRZ, called PTPz) is a member of the R5 RPTP subfamily together with PTPRG (PTPγ). The Ptprz gene encodes three major splicing isoforms: the long receptor isoform, PTPRZ-A consists of a carbonic anhydrase (CAH)-like domain, fibronectin type III-like domain followed by a spacer region, a membrane-spanning region, and cytoplasmic tandem PTP domains with a canonical PDZ-binding motif (-Ser-Leu-Val) at the carboxyl terminal end; the short receptor isoform, PTPRZ-B has a deletion in the extracellular spacer region from PTPRZ-A; and the secretory isoform, PTPRZ-S corresponds to the extracellular portion of PTPRZ-A. The two receptor isoforms have been further classified into two submembers, “conventional PTPRZ-A or -B” and “exon 16-deleted PTPRZ-A or -B(Δex16)”, respectively [3]; in the present study, we refer to both as “PTPRZ-A or-B” collectively

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