Tyrosine phosphorylation, regulated by protein tyrosine phosphatases
(PTPs) and kinases (PTKs), is important in signaling pathways underlying
tumorigenesis. A mutational analysis of the tyrosine phosphatase gene
superfamily in human cancers identified 83 somatic mutations in six PTPs
(PTPRF, PTPRG, PTPRT, PTPN3, PTPN13, PTPN14) affecting 26% of colorectal
cancers and a smaller fraction of lung, breast and gastric cancers.
Fifteen mutations were nonsense, frameshift or splice site alterations
predicted to result in truncated proteins lacking phosphatase activity.
Five missense mutations in the most commonly altered PTP (PTPRP) were
biochemically examined and found to reduce phosphatase activity.
Expression of wild-type but not a mutant PTPRT in human cancer cells
inhibited cell growth. These observations suggest that the tyrosine
phosphatase genes are tumor suppressor genes, regulating cellular
pathways that may be amenable to therapeutic intervention.