Mammalian PTPases can be subdivided into 1 of 2 broad categories: transmembrane receptor PTPases and intracellular PTPases. PTPN11 is one of the 2 closely related mammalian intracellular PTPases whose sequences encode 2 tandem SRC homology 2 (SH2) domains that are located at the amino-terminal side of a single PTPase catalytic domain. This PTP is widely expressed in most tissues and plays a regulatory role in various cell signaling events that are important for a diversity of cell functions, such as mitogenic activation, metabolic control, transcription regulation, and cell migration
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 90(6), 2197-2201 (1993-03-15)
A cDNA encoding a nontransmembrane protein-tyrosine phosphatase (PTP; EC 3.1.3.48), termed PTP2C, was isolated from a human umbilical cord cDNA library. The enzyme contains a single phosphatase domain and two adjacent copies of the src homology 2 (SH2) domain at
A 2.1-kb cDNA probe encoding the human SH2-domain containing protein-tyrosine phosphatase SH-PTP2 (PTPN11) was hybridized to human metaphase chromosomes in three independent experiments. In each instance, hybridization was maximal to chromosome 12q24.1-q24.3. The presence of SH-PTP2 cDNA crosshybridizing sequences located
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