AI Article Synopsis

  • * The vaccinia H1 (VH1) phosphatase is a unique protein that can act on different types of phosphorylated residues and plays a crucial role in viral replication and immune response.
  • * VH1 is a promising target for anti-poxvirus drug development due to its conservation across poxviruses and differences from a related human phosphatase, making it a viable candidate for creating inhibitors that disrupt its dimer structure.

Article Abstract

Vaccinia virus is a poxvirus that has been successfully leveraged to develop vaccines for smallpox, which is caused by the closely related Variola virus. Smallpox has been declared as 'eradicated' by the WHO in 1980; however, it still poses a potential bioterrorism threat. More recently, the spreading of monkeypox (MPox) in non-endemic countries has further highlighted the importance of continuing the exploration for druggable targets for poxvirus infections. The vaccinia H1 (VH1) phosphatase is the first reported dual specificity phosphatase (DUSP) able to hydrolyze both phosphotyrosine and phosphoserine/phosphotheonine residues. VH1 is a 20 kDa protein that forms a stable dimer and can dephosphorylate both viral and cellular substrates to regulate the viral replication cycle and host immune response. VH1 dimers adopt a domain swap mechanism with the first 20 amino acids of each monomer involved in dense electrostatic interaction and salt bridge formations while hydrophobic interactions between the N-terminal and C-terminal helices further stabilize the dimer. VH1 appears to be an ideal candidate for discovery of novel anti-poxvirus agents because it is highly conserved within the poxviridae family and is a virulence factor, yet it displays significant divergence in sequence and dimerization mechanism from its human closest ortholog vaccinia H1-related (VHR) phosphatase, encoded by the DUSP3 gene. As the dimeric quaternary structure of VH1 is essential for its phosphatase activity, strategies leading to disruption of the dimer structure might aid in VH1 inhibitor development.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/BST20200408DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • * The vaccinia H1 (VH1) phosphatase is a unique protein that can act on different types of phosphorylated residues and plays a crucial role in viral replication and immune response.
  • * VH1 is a promising target for anti-poxvirus drug development due to its conservation across poxviruses and differences from a related human phosphatase, making it a viable candidate for creating inhibitors that disrupt its dimer structure.
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Yeast VH1-related phosphatase (YVH1) (also known as DUSP12) is a member of the atypical dual-specificity phosphatase subfamily. Although no direct substrate has been firmly established, human YVH1 (hYVH1) has been shown to protect cells from cellular stressors, regulate the cell cycle, disassemble stress granules, and act as a 60S ribosome biogenesis factor. Despite knowledge of hYVH1 function, further research is needed to uncover mechanisms of its regulation.

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Chemical library screening approaches that focus exclusively on catalytic events may overlook unique effects of protein-protein interactions that can be exploited for development of specific inhibitors. Phosphotyrosyl (pTyr) residues embedded in peptide motifs comprise minimal recognition elements that determine the substrate specificity of protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPases). We incorporated aminooxy-containing amino acid residues into a 7-residue epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) derived phosphotyrosine-containing peptide and subjected the peptides to solution-phase oxime diversification by reacting with aldehyde-bearing druglike functionalities.

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Protein tyrosine kinases (PTK), discovered in the 1970s, have been considered master regulators of biological processes with high clinical significance as targets for human diseases. Their actions are countered by protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTP), enzymes yet underrepresented as drug targets because of the high homology of their catalytic domains and high charge of their catalytic pocket. This scenario is still worse for some PTP subclasses, for example, for the atypical dual-specificity phosphatases (ADUSPs), whose biological functions are not even completely known.

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OH1 from Orf Virus: A New Tyrosine Phosphatase that Displays Distinct Structural Features and Triple Substrate Specificity.

J Mol Biol

September 2017

Sección Bioquímica y Biología Molecular, Facultad de Ciencias, UdelaR, 11400 Montevideo, Uruguay. Electronic address:

Viral tyrosine phosphatases such as VH1 from Vaccinia and Variola virus are recognized as important effectors of host-pathogen interactions. While proteins sharing sequence to VH1 have been identified in other viruses, their structural and functional characterization is not known. In this work, we determined the crystal structure of the VH1 homolog in the Orf virus, herein named OH1.

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