Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Differential Requirement for Pten Lipid and Protein Phosphatase Activity during Zebrafish Embryonic Development

  • Miriam Stumpf,

    Affiliation Hubrecht Institute, Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen (KNAW) and University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands

  • Jeroen den Hertog

    j.denhertog@hubrecht.eu

    Affiliations Hubrecht Institute, Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen (KNAW) and University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands, Institute of Biology Leiden, Leiden University, Leiden, the Netherlands

Abstract

The lipid- and protein phosphatase PTEN is one of the most frequently mutated tumor suppressor genes in human cancers and many mutations found in tumor samples directly affect PTEN phosphatase activity. In order to understand the functional consequences of these mutations in vivo, the aim of our study was to dissect the role of Pten phosphatase activities during zebrafish embryonic development. As in other model organisms, zebrafish mutants lacking functional Pten are embryonically lethal. Zebrafish have two pten genes and pten double homozygous zebrafish embryos develop a severe pleiotropic phenotype around 4 days post fertilization, which can be largely rescued by re-introduction of pten mRNA at the one-cell stage. We used this assay to characterize the rescue-capacity of Pten and variants with mutations that disrupt lipid, protein or both phosphatase activities. The pleiotropic phenotype at 4dpf could only be rescued by wild type Pten, indicating that both phosphatase activities are required for normal zebrafish embryonic development. An earlier aspect of the phenotype, hyperbranching of intersegmental vessels, however, was rescued by Pten that retained lipid phosphatase activity, independent of protein phosphatase activity. Lipid phosphatase activity was also required for moderating pAkt levels at 4 dpf. We propose that the role of Pten during angiogenesis mainly consists of suppressing PI3K signaling via its lipid phosphatase activity, whereas the complex process of embryonic development requires lipid and protein phosphatase of Pten.

Introduction

PTEN (Phosphatase and tensin homolog) is one of the most frequently mutated tumor suppressor genes in spontaneous cancers [1, 2] and germline mutations of PTEN have been associated with PTEN hamartoma tumor syndromes (PHTS), such as Cowden syndrome and Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome [35], and with autism-spectrum disorders [6, 7]. Moreover, homozygous loss of germline PTEN is incompatible with life in higher eukaryotes [812], illustrating its essential functions for multicellular organisms since early embryonic development.

A prominent function of the tumor suppressor PTEN is its lipid phosphatase activity towards phosphatidylinositol (3, 4, 5)-trisphosphate (PIP3), which makes PTEN the main antagonist of the cell proliferation and cell survival promoting phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K)/ Akt (also known as protein kinase B, PKB) signaling pathway [13]. Little-known, in contrast, is its dual-specificity protein phosphatase activity against phosphotyrosine (pTyr), phosphoserine (pSer) and phosphothreonine (pThr), which was discovered and characterized [14] shortly after the identification of PTEN as one of the most frequently mutated tumor suppressor genes in human cancers. Nonetheless, the main attention so far has been drawn to the lipid phosphatase activity of PTEN, partly due to the early identification of germ line mutations in PTEN in Cowden syndrome patients, that are particularly affecting the protein’s lipid phosphatase activity [3, 15].

As in other members of the PTP (protein tyrosine phosphatase) family, the catalytic core of the PTEN PTP domain contains a cysteine, in this case Cys124, which is essential for dephosphorylation of substrates [16, 17]. Mutation of PTEN Cys124 to serine, C124S, which has been associated with spontaneous cancer [18], completely abolishes PTEN phosphatase activity towards inositol phospholipids or phosphorylated proteins [19]. Another point mutation within the catalytic core, G129E, which has been first identified in Cowden syndrome patients, only affects lipid- but not protein phosphatase activity of PTEN [3, 20]. In tumor specimens, Gly129 has been found mutated to either glutamate, G129E; arginine, G129R [14] or valine, G129V (http://cancer.sanger.ac.uk/cosmic). Due to its specific loss of lipid phosphatase activity but not protein phosphatase activity, PTEN G129E has to date been a valuable tool to study the contribution of each of the two enzymatic activities of PTEN in vitro [14, 2025] and in vivo [26]. Upon the discovery of the PTEN related phosphatase TPIP (Transmembrane phosphoinositide 3-phosphatase and tensin homolog) [27], which lacks protein phosphatase activity, and based on the homologous region shared with PTEN, Leslie et al. generated a PTEN mutant, Y138L, which conserves PTEN lipid phosphatase activity but lacks PTEN protein phosphatase activity [28]. Mutation of Tyr138 to cysteine, Y138C, has further been identified in a small cell lung carcinoma cell line, indicating that, though apparently with less frequency, also lack of PTEN protein phosphatase activity is positively selected for in some types of cancer [29].

These three phosphatase mutants of PTEN, C124S, G129E and Y138L, have been used in different studies, in vitro and in vivo, to functionally dissect PTENs distinct phosphatase activities [26, 28, 30, 31]. However, rescue experiments in living organisms using all three phosphatase mutants of PTEN, have not been done systematically yet. In cell based assays, the requirement for lipid phosphatase activity of PTEN to suppress cell proliferation and colony formation was confirmed definitively [22, 32, 33], whereas the importance of the protein phosphatase activity in this process is debatable and depends on the kind of assay performed [28, 29, 34]. However, the PTEN protein phosphatase activity seems to be required for glial cell migration [3537], for regulating differentiation of neuronal progenitor cells [31], for suppression of cell invasion in vitro (Matrigel assay) and for suppression of endothelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) in vivo [28, 29, 38]. The identity of the protein substrates of PTEN remains to be determined definitively. Some of the protein phosphatase-dependent functions of PTEN have recently been attributed to PTEN autodephosphorylation rather than to dephosphorylation of other target proteins [29, 37, 3941].

The role of PTEN lipid and protein phosphatase activity during embryonic development has not been studied in much detail yet, since it requires the availability of a suitable animal model. Analysis of mouse PTEN knockouts and knockins during embryonic development is hampered by embryonic lethality of PTEN knockouts at day E8.5 [8] and because development takes place in utero. We use zebrafish to study protein function during development. Zebrafish is a great model, because of extra-uterine development, the number of embryos generated (∼200 per female, weekly), the transparency of the egg and the variety of techniques to (re-) introduce genetic information (synthetic RNA, DNA) at the one-cell stage.

Zebrafish have two pten genes, ptena and ptenb, that have redundant functions [9, 10]. We generated ptena-/- and ptenb-/- fish lines by target-selected gene inactivation (TSGI) and inbred them to obtain ptena+/-ptenb-/- and ptena-/-ptenb+/- fish lines that we use for our functional rescue experiments [9, 42, 43]. While their heterozygous and single homozygous siblings are viable and fertile, double homozygous embryos that lack all Pten activity develop a pleiotropic phenotype, characterized by massive heart edema, craniofacial defects, aberrant pigmentation and shorter body axis. Those embryos die around 5 days post fertilization (dpf). We previously characterized the pleiotropic phenotype of double homozygous ptena-/-ptenb-/- embryos at different developmental stages [9], unveiled the formation of hemangiosarcomas in adult pten haploinsufficient zebrafish [44] and further studied the role of Pten in zebrafish angiogenesis [43] and hematopoiesis [45].

Angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels from the existing vasculature, is a common hallmark of solid tumor progression and the underlying signaling pathways, especially VEGFR-signaling, have been extensively studied as therapeutic targets. We recently described that pten double homozygous embryos have constitutively elevated pAkt and vegfaa levels [9, 43, 44], accompanied by enhanced angiogenesis that can be visualized from 3dpf onwards using confocal microscopy in ptena-/-ptenb-/- zebrafish embryos in the transgenic Tg(kdrl:eGFP) background [43]. This vasculature hyperbranching phenotype is rescued by treatment with the PI3K-specific inhibitor LY294002 but also by micro-injection of synthetic pten mRNA [43].

In this study we investigated which Pten phosphatase activity, lipid or protein phosphatase, is required for normal zebrafish embryonic development and angiogenesis. We tested the capacity of phosphatase activity mutants of Pten to rescue the pleiotropic phenotype at 4dpf when injected as synthetic mRNA at the one-cell stage. Wild type Pten, but none of the phosphatase mutants, was able to rescue the pleiotropic phenotype at 4dpf. In contrast to the pleiotropic phenotype at 4dpf, the hyperbranching vessel phenotype at 3dpf was rescued by both lipid phosphatase active Pten constructs, Pten wild type and Pten Y138L. Further, lipid phosphatase active Pten decreased activated Akt (pAkt) levels in pten double homozygous zebrafish embryos at 4dpf. We conclude that Pten lipid phosphatase activity is required to regulate correct vessel formation and pAkt levels during zebrafish embryogenesis, whereas the Pten protein phosphatase activity seems dispensable for regulating angiogenensis. For correct zebrafish embryonic development, however, both lipid and protein phosphatase activities appear to be required.

Material and Methods

Ethics statement

All procedures involving experimental animals described in this manuscript were approved by the local animal experiments committee (Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen-Dierexperimenten commissie protocol HL05.1501) and performed according to local guidelines and policies in compliance with national and European law.

Fish line

Zebrafish were maintained and the embryos were staged as previously described [46]. The lines Tg(kdrl:eGFP) and ptena-/-, as well as ptenb -/- were previously described [9, 47, 48].

Constructs, mRNA synthesis and Micro-injections

The Ptenb-mCherry and Ptenb-eGFP construct were obtained by amplification of ptenb from the vectors described in [9]. The PCR-product and the pCS2+mCherry or pCS2+eGFP vectors were digested with BglII and ptenb was subsequently ligated into pCS2+mCherry and pCS2+eGFP. The point mutations in the PTP domain were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis. The constructs were linearized with NotI and to synthetize 5’ capped sense RNA, the mMessage mMachine SP6 kit (Ambion) was used. mRNA injections were performed at the one-cell stage as described using a total of 300 pg of mRNA.

Lysis

Zebrafish embryos at 4dpf were anesthetized with 16mg/ml 3-amino benzoic acid ethylesther (MS-222) and cut in half (just below the yolk sack extension). The tail was lysed for genotyping and the head/trunk region was subjected to a protein lysis protocol for subsequent immunoblotting (see below).

Immunoblotting

Zebrafish embryos were lysed at 4dpf in 25mM HEPES (pH7,4), 125mM NaCl, 0,25% Deoxycholate, 10mM MgCl2, 1mM EDTA, 1% Triton X-100, 10% Glycerol buffer containing proteinase and phosphatase inhibitors. Samples were lysed for 30min and subsequently subjected to sonication with the Bioruptor (settings: high intensity, 15min, 1min on/off cycles). Samples were run on a 10% SDS-PAGE gel, transferred to a PVDF membrane and stained with Coomassie Blue to verify equal loading. The blots were probed with antibodies specific to pAkt (1:2000), Akt (1:1000) and PTEN (1:1000); (all Cell Signaling) and Tubulin (1:3000); (Calbiochem). For signal detection, enhanced chemiluminescence (Thermo Scientific kit) was diluted 1:2 in home- made ECL.

Confocal microscopy and Analysis

Zebrafish embryos were anesthetized at 3dpf and laterally mounted on glass bottom dishes (Greiner bio one) in 0,5% agarose (type V, Sigma Aldrich) in E3 embryo medium containing 16mg/ml 3-amino benzoic acid ethylesther (MS-222) to block contractile movements. Confocal microscopy was performed using a Leica TCS SPE, 20x objective. Z-stacks (step size 2μm) of the vasculature in the tail region, right below the yolk sack extension, were acquired for every embryo at 28.5°C. Image J software (http://rsb.info.nih.gov./ij/) was used to generate z-projection images of the zebrafish embryonic vasculature.

Statistics

Significance of the frequency of occurrence of the “hyperbranching” vasculature phenotype in the different experimental conditions compared to the non-injected control was assessed using two-tailed Fisher’s exact test. Results were considered significant when p<0.05 (p values * p<0.05, ** p<0.01, *** p<0.001).

Results

Pten phosphatase mutants

In order to study the role of Pten phosphatase activities during zebrafish embryonic development, we introduced point mutations, that are known to disrupt—fully or partially—the enzymatic activity of human PTEN, in the PTP domain of the zebrafish homologue, Ptenb (Fig 1A). The sequence conservation of the catalytic domain between human PTEN and zebrafish Pten is extremely high. All residues that contact the substrate, including Asp92, His93, Lys125, Ala126, Gly127, Lys128, Gly129, Arg130, Thr167, Ile168 and Gln171, and particularly the catalytic site cysteine of PTEN, Cys124, [49] are conserved in Ptenb. Therefore, we believe that mutation of C124S, G129E or Y138L in Ptenb affects the catalytic activities of these mutants in a similar manner as in human PTEN. We previously reported that zebrafish, as many other teleosts, have two pten genes, ptena and ptenb, that have redundant functions during embryonic development [9] and that both ptena and ptenb largely rescued the morphological defects in ptena-/-ptenb-/- zebrafish [43]. For our approach, we used ptenb and mutants. We first generated constructs encoding fluorescent protein-tagged Ptenb, using either eGFP or mCherry, which allowed us to check for correct microinjection and protein expression. Subsequently we created the phosphatase mutants of Ptenb-mCherry and Ptenb-eGFP (not depicted in the schematic) by site-directed mutagenesis (Fig 1A). Mutation of the catalytic cysteine, Cys124, to serine abolishes all phosphatase activity, whereas mutation of Gly129 to glutamate renders a lipid phosphatase inactive Ptenb that retains protein phosphatase activity. Mutation of Tyr138 to leucine on the contrary abolishes protein phosphatase activity, but not lipid phosphatase activity (Fig 1B).

thumbnail
Fig 1. Schematic representation of the Ptenb-mCherry WT, C124S, G129E and Y138L constructs and their enzymatic activities.

(A) Wild type Ptenb (long splicing variant, 422 amino acids) consists of the N-Terminus (yellow), the PTP-domain (green), the C2 domain (blue) and the C-terminus (black and white). The red fluorescent protein mCherry (red) is C-terminally tagged in frame to all Ptenb constructs. The point mutations of interest were introduced into the PTP-domain by site-directed mutagenesis. (B) Phosphatase activities of the Ptenb mutants: Wild type Ptenb posseses phosphatase activity against phospholipids and phosphorylated peptide sequences, which can both be completely abrogated by mutation of the catalytic cysteine, Cys124 to serine (C124S). Mutation of Gly129 to glutamate (G129E) results in loss of Ptenb lipid phosphatase activity while protein phosphatase activity is retained. Mutation of Tyr138 to leucine (Y138L), renders a protein-phosphatase-dead Ptenb that retains lipid phosphatase activity.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148508.g001

Both Pten phosphatase activities are required to rescue the ptena-/-ptenb-/- pleiotropic phenotype

For our functional rescue assay, we microinjected embryos of a ptena+/-ptenb-/- zebrafish incross at the one-cell stage with 300pg of synthetic Ptenb-mCherry WT or phosphatase mutant mRNA. At 4dpf, we performed brightfield microscopy of the whole embryos to assess their overall phenotype. Double homozygous ptena-/-ptenb-/- embryos displayed severe developmental defects, including massive heart and abdominal edemas, craniofacial defects, aberrant pigmentation and reduced body axis extension (Fig 2A, non-injected control (NIC)). These defects became visible at 4dpf and were likely provoked by aberrant cell proliferation and enhanced cell survival [9]. Micro-injection of 300 pg synthetic ptenb mRNA largely rescued the pleiotropic defects of ptena-/-ptenb-/- embryos, whereas injection of 300 pg ptenb mRNA did not induce any phenotypes in siblings (Fig 2A, WT). Although most features of the pleiotropic phenotype were rescued by re-introduction of wild type Ptenb, a complete rescue was not achieved. This is probably due to a decrease in mRNA levels over time and to a certain degree of mosaicism that may occur during the early cleavage stages. For quantification (Fig 2B), we therefore considered a highly improved phenotype, like the one of the Ptenb-mCherry WT-injected embryo depicted in Fig 2A, as “rescued”. In this assay, we used the phosphatase mutants of Ptenb in parallel to WT Ptenb in order to assess their capacity to rescue the ptena-/-ptenb-/- phenotype. Both lipid-phosphatase inactive mutants, Ptenb-mCherry C124S and Ptenb-mCherry G129E, were not capable of rescuing the pleiotropic phenotype at all. The pten double homozygous embryos microinjected with these two mutants closely resembled the non-injected double homozygous siblings (Fig 2A). Micro-injection of Ptenb-mCherry Y138L seemed to considerably alleviate the severity of the phenotype but did not fully rescue it. Yet, compared to the non-injected controls, Y138L injection is a great amelioration. Ptenb-eGFP G129E and Ptenb-mCherry Y138L RNA were co-injected each at half of the dose of the single injections to avoid inadvertant effects of microinjection of too much synthetic mRNA. However, these co-injections did not rescue the pten double homozygous phenotype either. In fact, the phenotype appeared much more severe than the one of the Ptenb-mCherry Y138L injected embryos but not as severe as the non-injected control.

thumbnail
Fig 2. Both Pten phosphatase activities are required to rescue the ptena-/-ptenb-/- pleiotropic phenotype.

Zebrafish embryos from a ptena+/- ptenb-/- incross were injected with either wild type Ptenb-mCherry, Ptenb-mCherry C124S, Ptenb-mCherry G129E or Ptenb-mCherry Y138L encoding synthetic mRNA at the one-cell stage. (A) At 4 dpf the embryos were submitted to brightfield microscopy and analyzed for the pleiotropic phenotype. Pictures show representative, genotyped embryos. Non-injected control embryos (NIC) were included for reference. (B) Quantification of the embryos showing the typical ptena-/-ptenb-/- pleiptropic phenotype at 4dpf. In the non-injected control (NIC), approximately 25% of the embryos showed the characteristic phenotype (Mendelian segregation). Only wild type Ptenb-mCherry rescued the pleiotropic ptena-/-ptenb-/- phenotype significantly at 4dpf. The statistical significance of each of the conditions compared to the non-injected control was determined using two-tailed Fisher’s exact test and is indicated in the bar graph (ns = not significant, * = p-value < 0,05, ** = p-value < 0,01, *** = p-value < 0,001).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148508.g002

According to Mendelian law, one quarter of the offspring of a ptena+/-ptenb-/- incross, 25%, is expected to be double homozygous. Counting the number of embryos displaying the pten double homozygous phenotype, compared to the total number of embryos in each experimental condition allowed us to assess the rescue capacity of each Ptenb-mCherry construct and to perform statistical analysis (Fig 2B). As expected, the occurrence of the pten double homozygous phenotype in the non-injected control was about 25%, which was significantly reduced, to about 10%, by micro- injection of Ptenb-mCherry WT. Ptenb-C124S and Ptenb-G129E did not rescue the morphological defects in ptena-/-ptenb-/- embryos. Although there appeared to be a positive effect of Ptenb-mCherry Y138L expression on the number of phenotypes observed, this was not statistically significant and neither was co-expression of Ptenb-G129E and Ptenb-Y138L. We conclude that for normal embryonic development in zebrafish, both phosphatase activities of Pten are required, because none of the Ptenb phosphatase mutants rescued the morphological defects in ptena-/-ptenb-/- mutants to the same extent as wild type Ptenb.

Pten lipid phosphatase activity is sufficient to rescue the hyperbranching vasculature phenotype of ptena-/-ptenb-/- zebrafish embryos

Morphological defects in ptena-/-ptenb-/- mutants develop relatively late during embryonic development, at 4dpf. The mCherry signal is already hard to detect at this stage, indicating that a big proportion of the injected mRNA might already have been degraded. Therefore, we decided to focus on a feature of the phenotype that emerges earlier during development: the hyperbranching of the vasculature at 3dpf, which we imaged using a kdrl:eGFP transgenic zebrafish line [43]. The characteristic trait of this phenotype is the correct development of the intersegmental vessels (ISV), which subsequently produce excessive sprouting, starting at around 70–72 hpf, and quickly evolve into a branch-like meshwork that intrudes into the somite tissue (Fig 3; NIC). Like the pleiotropic phenotype at 4dpf, hyperbranching of the vasculature was largely rescued by re-introduction of Pten [43] (Fig 3). We micro—injected Ptenb WT, Ptenb C124S, Ptenb G129E and Ptenb Y138L or a combination of Ptenb G129E and Y138L RNA in zebrafish eggs of a ptena+/-ptenb-/- incross with transgenic Tg(kdrl:eGFP) background, at the one-cell stage. At 3 dpf, the embryos were subjected to confocal in vivo imaging of the vasculature (Figs 3 and 4). The Z-projections of the stacks were analyzed for the occurrence of the hyperbranching phenotype and accordingly categorized into either “normal” or “hyperbranching” phenotype for quantification and statistical analysis (Fig 5). Representative images of embryos of this experiment at 3dpf are shown (Figs 3 and 4). Both enzymes retaining lipid phosphatase activity, Ptenb WT (Fig 3) and Ptenb Y138L (Fig 4), were able to significantly suppress the hyperbranching vasculature phenotype at 3dpf (Figs 35). Micro- injection of the other Ptenb mutants (Fig 4) that lack Pten lipid phosphatase activity, Ptenb C124S and Ptenb G129E, did not suppress excessive sprouting of the intersegmental vessels. Also, co-injection of Ptenb G129E and Ptenb Y138L each at half the normal dose did not significantly rescue the hyperbranching phenotype. This might be due to the fact that only half the amount of lipid phoshphatase active Ptenb Y138L was injected compared to single injection of Ptenb Y138L. Therefore, we co-injected Ptenb G129E and Ptenb Y138L each at the normal dose. This, however, did not rescue the hyperbranching phenotype (S1 Fig), suggesting that Ptenb G129E might have a dominant-negative effect over Ptenb Y138L or that both phosphatase activities have to be present in the same molecule (see discussion).

thumbnail
Fig 3. The hyperbranching vasculature phenotype, observed in Pten double homozygous zebrafish embryos at 3dpf, can be rescued by wild type Pten.

Zebrafish embryos from a Tg(kdrl:eGFP) ptena+/-ptenb-/- incross were microinjected at the one-cell stage with 300 pg synthetic mRNA encoding Ptenb-mCherry. At 3dpf the embryos were analyzed for the hyperbranching vessel phenotype by confocal live imaging on a Leica TCS-SPE microscope (anterior to the left, 20x objective, 2μm z-stacks). Subsequently, the embryos were genotyped. Pictures show the trunk region distal from the urogenital opening of representative embryos; non-injected control embryos (control) were included for reference.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148508.g003

thumbnail
Fig 4. Pten lipid phosphatase activity is required to rescue the hyperbranching vasculature phenotype observed in Pten double homozygous zebrafish embryos at 3dpf.

Zebrafish embryos from a Tg(kdrl:eGFP) ptena+/-ptenb-/- incross were microinjected at the one-cell stage with 300 pg synthetic mRNA encoding Ptenb-mCherry WT (not shown here, see Fig 3) or with either Ptenb-mcherry C124S, Ptenb-mcherry Y138L, Ptenb-mCherry G129E or with 150 pg of each, Ptenb-eGFP G129E and Ptenb-mCherry Y138L. At 3dpf, the embryos were analyzed for the hyperbranching vessel phenotype by confocal live imaging on a Leica TCS-SPE microscope (anterior to the left, 20x objective, 2μm z-stacks). Pictures show the trunk region distal from the urogenital opening of representative genotyped embryos. Both Ptenb WT (shown in Fig 3) and Ptenb Y138L rescue the hyperbranching phenotype observed at 3dpf.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148508.g004

thumbnail
Fig 5. Only lipid phosphatase-active Pten rescues the hyperbranching vasculature phenotype at 3dpf.

Quantification of the number of embryos showing the typical ptena-/-ptenb-/- hyperbranching intersegmental vessel phenotype at 3dpf. Both Ptenb-mCherry WT and Ptenb-mcherry Y138L rescue the characteristic ptena-/-ptenb-/- hyperbranching phenotype while the other phosphatase mutants do not. The statistical significance was determined using two-tailed Fisher’s Exact test. (ns = not significant, * = p-value < 0,05, ** = p-value < 0,01, *** = p-value < 0,001).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148508.g005

From the z-stack images, we assessed the number of embryos showing hyperbranching of the intersegmental vessels at 3dpf and calculated the percentage of the observed phenotype according to the total number of embryos in each experimental condition (Fig 5). Again, as expected, the occurrence of the hyperbranching phenotype in the non-injected control is about 25% and can be significantly reduced by micro-injection of Ptenb-mCherry WT, to about 5%. From the quantification of hyperbranching, it appears that there might be a slight difference between the rescue capacity of Ptenb WT (5% phenotype observed) and Ptenb Y138L (8% phenotype observed). However, comparing the two conditions directly to one another and performing two-tailed Fisher’s exact test revealed that this difference is not significant. Neither are the differences between Ptenb G129E (20% phenotype observed) and Ptenb G129E/Ptenb Y138L injection (27% phenotype observed), which further confirms the observation that co-microinjection of the two complementary phosphatase mutants did not restore a Ptenb wild-type-like rescue capacity.

Wild type Pten and Pten Y138L restore physiological pAkt levels in ptena-/-ptenb-/- double homozygous zebrafish embryos

To assess the ability of the different Ptenb phosphatase mutants to antagonize PI3K/Akt-signaling in vivo, the embryos were genotyped at 4dpf, and the phosphorylation of downstream Akt in each embryo was detected by immunoblotting (Fig 6). These data further confirmed that both lipid phosphatase active Ptenb, Ptenb WT and Ptenb Y138L, but none of the other phosphatase mutants were capable of decreasing pAkt levels in vivo. We conclude that there may be a causal link between the characteristic hyperbranching of intersegmental vessels at 3dpf in ptena-/-ptenb-/- embryos and elevated PIP3/pAkt signaling, which is consistent with the notion that that Pten lipid phosphatase activity, but not protein phosphatase activity is required to suppress the ptena-/-ptenb-/- hyperbranching phenotype.

thumbnail
Fig 6. Only lipid phosphatase-active Pten restores normal pAkt levels at 4dpf.

At 4dpf, single embryos from a ptena+/-ptenb-/- incross were cut in half. The trunk region was used for genotyping and the anterior half was lysed and processed for immunoblotting. Lysates from siblings and ptena-/-ptenb-/- embryos were run side by side on gels and blotted. The membranes were probed with phosphospecific anti-pAkt antibody (directed against pSer473), and subsequently sequentially stripped and probed with Akt-specific antibody, Tubulin-specific antibody as a loading control and PTEN-specific antibody, which only detects endogenous Ptena. The elevated pAkt levels in pten double homozygous embryos (see non-injected control) could be reduced to physiological levels by microinjection of either Ptenb WT or Ptenb Y138L RNA, indicating that both constructs have similar lipid phosphatase activities.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148508.g006

Discussion

So far, the contribution of the distinct phosphatase activities of PTEN to its cellular functions has been mainly studied in vitro [14, 2025, 28, 29, 31] and the few in vivo approaches did not include the PTEN protein phosphatase deficient mutant PTEN Y138L [26, 30, 50]. In order to address whether Pten lipid and protein phosphatase activity are required for correct embryonic development, we investigated the capacity of Pten mutants to functionally rescue the pleiotropic phenotype of ptena-/-ptenb-/- embryos. We found that Pten lipid and protein phosphatase are both required for normal embryonic development at 4 dpf and that lipid phosphatase activity is required for normal angiogenesis at 3 dpf. Consistent with our results at 4dpf, Tibarewal et al. reported that in Matrigel in in vitro assays with UM87G cells [29], only re-expression of wild type PTEN but of none of the PTEN phosphatase mutants, not even co-expression of PTEN G129E and PTEN Y138L, suppressed cell invasion in spite of the fact that PTEN Y138L restored normal pAkt levels. Based on these in vitro results and the finding that the main protein substrate of PTEN could be its own C-terminal tail, more specifically Thr366, Tibarewal et al. speculated that both phosphatase activities might have to be present on the same PTEN molecule in order to fulfill certain biological functions. In fact, they demonstrated that PTEN Y138L is hyperphosphorylated on Thr366, caused by its lack of protein phosphatase activity, and that mutation of this residue to alanine, T366A, restored the capacity of PTEN Y138L to suppress cell invasion [29]. Anyhow, we realized that in our experiments the mCherry signal was already quite difficult to detect at 4dpf, suggesting that at these relatively late developmental stages exogenous mRNA might have been degraded and hence the rescuing effect of Pten might be diminished. The limited lifespan of mRNA molecules in vivo is a common drawback of the microinjection technique and is the reason why achieving a long-lasting and complete rescue by microinjection of synthetic mRNA is virtually impossible.

To avoid the possible effects of RNA instability on the rescue capacity of Pten at later stages in development, we focused on an aspect of the ptena-/-ptenb-/- phenotype that emerges earlier during embryonic development: the characteristic hyperbranching of the intersegmental vessels at 3dpf [43]. Angiogenesis, the sprouting of new blood vessels from existing vasculature, is a highly regulated process during zebrafish embryonic development that requires a fine-tuned interplay between different signaling pathways, including Vegf signaling (vascular endothelial growth factor; artery and lymph vessel formation) and Bmp signaling (bone morphogenetic proteins; vein formation), as well as secondarily involved pathways, including for example Notch signaling, Semaphorin-Plexin signaling and the PI3K/Akt(PKB)/PTEN-axis. Upon binding of Vegfa to VEGFR2, the Vegfa receptor, PI3K signaling gets activated (as well as phospholipase Cγ1 and Src family kinases), promoting proliferation and differentiation of vascular endothelial cells and thereby inducing angiogenensis [5153]. The work of various groups previously unveiled that PTEN, the main antagonist of PI3K signaling, suppresses this pathway in vitro [54] and lack of PTEN has been associated with enhanced angiogenesis in gastric cancer patients [55]. We reported that pten double homozygous zebrafish develop an ectopic vascular hyperbranching phenotype [43] and that this phenotype is rescued either by re-introducing Pten mRNA at the one-cell stage or by treating embryos with LY294002, a specific PI3K inhibitor, thereby proving that Pten suppresses angiogenesis in vivo mainly via decreasing phosphorylated Akt levels.

We were intrigued to find out whether the lipid phosphatase activity of Pten is sufficient to rescue the hyperbranching vessel phenotype or whether Pten requires both phosphatase activities in order to suppress angiogenensis. Our results revealed that wild type Ptenb and Ptenb Y138L, both possessing lipid phosphatase activity, were the only Ptenb constructs that significantly prevented the development of hyperbranching trunk vasculature in the double homozygous pten embryos at 3dpf. This indicates that Pten lipid phosphatase activity is required to suppress angiogenesis in vivo.

Detection of pAkt levels at 4dpf by immunoblotting further confirmed that both Ptenb WT and Ptenb Y138L, are capable of restoring physiological pAkt levels at this developmental stage. Immunoblotting suggested that Ptenb Y138L was more active than Ptenb WT, since it also suppressed pAkt levels in the micro-injected siblings. It would be interesting to address this question in further studies. To our surprise, co-microinjection of Ptenb-eGFP G129E and Ptenb-mCherry Y138L did not significantly rescue the hyperbranching vessel phenotype at 3dpf, whereas microinjection of Ptenb-mCherry Y138L by itself did rescue. This may be due to a dominant negative effect of Ptenb G129E on Ptenb Y138L, for example by dimerization [26]. In vivo studies in mice revealed that both mutations of Pten that abolish lipid phosphatase activity, C124S and G129E, have a dominant negative effect over wild type Pten in a heterozygous setting (Pten+/C124S or Pten+/G129E), rendering mice with an amplified tumor spectrum compared to mice affected by Pten loss of heterozygosity (Pten+/-), an effect that can be explained by PTEN heterodimerization [26]. However, another explanation for the observed lack of a full rescue upon co-expression is that both phosphatase activities may need to be present in the same Pten molecule. Complete PTEN phosphatase functionality seems to be especially important to control complex biological processes such as invasion [29] and embryonic development.

We further believe that, as proposed by Tibarewal et al., certain biological functions of PTEN could either depend on lipid phosphatase-independent mechanisms, exerted by protein-protein interactions, or on lipid phosphatase activity of PTEN towards a specific spatial PIP3 pool that does not correlate with pAkt levels, as for example membrane ruffling and cell polarity [29]. This hypothesis would also explain why the Y138C mutation of PTEN has been positively selected for in the metastatic small cell lung cancer cell line NCI-H196 [29, 34, 41, 56, 57]. Lyu et al. recently reported that PTEN protein phosphatase activity but not lipid phosphatase activity is essential for the regulation of neuronal progenitor cell differentiation and that PTEN likely exerts its protein phosphatase-dependent function by dephosphorylating CREB [31]. Ultimately, cell motility, invasion, cell polarity and differentiation are all crucial processes that have to be highly regulated for correct embryonic development and therefore it is not surprising that some features of the pten double homozygous phenotype are controlled by PI3K/Akt-independent PTEN functions. Our results indicate that the role of Pten in antagonizing angiogenesis signaling is crucially dependent on its ability to dephosphorylate PIP3, whereas its role in zebrafish embryonic development likely depends on additional functions of Pten that are independent from suppressing the PI3K/Akt-signaling axis.

Supporting Information

S1 Fig. Co-injection of Ptenb-mCherry G129E and Ptenb-mCherry Y138L did not rescue developmental defects in ptena-/-ptenb-/- zebrafish embryos.

Zebrafish embryos from a Tg(kdrl:eGFP) ptena+/-ptenb-/- incross were microinjected at the one-cell stage with mRNA encoding Ptenb-mCherry G129E and Ptenb-mCherry Y138L (300 pg each). At 3dpf the embryos were analyzed for the hyperbranching vessel phenotype by confocal live imaging on a Leica TCS-SPE microscope (top left panels; anterior to the left, 20x objective, 2μm z-stacks). Subsequently, the embryos were genotyped. Pictures show the trunk region distal from the urogenital opening of representative embryos; non-injected control embryos (NIC) were included for reference. Quantification of the number of embryos showing the typical ptena-/-ptenb-/- hyperbranching intersegmental vessel phenotype at 3dpf. Two-tailed Fisher’s Exact test indicated no statistically significant difference between NIC and G129E/Y138L-injected embryos (top right panel). The morphology of NIC embryos and G129E/Y138L-injected embryos was assessed at 4 dpf by brightfield microscopy (bottom left panels). Pictures show representative, genotyped embryos. Non-injected control embryos (NIC) were included for reference. Quantification of the embryos showing the typical ptena-/-ptenb-/- pleiptropic phenotype at 4dpf (bottom right panel). Two-tailed Fisher’s Exact test indicated no statistically significant difference between NIC and G129E/Y138L-injected embryos.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0148508.s001

(PDF)

Acknowledgments

We thank Dr. Geert Geeven for the expert advice on the statistics. Further, we thank the Hubrecht Imaging Center (HIC) for imaging support and the Hubrecht fish facility for the excellent zebrafish husbandry.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: MS JdH. Performed the experiments: MS. Analyzed the data: MS JdH. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: MS JdH. Wrote the paper: MS JdH.

References

  1. 1. Li J, Yen C, Liaw D, Podsypanina K, Bose S, Wang SI, et al. PTEN, a putative protein tyrosine phosphatase gene mutated in human brain, breast, and prostate cancer. Science. 1997;275(5308):1943–7. Epub 1997/03/28. pmid:9072974.
  2. 2. Steck PA, Pershouse MA, Jasser SA, Yung WK, Lin H, Ligon AH, et al. Identification of a candidate tumour suppressor gene, MMAC1, at chromosome 10q23.3 that is mutated in multiple advanced cancers. Nat Genet. 1997;15(4):356–62. pmid:9090379.
  3. 3. Liaw D, Marsh DJ, Li J, Dahia PL, Wang SI, Zheng Z, et al. Germline mutations of the PTEN gene in Cowden disease, an inherited breast and thyroid cancer syndrome. Nat Genet. 1997;16(1):64–7. Epub 1997/05/01. pmid:9140396.
  4. 4. Marsh DJ, Dahia PL, Zheng Z, Liaw D, Parsons R, Gorlin RJ, et al. Germline mutations in PTEN are present in Bannayan-Zonana syndrome. Nat Genet. 1997;16(4):333–4. Epub 1997/08/01. pmid:9241266.
  5. 5. Zhou XP, Waite KA, Pilarski R, Hampel H, Fernandez MJ, Bos C, et al. Germline PTEN promoter mutations and deletions in Cowden/Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome result in aberrant PTEN protein and dysregulation of the phosphoinositol-3-kinase/Akt pathway. Am J Hum Genet. 2003;73(2):404–11. Epub 2003/07/05. pmid:12844284; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC1180378.
  6. 6. Goffin A, Hoefsloot LH, Bosgoed E, Swillen A, Fryns JP. PTEN mutation in a family with Cowden syndrome and autism. Am J Med Genet. 2001;105(6):521–4. pmid:11496368.
  7. 7. Buxbaum JD, Cai G, Chaste P, Nygren G, Goldsmith J, Reichert J, et al. Mutation screening of the PTEN gene in patients with autism spectrum disorders and macrocephaly. Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet. 2007;144B(4):484–91. pmid:17427195; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3381648.
  8. 8. Di Cristofano A, Pesce B, Cordon-Cardo C, Pandolfi PP. Pten is essential for embryonic development and tumour suppression. Nat Genet. 1998;19(4):348–55. Epub 1998/08/11. pmid:9697695.
  9. 9. Faucherre A, Taylor GS, Overvoorde J, Dixon JE, Hertog J. Zebrafish pten genes have overlapping and non-redundant functions in tumorigenesis and embryonic development. Oncogene. 2008;27(8):1079–86. Epub 2007/08/21. pmid:17704803.
  10. 10. Croushore JA, Blasiole B, Riddle RC, Thisse C, Thisse B, Canfield VA, et al. Ptena and ptenb genes play distinct roles in zebrafish embryogenesis. Dev Dyn. 2005;234(4):911–21. Epub 2005/09/30. pmid:16193492; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2611959.
  11. 11. Goberdhan DC, Paricio N, Goodman EC, Mlodzik M, Wilson C. Drosophila tumor suppressor PTEN controls cell size and number by antagonizing the Chico/PI3-kinase signaling pathway. Genes Dev. 1999;13(24):3244–58. Epub 2000/01/05. pmid:10617573; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC317204.
  12. 12. Mihaylova VT, Borland CZ, Manjarrez L, Stern MJ, Sun H. The PTEN tumor suppressor homolog in Caenorhabditis elegans regulates longevity and dauer formation in an insulin receptor-like signaling pathway. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999;96(13):7427–32. Epub 1999/06/23. pmid:10377431; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC22102.
  13. 13. Maehama T, Dixon JE. The tumor suppressor, PTEN/MMAC1, dephosphorylates the lipid second messenger, phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate. J Biol Chem. 1998;273(22):13375–8. Epub 1998/06/05. pmid:9593664.
  14. 14. Myers MP, Stolarov JP, Eng C, Li J, Wang SI, Wigler MH, et al. P-TEN, the tumor suppressor from human chromosome 10q23, is a dual-specificity phosphatase. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1997;94(17):9052–7. pmid:9256433; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC23024.
  15. 15. Chi SG, Kim HJ, Park BJ, Min HJ, Park JH, Kim YW, et al. Mutational abrogation of the PTEN/MMAC1 gene in gastrointestinal polyps in patients with Cowden disease. Gastroenterology. 1998;115(5):1084–9. Epub 1998/10/31. pmid:9797362.
  16. 16. Barford D, Flint AJ, Tonks NK. Crystal structure of human protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B. Science. 1994;263(5152):1397–404. pmid:8128219.
  17. 17. Kolmodin K, Aqvist J. The catalytic mechanism of protein tyrosine phosphatases revisited. FEBS Lett. 2001;498(2–3):208–13. pmid:11412859.
  18. 18. Bonneau D, Longy M. Mutations of the human PTEN gene. Hum Mutat. 2000;16(2):109–22. pmid:10923032.
  19. 19. Flint AJ, Tiganis T, Barford D, Tonks NK. Development of "substrate-trapping" mutants to identify physiological substrates of protein tyrosine phosphatases. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1997;94(5):1680–5. pmid:9050838; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC19976.
  20. 20. Myers MP, Pass I, Batty IH, Van der Kaay J, Stolarov JP, Hemmings BA, et al. The lipid phosphatase activity of PTEN is critical for its tumor supressor function. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1998;95(23):13513–8. Epub 1998/11/13. pmid:9811831; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC24850.
  21. 21. Furnari FB, Huang HJ, Cavenee WK. The phosphoinositol phosphatase activity of PTEN mediates a serum-sensitive G1 growth arrest in glioma cells. Cancer Res. 1998;58(22):5002–8. pmid:9823298.
  22. 22. Furnari FB, Lin H, Huang HS, Cavenee WK. Growth suppression of glioma cells by PTEN requires a functional phosphatase catalytic domain. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1997;94(23):12479–84. pmid:9356475; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC25009.
  23. 23. Leslie NR, Gray A, Pass I, Orchiston EA, Downes CP. Analysis of the cellular functions of PTEN using catalytic domain and C-terminal mutations: differential effects of C-terminal deletion on signalling pathways downstream of phosphoinositide 3-kinase. Biochem J. 2000;346 Pt 3:827–33. pmid:10698713; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC1220919.
  24. 24. Gildea JJ, Herlevsen M, Harding MA, Gulding KM, Moskaluk CA, Frierson HF, et al. PTEN can inhibit in vitro organotypic and in vivo orthotopic invasion of human bladder cancer cells even in the absence of its lipid phosphatase activity. Oncogene. 2004;23(40):6788–97. pmid:15273733.
  25. 25. Errafiy R, Aguado C, Ghislat G, Esteve JM, Gil A, Loutfi M, et al. PTEN increases autophagy and inhibits the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway in glioma cells independently of its lipid phosphatase activity. PLoS One. 2013;8(12):e83318. pmid:24349488; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3862694.
  26. 26. Papa A, Wan L, Bonora M, Salmena L, Song MS, Hobbs RM, et al. Cancer-associated PTEN mutants act in a dominant-negative manner to suppress PTEN protein function. Cell. 2014;157(3):595–610. Epub 2014/04/29. pmid:24766807; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4098792.
  27. 27. Walker SM, Downes CP, Leslie NR. TPIP: a novel phosphoinositide 3-phosphatase. Biochem J. 2001;360(Pt 2):277–83. pmid:11716755; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC1222227.
  28. 28. Davidson L, Maccario H, Perera NM, Yang X, Spinelli L, Tibarewal P, et al. Suppression of cellular proliferation and invasion by the concerted lipid and protein phosphatase activities of PTEN. Oncogene. 2010;29(5):687–97. pmid:19915616; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2816976.
  29. 29. Tibarewal P, Zilidis G, Spinelli L, Schurch N, Maccario H, Gray A, et al. PTEN protein phosphatase activity correlates with control of gene expression and invasion, a tumor-suppressing phenotype, but not with AKT activity. Science signaling. 2012;5(213):ra18. pmid:22375056.
  30. 30. Newton RH, Lu Y, Papa A, Whitcher GH, Kang YJ, Yan C, et al. Suppression of T-cell lymphomagenesis in mice requires PTEN phosphatase activity. Blood. 2015;125(5):852–5. pmid:25477498.
  31. 31. Lyu J, Yu X, He L, Cheng T, Zhou J, Cheng C, et al. The protein phosphatase activity of PTEN is essential for regulating neural stem cell differentiation. Mol Brain. 2015;8:26. pmid:25927309; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC4427940.
  32. 32. Cheney IW, Johnson DE, Vaillancourt MT, Avanzini J, Morimoto A, Demers GW, et al. Suppression of tumorigenicity of glioblastoma cells by adenovirus-mediated MMAC1/PTEN gene transfer. Cancer Res. 1998;58(11):2331–4. pmid:9622068.
  33. 33. Davies MA, Lu Y, Sano T, Fang X, Tang P, LaPushin R, et al. Adenoviral transgene expression of MMAC/PTEN in human glioma cells inhibits Akt activation and induces anoikis. Cancer Res. 1998;58(23):5285–90. pmid:9850049.
  34. 34. Zhang XC, Piccini A, Myers MP, Van Aelst L, Tonks NK. Functional analysis of the protein phosphatase activity of PTEN. Biochem J. 2012;444(3):457–64. pmid:22413754; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3365644.
  35. 35. Park MJ, Kim MS, Park IC, Kang HS, Yoo H, Park SH, et al. PTEN suppresses hyaluronic acid-induced matrix metalloproteinase-9 expression in U87MG glioblastoma cells through focal adhesion kinase dephosphorylation. Cancer Res. 2002;62(21):6318–22. pmid:12414663.
  36. 36. Tamura M, Gu J, Matsumoto K, Aota S, Parsons R, Yamada KM. Inhibition of cell migration, spreading, and focal adhesions by tumor suppressor PTEN. Science. 1998;280(5369):1614–7. pmid:9616126.
  37. 37. Raftopoulou M, Etienne-Manneville S, Self A, Nicholls S, Hall A. Regulation of cell migration by the C2 domain of the tumor suppressor PTEN. Science. 2004;303(5661):1179–81. pmid:14976311.
  38. 38. Leslie NR, Yang X, Downes CP, Weijer CJ. PtdIns(3,4,5)P(3)-dependent and -independent roles for PTEN in the control of cell migration. Curr Biol. 2007;17(2):115–25. pmid:17240336; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC1885949.
  39. 39. Leslie NR, Maccario H, Spinelli L, Davidson L. The significance of PTEN's protein phosphatase activity. Adv Enzyme Regul. 2009;49(1):190–6. pmid:19168090.
  40. 40. Ma D, Zhang J, Lin HF, Italiano J, Handin RI. The identification and characterization of zebrafish hematopoietic stem cells. Blood. 2011;118(2):289–97. Epub 2011/05/19. pmid:21586750; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3138684.
  41. 41. Worby CA, Dixon JE. Pten. Annu Rev Biochem. 2014;83:641–69. pmid:24905788.
  42. 42. Stumpf M, Choorapoikayil S, den Hertog J. Pten function in zebrafish: Anything but a fish story. Methods. 2015;77–78:191–6. pmid:25461815.
  43. 43. Choorapoikayil S, Weijts B, Kers R, de Bruin A, den Hertog J. Loss of Pten promotes angiogenesis and enhanced vegfaa expression in zebrafish. Dis Model Mech. 2013;6(5):1159–66. Epub 2013/05/31. pmid:23720233; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3759335.
  44. 44. Choorapoikayil S, Kuiper RV, de Bruin A, den Hertog J. Haploinsufficiency of the genes encoding the tumor suppressor Pten predisposes zebrafish to hemangiosarcoma. Dis Model Mech. 2012;5(2):241–7. Epub 2011/11/11. pmid:22071262; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3291645.
  45. 45. Choorapoikayil S, Kers R, Herbomel P, Kissa K, den Hertog J. Pivotal role of Pten in the balance between proliferation and differentiation of hematopoietic stem cells in zebrafish. Blood. 2014;123(2):184–90. Epub 2013/10/15. pmid:24124088.
  46. 46. Kimmel CB, Ballard WW, Kimmel SR, Ullmann B, Schilling TF. Stages of embryonic development of the zebrafish. Dev Dyn. 1995;203(3):253–310. Epub 1995/07/01. pmid:8589427.
  47. 47. Pauls S, Geldmacher-Voss B, Campos-Ortega JA. A zebrafish histone variant H2A.F/Z and a transgenic H2A.F/Z:GFP fusion protein for in vivo studies of embryonic development. Dev Genes Evol. 2001;211(12):603–10. pmid:11819118.
  48. 48. Covassin LD, Siekmann AF, Kacergis MC, Laver E, Moore JC, Villefranc JA, et al. A genetic screen for vascular mutants in zebrafish reveals dynamic roles for Vegf/Plcg1 signaling during artery development. Dev Biol. 2009;329(2):212–26. pmid:19269286; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2791107.
  49. 49. Lee JO, Yang H, Georgescu MM, Di Cristofano A, Maehama T, Shi Y, et al. Crystal structure of the PTEN tumor suppressor: implications for its phosphoinositide phosphatase activity and membrane association. Cell. 1999;99(3):323–34. pmid:10555148.
  50. 50. Wang H, Karikomi M, Naidu S, Rajmohan R, Caserta E, Chen HZ, et al. Allele-specific tumor spectrum in pten knockin mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2010;107(11):5142–7. pmid:20194734; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC2841921.
  51. 51. Guo D, Jia Q, Song HY, Warren RS, Donner DB. Vascular endothelial cell growth factor promotes tyrosine phosphorylation of mediators of signal transduction that contain SH2 domains. Association with endothelial cell proliferation. J Biol Chem. 1995;270(12):6729–33. pmid:7896817.
  52. 52. Fujio Y, Walsh K. Akt mediates cytoprotection of endothelial cells by vascular endothelial growth factor in an anchorage-dependent manner. J Biol Chem. 1999;274(23):16349–54. pmid:10347193; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC3624707.
  53. 53. Thakker GD, Hajjar DP, Muller WA, Rosengart TK. The role of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase in vascular endothelial growth factor signaling. J Biol Chem. 1999;274(15):10002–7. pmid:10187776.
  54. 54. Huang J, Kontos CD. PTEN modulates vascular endothelial growth factor-mediated signaling and angiogenic effects. J Biol Chem. 2002;277(13):10760–6. pmid:11784722.
  55. 55. Zhou YJ, Xiong YX, Wu XT, Shi D, Fan W, Zhou T, et al. Inactivation of PTEN is associated with increased angiogenesis and VEGF overexpression in gastric cancer. World J Gastroenterol. 2004;10(21):3225–9. pmid:15457582.
  56. 56. Pinal N, Goberdhan DC, Collinson L, Fujita Y, Cox IM, Wilson C, et al. Regulated and polarized PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 accumulation is essential for apical membrane morphogenesis in photoreceptor epithelial cells. Curr Biol. 2006;16(2):140–9. pmid:16431366.
  57. 57. Leslie NR, Bennett D, Gray A, Pass I, Hoang-Xuan K, Downes CP. Targeting mutants of PTEN reveal distinct subsets of tumour suppressor functions. Biochem J. 2001;357(Pt 2):427–35. pmid:11439092; PubMed Central PMCID: PMC1221969.