Dual specificity protein phosphatase 1 is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the DUSP1 gene.

Function

The expression of DUSP1 gene is induced in human skin fibroblasts by oxidative/heat stress and growth factors. It specifies a protein with structural features similar to members of the non-receptor-type protein-tyrosine phosphatase family, and which has significant amino-acid sequence similarity to a Tyr/Ser-protein phosphatase encoded by the late gene H1 of vaccinia virus. The bacterially expressed and purified DUSP1 protein has intrinsic phosphatase activity, and specifically inactivates mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase in vitro by the concomitant dephosphorylation of both its phosphothreonine and phosphotyrosine residues. Furthermore, it suppresses the activation of MAP kinase by oncogenic ras in extracts of Xenopus oocytes. Thus, DUSP1 may play an important role in the human cellular response to environmental stress as well as in the negative regulation of cellular proliferation.

Interactions

DUSP1 has been shown to interact with MAPK14, MAPK1 and MAPK8.

References

Further reading



DUSP1 Signaling Pathway Regulates Cytarabine Sensitivity in Acute

 Relations of DUSP1 and tumor microenvironment in ovarian carcinoma

Knockout of DUSP1 suppresses malignant progression of PC cells. (A

DUSP1 (dual specificity phosphatase 1)

DUSP1 Signaling Pathway Regulates Cytarabine Sensitivity in Acute