20 research outputs found
Work and Income Loss Consideration Among Patients With Herpes Zoster When Completing A Quality Of Life Questionnaire
Macrolide therapy and outcomes in a multicenter cohort of children hospitalized with <i>Mycoplasma pneumoniae</i> pneumonia
Vitamin E intake, alpha-tocopherol status, and pancreatic cancer in a cohort of male smokers
Influence of Antibiotic Susceptibility Patterns on Empiric Antibiotic Prescribing for Children Hospitalized With Community-acquired Pneumonia
Broad‐range bacterial polymerase chain reaction in the microbiologic diagnosis of complicated pneumonia
Correction: Extracellular phosphorylation of a receptor tyrosine kinase controls synaptic localization of NMDA receptors and regulates pathological pain
Extracellular phosphorylation of a receptor tyrosine kinase controls synaptic localization of NMDA receptors and regulates pathological pain.
Extracellular phosphorylation of proteins was suggested in the late 1800s when it was demonstrated that casein contains phosphate. More recently, extracellular kinases that phosphorylate extracellular serine, threonine, and tyrosine residues of numerous proteins have been identified. However, the functional significance of extracellular phosphorylation of specific residues in the nervous system is poorly understood. Here we show that synaptic accumulation of GluN2B-containing N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) and pathological pain are controlled by ephrin-B-induced extracellular phosphorylation of a single tyrosine (p*Y504) in a highly conserved region of the fibronectin type III (FN3) domain of the receptor tyrosine kinase EphB2. Ligand-dependent Y504 phosphorylation modulates the EphB-NMDAR interaction in cortical and spinal cord neurons. Furthermore, Y504 phosphorylation enhances NMDAR localization and injury-induced pain behavior. By mediating inducible extracellular interactions that are capable of modulating animal behavior, extracellular tyrosine phosphorylation of EphBs may represent a previously unknown class of mechanism mediating protein interaction and function
