Identification and Functional Characterization of N-Terminally Acetylated Proteins in Drosophila melanogaster
Sandra Goetze,Ermir Qeli,Christian Mosimann,An Staes,An Staes,Bertran Gerrits,Bernd Roschitzki,Sonali Mohanty,Sonali Mohanty,Eva Niederer,Endre Laczko,Evy Timmerman,Evy Timmerman,Vinzenz Lange,Ernst Hafen,Ruedi Aebersold,Ruedi Aebersold,Ruedi Aebersold,Joël Vandekerckhove,Joël Vandekerckhove,Konrad Basler,Christian H. Ahrens,Kris Gevaert,Kris Gevaert,Erich Brunner +24 more
TL;DR: A new study reveals a functional rule for N-terminal acetylation in higher eukaryotes called the (X)PX rule and describes a generic method that prevents this modification to allow the study of N- terminal acetylations in any given protein.
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Abstract: Protein modifications play a major role for most biological processes in living organisms. Amino-terminal acetylation of proteins is a common modification found throughout the tree of life: the N-terminus of a nascent polypeptide chain becomes co-translationally acetylated, often after the removal of the initiating methionine residue. While the enzymes and protein complexes involved in these processes have been extensively studied, only little is known about the biological function of such N-terminal modification events. To identify common principles of N-terminal acetylation, we analyzed the amino-terminal peptides from proteins extracted from Drosophila Kc167 cells. We detected more than 1,200 mature protein N-termini and could show that N-terminal acetylation occurs in insects with a similar frequency as in humans. As the sole true determinant for N-terminal acetylation we could extract the (X)PX rule that indicates the prevention of acetylation under all circumstances. We could show that this rule can be used to genetically engineer a protein to study the biological relevance of the presence or absence of an acetyl group, thereby generating a generic assay to probe the functional importance of N-terminal acetylation. We applied the assay by expressing mutated proteins as transgenes in cell lines and in flies. Here, we present a straightforward strategy to systematically study the functional relevance of N-terminal acetylations in cells and whole organisms. Since the (X)PX rule seems to be of general validity in lower as well as higher eukaryotes, we propose that it can be used to study the function of N-terminal acetylation in all species.
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Citations
Protein amino-termini and how to identify them
Annelies Bogaert,Kris Gevaert +1 more
TL;DR: An overview of how the field of N-terminomics developed is presented, including a discussion of the founding methods, several updates made to these and newer methods such as TMPP-labeling, biotin-based methods besides some necessary improvements in data analysis.
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Depletion of the human N-terminal acetyltransferase hNaa30 disrupts Golgi integrity and ARFRP1 localization
TL;DR: It is concluded that hNaa30 depletion induces Golgi scattering and induces aberrant ARFRP1 Golgi localization.
Expanded in vivo substrate profile of the yeast N-terminal acetyltransferase NatC
P. Van Damme,Camilla Osberg,Veronique Jonckheere,Nina Glomnes,Kris Gevaert,Thomas Arnesen,Henriette Aksnes +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used S. cerevisiae deleted for the NatC catalytic subunit Naa30 and identified 57 yeast NATC substrates by N-terminal combined fractional diagonal chromatography analysis.
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Towards the N-Terminal Acetylome: An N-Terminal Acetylated Peptide Enrichment Method Using CNBr-Activated Sepharose Resin
Xumin Zhang,Peter Højrup +1 more
TL;DR: A protocol for N(α)-acetylated peptide enrichment using CNBr-activated sepharose resin, which has proved to be simple, sensitive, and highly reproducible.
9
Classification and phylogeny for the annotation of novel eukaryotic GNAT acetyltransferases.
TL;DR: The results show that protein NATs have evolved more than once on the GNAT acetylation scaffold, and use the classification to predict the function of uncharacterized sequences and verify by in vitro protein assays that two fungal genes encode NAT enzymes targeting specific protein N-terminal sequences.
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