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Diverse Roles of Protein Palmitoylation in Cancer Progression, Immunity, Stemness, and Beyond

Journal

CELLS
Volume 12, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells12182209

Keywords

palmitoylation; cancer; cancer treatment; protein post-translational modification; tumor; ZDHHCs

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Protein S-palmitoylation is a common post-translational modification that regulates protein function and subcellular localization, playing a crucial role in cancer progression and treatment. Understanding the mechanisms and functions of palmitoylation is important for studying tumor development and therapy.
Protein S-palmitoylation, a type of post-translational modification, refers to the reversible process of attachment of a fatty acyl chain-a 16-carbon palmitate acid-to the specific cysteine residues on target proteins. By adding the lipid chain to proteins, it increases the hydrophobicity of proteins and modulates protein stability, interaction with effector proteins, subcellular localization, and membrane trafficking. Palmitoylation is catalyzed by a group of zinc finger DHHC-containing proteins (ZDHHCs), whereas depalmitoylation is catalyzed by a family of acyl-protein thioesterases. Increasing numbers of oncoproteins and tumor suppressors have been identified to be palmitoylated, and palmitoylation is essential for their functions. Understanding how palmitoylation influences the function of individual proteins, the physiological roles of palmitoylation, and how dysregulated palmitoylation leads to pathological consequences are important drivers of current research in this research field. Further, due to the critical roles in modifying functions of oncoproteins and tumor suppressors, targeting palmitoylation has been used as a candidate therapeutic strategy for cancer treatment. Here, based on recent literatures, we discuss the progress of investigating roles of palmitoylation in regulating cancer progression, immune responses against cancer, and cancer stem cell properties.

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