4.8 Article

Structural and genomic decoding of human and plant myristoylomes reveals a definitive recognition pattern

Journal

NATURE CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue 7, Pages 671-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41589-018-0077-5

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Funding

  1. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-2010-BLAN-1611-01]
  2. Fondation ARC [SFI2011120111203841]
  3. LabEx Saclay Plant Sciences-SPS [ANR-10-LABX-0040-SPS]
  4. CNRS

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An organism's entire protein modification repertoire has yet to be comprehensively mapped. N-myristoylation (MYR) is a crucial eukaryotic N-terminal protein modification. Here we mapped complete Homo sapiens and Arabidopsis thaliana myristoylomes. The crystal structures of human modifier NMT1 complexed with reactive and nonreactive target-mimicking peptide ligands revealed unexpected binding clefts and a modifier recognition pattern. This information allowed integrated mapping of myristoylomes using peptide macroarrays, dedicated prediction algorithms, and in vivo mass spectrometry. Global MYR profiling at the genomic scale identified over a thousand novel, heterogeneous targets in both organisms. Surprisingly, MYR involved a non-negligible set of overlapping targets with N-acetylation, and the sequence signature marks for a third proximal acylation-S-palmitoylation-were genomically imprinted, allowing recognition of sequences exhibiting both acylations. Together, the data extend the N-end rule concept for Gly-starting proteins to subcellular compartmentalization and reveal the main neighbors influencing protein modification profiles and consequent cell fate.

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