» Articles » PMID: 25476580

Systematic Analysis of the in Situ Crosstalk of Tyrosine Modifications Reveals No Additional Natural Selection on Multiply Modified Residues

Overview
Journal Sci Rep
Specialty Science
Date 2014 Dec 6
PMID 25476580
Citations 23
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Recent studies have indicated that different post-translational modifications (PTMs) synergistically orchestrate specific biological processes by crosstalks. However, the preference of the crosstalk among different PTMs and the evolutionary constraint on the PTM crosstalk need further dissections. In this study, the in situ crosstalk at the same positions among three tyrosine PTMs including sulfation, nitration and phosphorylation were systematically analyzed. The experimentally identified sulfation, nitration and phosphorylation sites were collected and integrated with reliable predictions to perform large-scale analyses of in situ crosstalks. From the results, we observed that the in situ crosstalk between sulfation and nitration is significantly under-represented, whereas both sulfation and nitration prefer to co-occupy with phosphorylation at same tyrosines. Further analyses suggested that sulfation and nitration preferentially co-occur with phosphorylation at specific positions in proteins, and participate in distinct biological processes and functions. More interestingly, the long-term evolutionary analysis indicated that multi-PTM targeting tyrosines didn't show any higher conservation than singly modified ones. Also, the analysis of human genetic variations demonstrated that there is no additional functional constraint on inherited disease, cancer or rare mutations of multiply modified tyrosines. Taken together, our systematic analyses provided a better understanding of the in situ crosstalk among PTMs.

Citing Articles

Genetic variability in proteoglycan biosynthetic genes reveals new facets of heparan sulfate diversity.

Ouidja M, Biard D, Huynh M, Laffray X, Gomez-Henao W, Chantepie S Essays Biochem. 2024; 68(4):555-578.

PMID: 39630030 PMC: 11625870. DOI: 10.1042/EBC20240106.


Sulfoproteomics Workflow with Precursor Ion Accurate Mass Shift Analysis Reveals Novel Tyrosine Sulfoproteins in the Golgi.

Kweon H, Kong A, Hersberger K, Huang S, Nesvizhskii A, Wang Y J Proteome Res. 2023; 23(1):71-83.

PMID: 38112105 PMC: 11218929. DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.3c00323.


"Glyco-sulfo barcodes" regulate chemokine receptor function.

Verhallen L, Lackman J, Wendt R, Gustavsson M, Yang Z, Narimatsu Y Cell Mol Life Sci. 2023; 80(2):55.

PMID: 36729338 PMC: 9894980. DOI: 10.1007/s00018-023-04697-9.


A Germline-Targeting Chimpanzee SIV Envelope Glycoprotein Elicits a New Class of V2-Apex Directed Cross-Neutralizing Antibodies.

Bibollet-Ruche F, Russell R, Ding W, Liu W, Li Y, Wagh K mBio. 2023; 14(1):e0337022.

PMID: 36629414 PMC: 9973348. DOI: 10.1128/mbio.03370-22.


Thirty years of molecular dynamics simulations on posttranslational modifications of proteins.

Weigle A, Feng J, Shukla D Phys Chem Chem Phys. 2022; 24(43):26371-26397.

PMID: 36285789 PMC: 9704509. DOI: 10.1039/d2cp02883b.


References
1.
Lopez-Otin C, Hunter T . The regulatory crosstalk between kinases and proteases in cancer. Nat Rev Cancer. 2010; 10(4):278-92. DOI: 10.1038/nrc2823. View

2.
Gharib M, Marcantonio M, Lehmann S, Courcelles M, Meloche S, Verreault A . Artifactual sulfation of silver-stained proteins: implications for the assignment of phosphorylation and sulfation sites. Mol Cell Proteomics. 2008; 8(3):506-18. PMC: 2649813. DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M800327-MCP200. View

3.
Shi X, Kachirskaia I, Yamaguchi H, West L, Wen H, Wang E . Modulation of p53 function by SET8-mediated methylation at lysine 382. Mol Cell. 2007; 27(4):636-46. PMC: 2693209. DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2007.07.012. View

4.
Stenson P, Mort M, Ball E, Howells K, Phillips A, Thomas N . The Human Gene Mutation Database: 2008 update. Genome Med. 2009; 1(1):13. PMC: 2651586. DOI: 10.1186/gm13. View

5.
Johnson M, Zaretskaya I, Raytselis Y, Merezhuk Y, McGinnis S, Madden T . NCBI BLAST: a better web interface. Nucleic Acids Res. 2008; 36(Web Server issue):W5-9. PMC: 2447716. DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkn201. View