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1.
Gizachew D  Oswald R 《FEBS letters》2006,580(17):4296-4301
Arf proteins are guanine nucleotide binding proteins that are implicated in endocytotic pathways and vesicle trafficking. The two widely studied isoforms of Arf proteins (Arf1 and Arf6) have different cellular functions and localizations but similar structures. Arf proteins have an N-terminal helix with a covalently bound myristoyl group. Except structural models, there are no three dimensional structures of the myristoylated N-terminal peptide or the intact myristoylated Arf proteins. However, understanding the role of both the myristoyl group and the N-terminal helix based on the details of their molecular structures is of great interest. In the solution structure of myristoylated N-terminal peptide of Arf6 described here, the myristoyl group folds toward the N-terminus to interact with the hydrophobic residues in particular, the phenyl ring. Also, the structure of the dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelle-bound of the peptide together with paramagnetic studies showed that the myristoyl group is inserted into the micelle while residues V4-G10 interact with the surface of the micelle. The structural differences between the unbound and micelle-bound myristoylated N-terminal peptide of Arf6 involves the myristoyl group and the side chains of the hydrophobic residues.  相似文献   

2.
Various proteins in the signal transduction pathways as well as those of viral origin have been shown to be myristoylated. Although the modification is often essential for the proper functioning of the modified protein, the mechanism by which the modification exerts its effects is still largely unknown. Brain-specific protein kinase C substrate, CAP-23/NAP-22, which is involved in the synaptogenesis and neuronal plasticity, binds calmodulin, but the protein lacks any canonical calmodulin-binding domain. In the present report, we show that CAP-23/NAP-22 isolated from rat brain is myristoylated and that the modification is directly involved in its interaction with calmodulin. Myristoylated and non-myristoylated recombinant proteins were produced in Escherichia coli, and their calmodulin-binding properties were examined. Only the former bound to calmodulin. Synthetic peptides based on the N-terminal sequence showed similar binding properties to calmodulin, only when they were myristoylated. The calmodulin-binding site narrowed down to the myristoyl moiety together with a nine-amino acid N-terminal basic domain. Phosphorylation of a single serine residue in the N-terminal domain (Ser5) by protein kinase C abolished the binding. Furthermore, phosphorylation of CAP-23/NAP-22 by protein kinase C was also found myristoylation-dependent, suggesting the importance of myristoylation in protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

3.
Myristoylation corresponds to the irreversible covalent linkage of the 14-carbon saturated fatty acid, myristic acid, to the N-terminal glycine of many eukaryotic and viral proteins. It is catalyzed by N-myristoyltransferase. Typically, the myristate moiety participates in protein subcellular localization by facilitating protein-membrane interactions as well as protein-protein interactions. Myristoylated proteins are crucial components of a wide variety of functions, which include many signalling pathways, oncogenesis or viral replication. Initially, myristoylation was described as a co-translational reaction that occurs after the removal of the initiator methionine residue. However, it is now well established that myristoylation can also occur post-translationally in apoptotic cells. Indeed, during apoptosis hundreds of proteins are cleaved by caspases and in many cases this cleavage exposes an N-terminal glycine within a cryptic myristoylation consensus sequence, which can be myristoylated. The principal objective of this review is to provide an overview on the implication of myristoylation in health and disease with a special emphasis on post-translational myristoylation. In addition, new advancements in the detection and identification of myristoylated proteins are also briefly reviewed.  相似文献   

4.
Matrix proteins play multiple roles both in early and late stages of the viral replication cycle. Their N-terminal myristoylation is important for interaction with the host cell membrane during virus budding. We used Escherichia coli, carrying N-myristoyltransferase gene, for the expression of the myristoylated His-tagged matrix protein of Mason-Pfizer monkey virus. An efficient, single-step purification procedure eliminating all contaminating proteins including, importantly, the non-myristoylated matrix protein was designed. The comparison of NMR spectra of matrix protein with its myristoylated form revealed substantial structural changes induced by this fatty acid modification.  相似文献   

5.
Myristoylation, the addition of a 14-carbon fatty acid to the N-terminal glycine of a protein, is key to protein-membrane and protein-protein interactions. Typically, myristoylation occurs cotranslationally; however, post-translational myristoylation of caspase-cleaved proteins is now emerging as a well-established protein modification and as a novel regulator of apoptosis. To identify additional post-translationally myristoylated proteins, we engineered a plasmid vector encoding for a caspase-cleavable reporter protein named tandem reporter assay for myristoylation of proteins post-translationally (TRAMPP). pTRAMPP consists of tdTomato-DEVD-"test myristoylation sequence"-enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP). After induction of apoptosis, the reporter protein is cleaved by caspases, which frees a new N-terminal glycine residue attached to EGFP that can be myristoylated. We used pTRAMPP in appropriately transfected cells to identify 7 post-translationally myristoylated proteins. First, we confirmed the post-translational myristoylation of two previously identified putative substrates, cytoplasmic dynein intermediate chain 2A and PKCε (ctPKCε), and identified 5 more caspase-cleaved potential substrates for myristoylation that include the antiapoptotic regulator of apoptosis, Mcl-1, and the causative agent of Huntington's disease, huntingtin protein. Further investigation revealed that post-translationally myristoylated ctPKCε localized to membranes and increased Erk signaling and degradation of the proapoptotic protein Bim, which prevented a significant loss of mitochondrial potential of 17% over nonmyristoylated ctPKCε in HeLa cells in the presence of apoptotic stimuli. Taken together, these findings suggest a possible antiapoptotic role for post-translationally myristoylated caspase-cleaved ctPKCε.  相似文献   

6.
MARCKS, a major in vivo substrate of protein kinase C, interacts with plasma membranes in a phosphorylation-, myristoylation-, and calmodulin-dependent manner. Although we have previously observed that myristoylated and non-myristoylated MARCKS proteins behave differently during calmodulin-agarose chromatography, the role of protein myristoylation in the MARCKS-calmodulin interaction remained to be elucidated. Here we demonstrate that the myristoyl moiety together with the N-terminal protein domain is directly involved in the MARCKS-calmodulin interaction. Both myristoylated and non-myristoylated recombinant MARCKS bound to calmodulin-agarose at low ionic strengths, but only the former retained the affinity at high ionic strengths. A quantitative analysis obtained with dansyl (5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl)-calmodulin showed that myristoylated MARCKS has an affinity higher than the non-myristoylated protein. Furthermore, a synthetic peptide based on the N-terminal sequence was found to bind calmodulin only when it was myristoylated. Only the N-terminal peptide but not the canonical calmodulin-binding domain showed the ionic strength-independent calmodulin binding. A mutation study suggested that the importance of the positive charge in the N-terminal protein domain in the binding.  相似文献   

7.
Neuronal Calcium Sensor-1 (NCS-1) is a member of calcium sensor family. It is originally identified as frequenin. NCS-1 has been found to interact with membrane and cytosolic proteins and its physiological role is governed by N-terminal myristoylation. In this paper, we report the NMR assignments of both myristoylated and non-myristoylated NCS-1 in the presence of a membrane.  相似文献   

8.
To establish a strategy for the comprehensive identification of human N‐myristoylated proteins, the susceptibility of human cDNA clones to protein N‐myristoylation was evaluated by metabolic labeling and MS analyses of proteins expressed in an insect cell‐free protein synthesis system. One‐hundred‐and‐forty‐one cDNA clones with N‐terminal Met‐Gly motifs were selected as potential candidates from ~2000 Kazusa ORFeome project human cDNA clones, and their susceptibility to protein N‐myristoylation was evaluated using fusion proteins, in which the N‐terminal ten amino acid residues were fused to an epitope‐tagged model protein. As a result, the products of 29 out of 141 cDNA clones were found to be effectively N‐myristoylated. The metabolic labeling experiments both in an insect cell‐free protein synthesis system and in the transfected COS‐1 cells using full‐length cDNA revealed that 27 out of 29 proteins were in fact N‐myristoylated. Database searches with these 27 cDNA clones revealed that 18 out of 27 proteins are novel N‐myristoylated proteins that have not been reported previously to be N‐myristoylated, indicating that this strategy is useful for the comprehensive identification of human N‐myristoylated proteins from human cDNA resources.  相似文献   

9.
The N-terminal sequence myr-Gly-Asn is conserved among the myristoylated cAPK (protein kinase A) catalytic subunit isozymes Calpha, Cbeta, and Cgamma. By capillary LC-MS and tandem MS, we show that, in approximately one third of the Calpha and Cbeta enzyme populations from cattle, pig, rabbit, and rat striated muscle, Asn 2 is deamidated to Asp 2. This deamidation accounts for the major isoelectric variants of the cAPK C-subunits formerly called CA and CB. Deamidation also includes characteristic isoaspartate isomeric peptides from Calpha and Cbeta. Asn 2 deamidation does not occur during C-subunit preparation and is absent in recombinant myristoylated Calpha (rCalpha) from Escherichia coli. Deamidation appears to be the exclusive pathway for introduction of an acidic residue adjacent to the myristoylated N-terminal glycine, verified by the myristoylation negative phenotype of an rCalpha(Asn 2 Asp) mutant. This is the first report thus far of a naturally occurring myr-Gly-Asp sequence. Asp 2 seems to be required for the well-characterized (auto)phosphorylation of the native enzyme at Ser 10. Our results suggest that the myristoylated N terminus of cAPK is a conserved site for deamidation in vivo. Comparable myr-Gly-Asn sequences are found in several signaling proteins. This may be especially significant in view of the recent knowledge that negative charges close to myristic acid in some proteins contribute to regulating their cellular localization.  相似文献   

10.
N-Terminal myristoylation predictions by ensembles of neural networks   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Bologna G  Yvon C  Duvaud S  Veuthey AL 《Proteomics》2004,4(6):1626-1632
N-terminal myristoylation is a post-translational modification that causes the addition of a myristate to a glycine in the N-terminal end of the amino acid chain. This work presents neural network (NN) models that learn to discriminate myristoylated and nonmyristoylated proteins. Ensembles of 25 NNs and decision trees were trained on 390 positive sequences and 327 negative sequences. Experiments showed that NN ensembles were more accurate than decision tree ensembles. Our NN predictor evaluated by the leave-one-out procedure, obtained a false positive error rate equal to 2.1%. That was better than the PROSITE pattern for myristoylation for which the false positive error rate was 22.3%. On a recent version of Swiss-Prot (41.2), the NN ensemble predicted 876 myristoylated proteins, while 1150 proteins were predicted by the PROSITE pattern for myristoylation. Finally, compared to the well-known NMT predictor, the NN predictor gave similar results. Our tool is available under http://www.expasy.org/tools/myristoylator/myristoylator.html.  相似文献   

11.
N-myristoylation is the attachment of a 14-carbon fatty acid, myristate, onto the N-terminal glycine residue of target proteins, catalysed by N-myristoyltransferase (NMT), a ubiquitous and essential enzyme in eukaryotes. Many of the target proteins of NMT are crucial components of signalling pathways, and myristoylation typically promotes membrane binding that is essential for proper protein localisation or biological function. NMT is a validated therapeutic target in opportunistic infections of humans by fungi or parasitic protozoa. Additionally, NMT is implicated in carcinogenesis, particularly colon cancer, where there is evidence for its upregulation in the early stages of tumour formation. However, the study of myristoylation in all organisms has until recently been hindered by a lack of techniques for detection and identification of myristoylated proteins. Here we introduce the chemistry and biology of N-myristoylation and NMT, and discuss new developments in chemical proteomic technologies that are meeting the challenge of studying this important co-translational modification in living systems.  相似文献   

12.
Zhou HX 《FEBS letters》2003,552(2-3):160-162
The myristoylated N-terminal latching to the C-terminal lobe of c-Abl was recently demonstrated to be an important regulatory element for the kinase, playing a role similar to that of the tyrosine-phosphorylated C-terminal tail of c-Src. A potential mechanism for activating c-Abl is the dissociation of the myristoylated N-terminal latch. How often does this latch spontaneously come off? A recent theoretical model along with the experimental results of Superti-Furga, Kuriyan, and co-workers suggests that the equilibrium fraction of c-Abl in which the myristoylated N-terminal is unlatched is approximately 0.5%.  相似文献   

13.
The N-terminal SH4 domain of Src family kinases is responsible for promoting membrane binding and plasma membrane targeting. Most Src family kinases contain an N-terminal Met-Gly-Cys consensus sequence that undergoes dual acylation with myristate and palmitate after removal of methionine. Previous studies of Src family kinase fatty acylation have relied on radiolabeling of cells with radioactive fatty acids. Although this method is useful for verifying that a given fatty acid is attached to a protein, it does not reveal whether other fatty acids or other modifying groups are attached to the protein. Here we use matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry to identify fatty acylated species of the Src family kinase Fyn. Our results reveal that Fyn is efficiently myristoylated and that some of the myristoylated proteins are also heterogeneously S-acylated with palmitate, palmitoleate, stearate, or oleate. Furthermore, we show for the first time that Fyn is trimethylated at lysine residues 7 and/or 9 within its N-terminal region. Both myristoylation and palmitoylation were required for methylation of Fyn. However, a general methylation inhibitor had no inhibitory effect on myristoylation and palmitoylation of Fyn, suggesting that methylation occurs after myristoylation and palmitoylation. Lysine mutants of Fyn that could not be methylated failed to promote cell adhesion and spreading, suggesting that methylation is important for Fyn function.  相似文献   

14.
Human immunodeficiency virus Nef is a myristoylated protein expressed early in infection by HIV. In addition to the well known down-regulation of the cell surface receptors CD4 and MHCI, Nef is able to alter T-cell signaling pathways. The ability to alter the cellular signaling pathways suggests that Nef can associate with signaling proteins. In the present report, we show that Nef can interact with calmodulin, the major intracellular receptor for calcium. Coimmunoprecipitation analyses with lysates from the NIH3T3 cell line constitutively expressing the native HIV-1 Nef protein revealed the presence of a stable Nef-calmodulin complex. When lysates from NIH3T3 cells were incubated with calmodulin-agarose beads in the presence of CaCl(2) or EGTA, calcium ion drastically enhanced the interaction between Nef and calmodulin, suggesting that the binding is under the influence of Ca(2+) signaling. Glutathione S-transferase-Nef fusion protein bound directly to calmodulin with high affinity. Using synthetic peptides based on the N-terminal sequence of Nef, we determined that within a 20-amino-acid N-terminal basic domain was sufficient for calmodulin binding. Furthermore, the myristoylated peptide bound to calmodulin with higher affinity than nonmyris-toylated form. Thus, the N-terminal myristoylation domain of Nef plays an important role in interacting with calmodulin. This domain is highly conserved in several HIV-1 Nef variants and resembles the N-terminal domain of NAP-22/CAP23, a myristoylated calmodulin-binder. These results for the interaction between HIV Nef and calmodulin in the cells suggested that the Nef might interfere with intracellular Ca(2+) signaling through calmodulin-mediated interactions in infected cells.  相似文献   

15.
A variety of viral and signal transduction proteins are known to be myristoylated. Although the role of myristoylation in protein-lipid interaction is well established, the involvement of myristoylation in protein-protein interactions is less well understood. CAP-23/NAP-22 is a brain-specific protein kinase C substrate protein that is involved in axon regeneration. Although the protein lacks any canonical calmodulin (CaM)-binding domain, it binds CaM with high affinity. The binding of CAP-23/NAP-22 to CaM is myristoylation dependent and the N-terminal myristoyl group is directly involved in the protein-protein interaction. Here we show the crystal structure of Ca2+-CaM bound to a myristoylated peptide corresponding to the N-terminal domain of CAP-23/NAP-22. The myristoyl moiety of the peptide goes through a hydrophobic tunnel created by the hydrophobic pockets in the N- and C-terminal domains of CaM. In addition to the myristoyl group, several amino-acid residues in the peptide are important for CaM binding. This is a novel mode of binding and is very different from the mechanism of binding in other CaM-target complexes.  相似文献   

16.
Nef of HIV-1 interacts directly with calcium-bound calmodulin   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
It was recently found that the myristoyl group of CAP-23/NAP-22, a neuron-specific protein kinase C substrate, is essential for the interaction between the protein and Ca(2+)-bound calmodulin (Ca(2+)/CaM). Based on the N-terminal amino acid sequence alignment of CAP-23/NAP-22 and other myristoylated proteins, including the Nef protein from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), we proposed a new hypothesis that the protein myristoylation plays important roles in protein-calmodulin interactions. To investigate the possibility of direct interaction between Nef and calmodulin, we performed structural studies of Ca(2+)/CaM in the presence of a myristoylated peptide corresponding to the N-terminal region of Nef. The dissociation constant between Ca(2+)/CaM and the myristoylated Nef peptide was determined to be 13.7 nM by fluorescence spectroscopy analyses. The NMR experiments indicated that the chemical shifts of some residues on and around the hydrophobic clefts of Ca(2+)/CaM changed markedly in the Ca(2+)/CaM-Nef peptide complex with the molar ratio of 1:2. Correspondingly, the radius of gyration determined by the small angle X-ray scattering measurements is 2-3 A smaller that of Ca(2+)/CaM alone. These results demonstrate clearly that Nef interacts directly with Ca(2+)/CaM.  相似文献   

17.
N-Myristoyltransferase (NMT) is an essential eukaryotic enzyme that catalyzes the cotranslational and/or posttranslational transfer of myristate to the amino terminal glycine residue of a number of important proteins especially the non-receptor tyrosine kinases whose activity is important for tumorigenesis. Human NMT was found to be phosphorylated by non-receptor tyrosine kinase family members of Lyn, Fyn and Lck and dephosphorylated by the Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein phosphatase, calcineurin. Deletion of 149 amino acids from the N-terminal end resulted in the absence of phosphorylation suggesting that the phosphorylation sites are located in the N-terminal end of NMT. Furthermore, a site-directed mutagenesis study indicated that substitution of tyrosine 100 with phenylalanine served NMT as a poor substrate for the Lyn kinase. A synthetic peptide corresponding to the amino-terminal region encompassing tyrosine 100 of NMT served as a good substrate for the Lyn and Fyn kinases. Our studies also indicated that NMT was found to interact with Lyn through its N-terminal end in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. This is the first study demonstrating the cross-talk between NMT and their myristoylated protein substrates in signaling pathways.  相似文献   

18.
pp60v-src tyrosine protein kinase was suggested to interact with Ca2+-bound calmodulin (Ca2+/CaM) through the N-terminal region based on its structural similarities to CAP-23/NAP-22, a myristoylated neuron-specific protein, whose myristoyl group is essential for interaction with Ca2+/CaM; (1) the N terminus of pp60v-src is myristoylated like CAP-23/NAP-22; (2) both lysine residues are required for the myristoylation-dependent interaction and serine residues that are thought to regulate the interaction through the phosphorylations located in the N-terminal region of pp60v-src. To verify this possibility, we investigated the direct interaction between pp60v-src and Ca2+/CaM using a myristoylated peptide corresponding to the N-terminal region of pp60v-src. The binding assay indicated that only the myristoylated peptide binds to Ca2+/CaM, and the non-myristoylated peptide is not able to bind to Ca2+/CaM. Analyses of the binding kinetics revealed two independent reactions with the dissociation constants (KD) of 2.07 x 10(-9)M (KD1) and 3.93 x 10(-6)M (KD2), respectively. Two serine residues near the myristoyl moiety of the peptide (Ser2, Ser11) were phosphorylated by protein kinase C in vitro, and the phosphorylation drastically reduced the interaction. NMR experiments indicated that two molecules of the myristoylated peptide were bound around the hydrophobic clefts of a Ca2+/CaM molecule. The small-angle X-ray scattering analyses showed that the size of the peptide-Ca2+/CaM complex is 2-3A smaller than that of the known Ca2+/CaM-target molecule complexes. These results demonstrate clearly the direct interaction between pp60v-src and Ca2+/CaM in a novel manner different from that of known Ca2+/CaM, the target molecules, interactions.  相似文献   

19.
We have developed a protocol to produce large quantities of high purity myristoylated and non-myristoylated neuronal calcium sensor 1 (NCS-1) protein. NCS-1 is a member of the neuronal calcium sensor (NCS) family and plays an important role in modulating G-protein signaling and exocytosis pathways in cells. Many of these functions are calcium-dependent and require NCS-1 to be modified with an N-terminal myristoyl moiety. In our system, a C-terminally 6x His-tagged variant of NCS-1 was co-expressed with yeast N-myristoyltransferase (NMT) in ZYP-5052 auto-induction media supplemented with sodium myristate (100-200 microM). With optimized growth conditions and a high capacity metal affinity purification scheme, >50mg of homogenous myristoylated NCS-1 is obtained from 1L of culture in a single step. The properties of the C-terminally tagged NCS-1 variants are indistinguishable from those reported for untagged NCS-1. Using this system, we have also isolated and characterized mutant NCS-1 proteins that have attenuated (NCS-1 E120Q) and abrogated (NCS-1 DeltaEF) ability to bind calcium. The large quantities of NCS-1 proteins isolated from small culture volumes of auto-inducible media will provide the necessary reagents for further biochemical and structural characterization. The affinity tag at the C-terminus of the protein provides a suitable reagent for easily identifying binding partners of the various NCS-1 constructs. Additionally, this method could be used to produce other recombinant proteins of the NCS family, and may be extended to express and isolate myristoylated variants of other proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Nef is a multifunctional virulence factor of primate lentiviruses that facilitates viral replication in the infected host. All known functions of Nef require that it be myristoylated at its N terminus. This reaction is catalyzed by N-myristoyltransferases (NMTs), which transfer myristate from myristoyl coenzyme A (myristoyl-CoA) to the N-terminal glycine of substrate proteins. Two NMT isoforms (NMT-1 and NMT-2) are expressed in mammalian cells. To provide a better mechanistic understanding of Nef function, we used biochemical and microsequencing techniques to isolate and identify Nef-associated proteins. Through these studies, NMT-1 was identified as an abundant Nef-associated protein. The Nef-NMT-1 complex is most likely a transient intermediate of the myristoylation reaction of Nef and is modulated by agents which affect the size of the myristoyl-CoA pool in the cell. We also examined two other proteins that bear an N-terminal myristoylation signal, human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Gag and Hck protein tyrosine kinase, and found that Gag bound preferentially the NMT-2 isoform, while Hck bound mostly to NMT-1. Recognition of different NMT isoforms by these viral and cellular substrate proteins suggests nonoverlapping roles for these enzymes in vivo and reveals a potential for the development of inhibitors that target the myristoylation of specific viral substrates more selectively.  相似文献   

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