Proteomics and PUGNAcity will overcome questioning of insulin resistance induction by nonselective inhibition of O‐GlcNAcase |
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Authors: | Vanessa Dehennaut Tony Lefebvre |
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Affiliation: | CNRS‐UMR 8576, Unit of Structural and Functional Glycobiology, IFR 147, University of Lille 1, , Villeneuve d’Ascq, France |
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Abstract: | PTMs are the ultimate elements that perfect the existence and the activity of proteins. Owing to PTM, not less than 500 millions biological activities arise from approximately 20 000 protein‐coding genes in human. Hundreds of PTM were characterized in living beings among which is a large variety of glycosylations. Many compounds have been developed to tentatively block each kind of glycosylation so as to study their biological functions but due to their complexity, many off‐target effects were reported. Insulin resistance exemplifies this problem. Several independent groups described that inhibiting the removal of O‐GlcNAc moieties using O‐(2‐acetamido‐2‐deoxy‐d‐glucopyranosylidene)amino‐N‐phenylcarbamate (PUGNAc), a nonselective inhibitor of the nuclear and cytoplasmic O‐GlcNAcase, induced insulin resistance both in vivo and ex vivo. The development of potent and highly selective O‐GlcNAcase inhibitors called into question that elevated O‐GlcNAcylation levels are responsible for insulin resistance; these compounds not recapitulating the insulin‐desensitizing effect of PUGNAc. To tackle this intriguing problem, a South Korean group recently combined ATP‐affinity chromatography and gel‐assisted digestion to identify proteins, differentially expressed upon treatment of 3T3‐L1 adipocytes with PUGNAc, involved in protein turnover and insulin signaling. |
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Keywords: | Biomedicine Hexosaminidases inhibitors Insulin signaling O‐GlcNAcylation PUGNAc Ubiquitination |
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