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Identification of Lysine Succinylation Substrates and the Succinylation Regulatory Enzyme CobB in Escherichia coli
Authors:Gozde Colak  Zhongyu Xie  Anita Y Zhu  Lunzhi Dai  Zhike Lu  Yi Zhang  Xuelian Wan  Yue Chen  Yoon H Cha  Hening Lin  Yingming Zhao  Minjia Tan
Institution:From the ‡Ben May Department of Cancer Research, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637; ;¶Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853; The Chemical Proteomics Center and ;‖State Key Laboratory of Drug Research, Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, 201203, China
Abstract:Lysine succinylation is a newly identified protein post-translational modification pathway present in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. However, succinylation substrates and regulatory enzyme(s) remain largely unknown, hindering the biological study of this modification. Here we report the identification of 2,580 bacterial lysine succinylation sites in 670 proteins and 2,803 lysine acetylation (Kac) sites in 782 proteins, representing the first lysine succinylation dataset and the largest Kac dataset in wild-type E. coli. We quantified dynamic changes of the lysine succinylation and Kac substrates in response to high glucose. Our data showed that high-glucose conditions led to more lysine-succinylated proteins and enhanced the abundance of succinyllysine peptides more significantly than Kac peptides, suggesting that glucose has a more profound effect on succinylation than on acetylation. We further identified CobB, a known Sir2-like bacterial lysine deacetylase, as the first prokaryotic desuccinylation enzyme. The identification of bacterial CobB as a bifunctional enzyme with lysine desuccinylation and deacetylation activities suggests that the eukaryotic Kac-regulatory enzymes may have enzymatic activities on various lysine acylations with very different structures. In addition, it is highly likely that lysine succinylation could have unique and more profound regulatory roles in cellular metabolism relative to lysine acetylation under some physiological conditions.Lysine acetylation (Kac)1 is a dynamic and evolutionarily conserved post-translational modification (PTM) that is known to be involved in the regulation of diverse cellular processes (19). The status of this modification is controlled by two groups of enzymes with opposing enzymatic activities, lysine acetyltransferases that add an acetyl group to the lysine (Lys or K) residue, and histone lysine deacetylases (HDACs) that remove the acetyl group (1016). HDACs are grouped into several categories (17): class I (HDAC1, -2, -3, and -8), class IIA (HDAC4, -5, -7, and -9), class IIB (HDAC6 and -10), class III (Sirt1–7), and class IV (HDAC11). The weak deacetylation activities of some HDACs (e.g. Sirt4–7 and HDAC4, -5, and -7–11), as well as the demonstration of Sirt5 as a desuccinylation and demalonylation enzyme, suggest that some HDAC enzymes have activities that are independent of acetylation (18, 19).For a long period of time, lysine acetylation was considered as a protein modification that was restricted to nuclei (20). The identification of cytosolic Kac substrates and the localization of some HDACs outside nuclei suggest a non-nuclear function of lysine acetylation (13, 21, 22). The first proteomic screening identified hundreds of substrate proteins in cytosolic and mitochondrial fractions and demonstrated high abundance of Kac in mitochondrial proteins and metabolic enzymes (23). This result implies that Kac has diverse non-nuclear roles and can regulate functions of metabolism and mitochondria (23). Since then, we and others have extensively characterized the cellular acetylome (5, 9, 2426).The lysine succinylation (Ksucc) and lysine malonylation pathways are two PTM pathways that were recently identified and comprehensively validated in both bacterial and mammalian cells, with multiple substrate proteins identified, using HPLC-MS/MS, co-elution of synthetic peptides, isotopic labeling, Western blotting analysis using pan-anti-Ksucc antibodies, and proteomics analysis (18, 27). We also showed that Ksucc is present in core histones (29). In yeast histones, some Ksucc sites are located in regions where histones make close contact with DNA, suggesting that Ksucc sites may be involved in gene regulation by changing the chromatin structure (29). We then found that Sirt5, a member of the class III family of HDACs, can function as a desuccinylation enzyme in vitro and in vivo (18, 19). In a recent study, we revealed that Sirt5 is a key regulatory enzyme of Ksucc and that Ksucc proteins are abundant among a group of mitochondrial enzymes that are predominantly involved in fatty acid metabolism, amino acid degradation, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle (28). Importantly, Ksucc is very dynamic not only in mammalian cells, but also in bacteria (27, 29). These lines of evidence strongly suggest that lysine succinylation is likely an important PTM in the regulation of cellular functions.Although key elements of the Ksucc pathway are being identified in mammalian cells, their counterparts in bacteria remain largely unknown. We and others have used a proteomics approach to identify Kac substrates in bacteria (26, 30, 31, 52). The Sir2-like enzyme CobB is the best-studied protein deacetylase in bacteria (8). CobB was initially identified as an enzyme required for the activation of acetyl-CoA synthetase (8). Recently, CobB was shown to play roles in bacterial energy metabolism (31) and stress response (32). Those studies indicated that Kac is an evolutionarily conserved PTM with a role in energy metabolism in prokaryotes. Nevertheless, dynamic changes of lysine acetylation in bacteria have not been studied. In addition, substrates of lysine succinylation and their regulatory enzymes are not known.In this paper, we report a quantitative proteomic approach based on stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) to identify and quantify changes in bacterial lysine succinylation, as well as lysine acetylation, in response to glucose, a major energy source. Our screening detected 2,580 lysine-succinylated sites in 670 proteins and 2,803 Kac sites in 782 proteins in Escherichia coli. Our quantitative proteomics data show that glucose had a more profound effect on Ksucc than on Kac. In addition, we found that CobB, a known prokaryotic deacetylase, had dual enzymatic activities to catalyze the removal of two structurally different lysine acyl groups, acetyl and succinyl, from the modified lysine residues.
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