14 research outputs found

    Cross-talk between phosphorylation and lysine acetylation in a genome-reduced bacterium

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    The effect of kinase, phosphatase and N-acetyltransferase deletions on proteome phosphorylation and acetylation was investigated in Mycoplasma pneumoniae. Bi-directional cross-talk between post-transcriptional modifications suggests an underlying regulatory molecular code in prokaryotes

    TGF beta-induced changes in membrane curvature influence Ras oncoprotein membrane localization

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    In the course of cancer progression tumor cells undergo morphological changes that lead to increased motility and invasiveness thusĀ promoting formation of metastases. This process called epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) is triggered by transforming growth factor (TGFĪ²) but for gaining the full invasive potential an interplay between signaling of TGFĪ² and Ras GTPases is required. Ras proteins possess aĀ lipidated domain that mediates Ras association with theĀ plasma membrane, which is essential for Ras biological functions. Type and number of the lipid anchors are the main difference among three Ras variantsā€”H-ras, N-ras and K-ras. The lipid anchors determine membrane partitioning of lipidated proteins into membrane areas of specific physico-chemical properties and curvature. In this study, we investigated the effect of TGFĪ² treatment onĀ the subcellular localization of H-ras and K-ras. We show that TGFĪ² increases positive plasmaĀ membrane curvature, which is subsequently sensed by H-ras, leading to its elevated plasma membrane localizationĀ andĀ activation. This observation suggests the existence of a novelĀ positive feedback loop whereby theĀ increased level of plasmaĀ membrane curvature during TGFĪ² induced EMT attracts more Ras molecules to theĀ plasma membrane resulting in increased Ras activity which in turnĀ promotes furtherĀ EMTĀ andĀ thusĀ ultimately enablesĀ theĀ acquisition ofĀ full invasive potential

    A protocol for the systematic and quantitative measurement of protein-lipid interactions using the liposome-microarray-based assay

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    Lipids organize the activity of the cell's proteome through a complex network of interactions. The assembly of comprehensive atlases embracing all protein-lipid interactions is an important challenge that requires innovative methods. We recently developed a liposome-microarray-based assay (LiMA) that integrates liposomes, microfluidics and fluorescence microscopy and which is capable of measuring protein recruitment to membranes in a quantitative and high-throughput manner. Compared with previous assays that are labor-intensive and difficult to scale up, LiMA improves the protein-lipid interaction assay throughput by at least three orders of magnitude. Here we provide a step-by-step LiMA protocol that includes the following: (i) the serial and generic production of the liposome microarray; (ii) its integration into a microfluidic format; (iii) the measurement of fluorescently labeled protein (either purified proteins or from cell lysate) recruitment to liposomal membranes using high-throughput microscopy; (iv) automated image analysis pipelines to quantify protein-lipid interactions; and (v) data quality analysis. In addition, we discuss the experimental design, including the relevant quality controls. Overall, the protocol-including device preparation, assay and data analysis-takes 6-8 d. This protocol paves the way for protein-lipid interaction screens to be performed on the proteome and lipidome scales

    Structure of the Kti11/Kti13 heterodimer and its double role in modifications of tRNA and eukaryotic elongation factor 2

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    SummaryThe small, highly conserved Kti11 alias Dph3 protein encoded by the Kluyveromyces lactis killer toxin insensitive gene KTI11/DPH3 is involved in the diphthamide modification of eukaryotic elongation factor 2 and, together with Kti13, in Elongator-dependent tRNA wobble base modifications, thereby affecting the speed and accuracy of protein biosynthesis through two distinct mechanisms. We have solved the crystal structures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Kti13 and the Kti11/Kti13 heterodimer at 2.4 and 2.9Ā Ć… resolution, respectively, and validated interacting residues through mutational analysis inĀ vitro and inĀ vivo. We show that metal coordination by Kti11 and its heterodimerization with Kti13 are essential for both translational control mechanisms. Our structural and functional analyses identify Kti13 as an additional component of the diphthamide modification pathway and provide insight into the molecular mechanisms that allow the Kti11/Kti13 heterodimer to coregulate two consecutive steps in ribosomal protein synthesis

    A quantitative liposome microarray to systematically characterize protein-lipid interactions

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    Lipids have a role in virtually all biological processes, acting as structural elements, scaffolds and signaling molecules, but they are still largely under-represented in known biological networks. Here we describe a liposome microarray-based assay (LiMA), a method that measures protein recruitment to membranes in a quantitative, automated, multiplexed and high-throughput manner.</p

    Lipid Cooperativity as a General Membrane-Recruitment Principle for PH Domains

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    Many cellular processes involve the recruitment of proteins to specific membranes, which are decorated with distinctive lipids that act as docking sites. The phosphoinositides form signaling hubs, and we examine mechanisms underlying recruitment. We applied a physiological, quantitative, liposome microarray-based assay to measure the membrane-binding properties of 91 pleckstrin homology (PH) domains, the most common phosphoinositide-binding target. 10,514 experiments quantified the role of phosphoinositides in membrane recruitment. For most domains examined, the observed binding specificity implied cooperativity with additional signaling lipids. Analyses of PH domains with similar lipid-binding profiles identified a conserved motif, mutations in which-including some found in human cancers-induced discrete changes in binding affinities in vitro and protein mislocalization in vivo. The data set reveals cooperativity as a key mechanism for membrane recruitment and, by enabling the interpretation of disease-associated mutations, suggests avenues for the design of small molecules targeting PH domains.publisher: Elsevier articletitle: Lipid Cooperativity as a General Membrane-Recruitment Principle for PH Domains journaltitle: Cell Reports articlelink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2015.07.054 content_type: article copyright: Copyright Ā© 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.status: publishe

    Lipid Cooperativity as a General Membrane-Recruitment Principle for PH Domains

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    Many cellular processes involve the recruitment of proteins to specific membranes, which are decorated with distinctive lipids that act as docking sites. The phosphoinositides form signaling hubs, and weĀ examine mechanisms underlying recruitment. We applied a physiological, quantitative, liposome microarray-based assay to measure the membrane-binding properties of 91 pleckstrin homology (PH) domains, the most common phosphoinositide-bindingĀ target. 10,514 experiments quantified the role ofĀ phosphoinositides in membrane recruitment. For most domains examined, the observed binding specificity implied cooperativity with additional signaling lipids. Analyses of PH domains with similar lipid-binding profiles identified a conserved motif, mutations in whichā€”including some found in human cancersā€”induced discrete changes in binding affinities inĀ vitro and protein mislocalization inĀ vivo. The data set reveals cooperativity as a key mechanism for membrane recruitment and, by enabling the interpretation of disease-associated mutations, suggests avenues for the design of small molecules targeting PH domains
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