Login / Signup

Reversible lysine fatty acylation of an anchoring protein mediates adipocyte adrenergic signaling.

Rushita A BagchiEmma L RobinsonTianjing HuJi CaoJun Young HongCharles A TharpHanan QasimKathleen M GavinJulie Pires Da SilvaJennifer L MajorBradley K McConnellEdward SetoHening LinTimothy A McKinsey
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
N -myristoylation on glycine is an irreversible modification that has long been recognized to govern protein localization and function. In contrast, the biological roles of lysine myristoylation remain ill-defined. We demonstrate that the cytoplasmic scaffolding protein, gravin-α/A kinase-anchoring protein 12, is myristoylated on two lysine residues embedded in its carboxyl-terminal protein kinase A (PKA) binding domain. Histone deacetylase 11 (HDAC11) docks to an adjacent region of gravin-α and demyristoylates these sites. In brown and white adipocytes, lysine myristoylation of gravin-α is required for signaling via β 2 - and β 3 -adrenergic receptors (β-ARs), which are G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). Lysine myristoylation of gravin-α drives β-ARs to lipid raft membrane microdomains, which results in PKA activation and downstream signaling that culminates in protective thermogenic gene expression. These findings define reversible lysine myristoylation as a mechanism for controlling GPCR signaling and highlight the potential of inhibiting HDAC11 to manipulate adipocyte phenotypes for therapeutic purposes.
Keyphrases