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A Systematic Investigation of Proteoforms with N-Terminal Glycine and Their Dynamics Reveals Its Impacts on Protein Stability.

Senhan XuXing XuZeyu WangRonghu Wu
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2023)
The N-termini of proteins can regulate their degradation, and the same protein with different N-termini may have distinct dynamics. Recently, it was found that N-terminal glycine can serve as a degron recognized by two E3 ligases, but N-terminal glycine was also reported to stabilize proteins. Here we developed a chemoenzymatic method for selective enrichment of proteoforms with N-terminal glycine and integrated dual protease cleavage to further improve the enrichment specificity. Over 2000 unique peptides with protein N-terminal glycine were analyzed from >1000 proteins, and most of them are previously unknown, indicating the effectiveness of the current method to capture low-abundance proteoforms with N-terminal glycine. The degradation rates of proteoforms with N-terminal glycine were quantified along with those of proteins from the whole proteome. Bioinformatic analyses reveal that proteoforms with N-terminal glycine with the fastest and slowest degradation rates have different functions and localizations. Membrane proteins with N-terminal glycine and proteins with N-terminal glycine from the N-terminal methionine excision degrade more rapidly. Furthermore, the secondary structures, adjacent amino acid residues, and protease specificities for N-terminal glycine are also vital for protein degradation. The results advance our understanding of the effects of N-terminal glycine on protein properties and functions.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • systematic review
  • randomized controlled trial
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • dna methylation
  • high resolution
  • mass spectrometry
  • single cell
  • transcription factor
  • microbial community