Cyclic immonium ion of lactyllysine reveals widespread lactylation in the human proteome.
Ning WanNian WangSiqin YuHanqing ZhangShuo TangDexiang WangWenjie LuHuanhuan LiDaniel G DelafieldYing KongXinmiao WangChang ShaoLanglang LvGuangji WangRenxiang TanNanxi WangHaiping HaoLingjun LiPublished in: Nature methods (2022)
Lactylation was initially discovered on human histones. Given its nascence, its occurrence on nonhistone proteins and downstream functional consequences remain elusive. Here we report a cyclic immonium ion of lactyllysine formed during tandem mass spectrometry that enables confident protein lactylation assignment. We validated the sensitivity and specificity of this ion for lactylation through affinity-enriched lactylproteome analysis and large-scale informatic assessment of nonlactylated spectral libraries. With this diagnostic ion-based strategy, we confidently determined new lactylation, unveiling a wide landscape beyond histones from not only the enriched lactylproteome but also existing unenriched human proteome resources. Specifically, by mining the public human Meltome Atlas, we found that lactylation is common on glycolytic enzymes and conserved on ALDOA. We also discovered prevalent lactylation on DHRS7 in the draft of the human tissue proteome. We partially demonstrated the functional importance of lactylation: site-specific engineering of lactylation into ALDOA caused enzyme inhibition, suggesting a lactylation-dependent feedback loop in glycolysis.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- tandem mass spectrometry
- healthcare
- emergency department
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- magnetic resonance imaging
- transcription factor
- high resolution
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance
- small molecule
- ultra high performance liquid chromatography
- mass spectrometry
- ms ms
- binding protein
- contrast enhanced
- gas chromatography
- adverse drug