Global crotonylome reveals CDYL-regulated RPA1 crotonylation in homologous recombination-mediated DNA repair.
Huajing YuChen BuYuncheng LiuTianyu GongXiaoping LiuShumeng LiuXiaojun PengWenting ZhangYani PengJianguo YangLin HeYu ZhangXia YiXiaohan YangLuyang SunYongfeng ShangZhongyi ChengJing LiangPublished in: Science advances (2020)
Previously, we reported that chromodomain Y-like (CDYL) acts as a crotonyl-coenzyme A hydratase and negatively regulates histone crotonylation (Kcr). However, the global CDYL-regulated crotonylome remains unclear. Here, we report a large-scale proteomics analysis for protein Kcr. We identify 14,311 Kcr sites across 3734 proteins in HeLa cells, providing by far the largest crotonylome dataset. We show that depletion of CDYL alters crotonylome landscape affecting diverse cellular pathways. Specifically, CDYL negatively regulated Kcr of RPA1, and mutation of the Kcr sites of RPA1 impaired its interaction with single-stranded DNA and/or with components of resection machinery, supporting a key role of RPA1 Kcr in homologous recombination DNA repair. Together, our study indicates that protein crotonylation has important implication in various pathophysiological processes.