A comprehensive landscape of the zinc-regulated human proteome.
Nils BurgerMelanie J MittenbühlerHaopeng XiaoSanghee ShinLuiz H M BoziShelley WeiHans-Georg SprengerYizhi SunYingde ZhuNarek DarabedianJonathan J PetrocelliPedro Latorre- MuroJianwei CheEdward T ChouchaniPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Zinc is an essential micronutrient that regulates a wide range of physiological processes, principally through Zn 2+ binding to protein cysteine residues. Despite being critical for modulation of protein function, for the vast majority of the human proteome the cysteine sites subject to regulation by Zn 2+ binding remain undefined. Here we develop ZnCPT, a comprehensive and quantitative mapping of the zinc-regulated cysteine proteome. We define 4807 zinc-regulated protein cysteines, uncovering protein families across major domains of biology that are subject to either constitutive or inducible modification by zinc. ZnCPT enables systematic discovery of zinc-regulated structural, enzymatic, and allosteric functional domains. On this basis, we identify 52 cancer genetic dependencies subject to zinc regulation, and nominate malignancies sensitive to zinc-induced cytotoxicity. In doing so, we discover a mechanism of zinc regulation over Glutathione Reductase (GSR) that drives cell death in GSR-dependent lung cancers. We provide ZnCPT as a resource for understanding mechanisms of zinc regulation over protein function.
Keyphrases
- squamous cell carcinoma
- oxide nanoparticles
- lymph node metastasis
- cell death
- endothelial cells
- transcription factor
- high resolution
- binding protein
- amino acid
- gene expression
- papillary thyroid
- young adults
- genome wide
- oxidative stress
- cell proliferation
- dna methylation
- mass spectrometry
- living cells
- copy number
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- high glucose