| Literature DB >> 24914234 |
Abstract
Distinct properties of poly(ADP-ribose)-including its structural diversity, nucleation potential, and low complexity, polyvalent, highly charged nature-could contribute to organizing cellular architectures. Emergent data indicate that poly(ADP-ribose) aids in the formation of nonmembranous structures, such as DNA repair foci, spindle poles, and RNA granules. Informatics analyses reported here show that RNA granule proteins enriched for low complexity regions, which aid self-assembly, are preferentially modified by poly(ADP-ribose), indicating how poly(ADP-ribose) could direct cellular organization.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24914234 PMCID: PMC4050725 DOI: 10.1083/jcb.201402114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biol ISSN: 0021-9525 Impact factor: 10.539
Figure 1.Protein ADP-ribosylation. Shown here is mono(ADP-ribosyl)ation and poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation with linear or branched chains.
Activities and localization of PARPs
| Gene name | Alternative name | Activity | Localization |
| PARP-1 | ARTD1 | PARylation (branching) | Nucleus, nucleoli |
| PARP-2 | ARTD2 | PARylation | Cytoplasmic puncta, nuclear puncta, nucleoli |
| PARP-3 | ARTD3 | MARylation/PARylation? | Cytoplasmic puncta, nuclear puncta |
| PARP-4 | ARTD4 | PARylation | Cytoplasmic puncta and nucleus |
| PARP-5a | ARTD5, TNKS | PARylation | Cytoplasmic puncta, centrosome, stress granules, spindle pole |
| PARP-5b | ARTD6, TNKS2 | PARylation | Cytoplasmic puncta, spindle |
| PARP-6 | ARTD17 | MARylation? | Cytoplasmic puncta |
| PARP-7 | ARTD14, tiPARP | MARylation? | Cytoplasmic puncta, nuclear puncta |
| PARP-8 | ARTD16 | MARylation? | Cytoplasmic puncta, centrosome, nuclear envelope, spindle pole |
| PARP-9 | ARTD9, BAL1 | Inactive | Cytoplasm, plasma membrane, nucleus |
| PARP-10 | ARTD10 | MARylation | Cytoplasmic puncta |
| PARP-11 | ARTD11 | MARylation? | Cytoplasmic puncta, nuclear puncta, centriole |
| PARP-12 | ARTD12, ZC3HDC1 | MARylation | Cytoplasmic puncta, Golgi, stress granules |
| PARP-13 | ARTD13, ZC3HAV1, ZAP | Inactive | Cytoplasmic puncta, stress granules |
| PARP-14 | ARTD8, BAL2, CoaSt6 | MARylation | Cytoplasmic puncta, nuclear puncta, focal adhesion, stress granules |
| PARP-15 | ARTD7, BAL3 | MARylation? | Stress granules |
| PARP-16 | ARTD15 | MARylation | Cytoplasmic puncta, reticular |
PARylation, poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation; MARylation, mono(ADP-ribosyl)ation. Predicted activities are indicated with question marks. Localization data are based on Meder et al. (2005); Leung et al. (2011); and Vyas et al. (2013).
Properties and localization of PAR degrading enzymes
| Gene name | Alternative name | Cleave ribose–ribose bonds? | Cleave between ADP-ribose and acidic residues? | Localization |
| PARG | + | − | Cytoplasm, nucleus, mitochondria | |
| ARH3 | ADPRHL2 | + | Not tested | Cytoplasm, nucleus, mitochondria |
| MacroD1 | LRP16 | − | + | Cytoplasm, nucleus |
| MacroD2 | C20orf133 | − | + | Cytoplasm, nucleus |
| TARG1 | C6orf130, OARD1 | − | + | Cytoplasm, nucleus |
ARH3, ADP-ribosylhydrolase 3; PARG, poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase; TARG1, terminal ADP-ribose protein glycohydrolase 1.
Figure 2.Model of PAR-mediated RNA granule formation. PARylation could facilitate the local concentration of RNA granule proteins with low complexity regions, thereby promoting the oligomerization of these protein regions to form RNA granules.
Figure 3.ADP-ribose recognition by protein domains. The WWE domain recognizes the smallest structural unit of PAR, iso-ADP-ribose, the macrodomain recognizes the terminal ADP-ribose groups, and the PBZ domain can recognize adjacent ADP-ribose groups.