| Literature DB >> 29403483 |
Justyna Sobocińska1, Paula Roszczenko-Jasińska1, Anna Ciesielska1, Katarzyna Kwiatkowska1.
Abstract
S-palmitoylation is a reversible, enzymatic posttranslational modification of proteins in which palmitoyl chain is attached to a cysteine residue via a thioester linkage. S-palmitoylation determines the functioning of proteins by affecting their association with membranes, compartmentalization in membrane domains, trafficking, and stability. In this review, we focus on S-palmitoylation of proteins, which are crucial for the interactions of pathogenic bacteria and viruses with the host. We discuss the role of palmitoylated proteins in the invasion of host cells by bacteria and viruses, and those involved in the host responses to the infection. We highlight recent data on protein S-palmitoylation in pathogens and their hosts obtained owing to the development of methods based on click chemistry and acyl-biotin exchange allowing proteomic analysis of protein lipidation. The role of the palmitoyl moiety present in bacterial lipopolysaccharide and lipoproteins, contributing to infectivity and affecting recognition of bacteria by innate immune receptors, is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: IFITM; S-palmitoylation; acyl-biotin exchange; bacterial effector proteins; click chemistry; fatty acylation of proteins; hemagglutinin; tumor necrosis factor α
Year: 2018 PMID: 29403483 PMCID: PMC5780409 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.02003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Fatty acylation and prenylation of proteins.
| Modification | Lipid | Amino acid modified | Linkage | Representative proteins | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C16:0 | Cysteine | Thioester | IFITM3, toll-like receptor 2, hemagglutinin (HA), glycoprotein G of vesicular stomatitis virus, Lyn, and other Src kinases | ( | |
| C18:0 | HA and transferrin receptor | ( | |||
| C16:1 | IFITM3 | ( | |||
| C18:1 | H-Ras | ( | |||
| C20:4 | Fyn kinase | ( | |||
| C14:0 | Glycine | Amide | Gag of human immunodeficiency virus-1, Lck, and other Src kinases, Arf1 | ( | |
| C16:0 | Gαs | ( | |||
| C16:0 | Cysteine | Amide | Sonic hedgehog | ( | |
| ε- | C14:0 | Lysine | Amide | Tumor necrosis factor α, interleukin-1, and α-hemolysin of | ( |
| C16:0 | Adenylate cyclase of | ( | |||
| C16:0 | Serine or threonine | Oxyester | Histone H4 | ( | |
| C8:0 | Ghrelin | ( | |||
| C16:1 | Wnt proteins, e.g., Wnt3a | ( | |||
| Farnesyl | Cysteine | Thioether | H- and N-Ras | ( | |
| Geranylgeranyl | Rab proteins | ( | |||
Attachment of glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor or phosphatidylethanolamine (.
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.
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Figure 1Dynamic protein S-palmitoylation. Palmitate is transferred to the thiol group of cysteine from palmitoyl-CoA by integral membrane zDHHC-family palmitoyl acyltransferases. Upon S-palmitoylation cytosolic proteins gain a hydrophobic moiety allowing their anchoring in the membrane. Proteins are depalmitoylated by acylthioesterases [acyl-protein thioesterase (APT) 1/APT2 and ABHD17] and translocate to the cytosol.
Figure 2Detection of S-palmitoylated proteins using click chemistry and acyl-biotin exchange (ABE). (A) Click chemistry-based method. Cells are metabolically labeled with an alkyne-functionalized palmitic acid analog, such as 17-octadecynoic acid (17ODYA), and after cell lysis, the click reaction is conducted with azido-tagged biotin or fluorescent probes allowing enrichment and detection of labeled proteins in various ways. Biotinylated proteins can be bound on a streptavidin resin and then released using, e.g., high concentrations of urea and SDS (108). When a cleavable derivative of biotin, azido-azo-biotin, is used the labeled proteins are eluted from streptavidin beads with sodium dithionite, which cleaves the diazobenzene moiety in the linker arm of azido-azo-biotin, and analyzed by mass spectrometry or immunoblotting (109). (B) ABE method. Cells or tissues are lysed, free thiol groups of proteins are blocked by alkylation, and palmitoyl moieties are released with hydroxylamine. The newly exposed protein thiol groups are subjected to labeling with biotin-HPDP allowing selective binding, elution, and analysis of the originally S-palmitoylated proteins. The proteins can also be captured without biotinylation through a direct interaction of their thiol residues with a thiol-reactive resin (acyl-RAC technique).
Figure 3Influence of fatty acylation of transmembrane tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) on production of soluble sTNFα. (A) S-palmitoylation and (B) ε-N-myristoylation of tmTNFα. (A) Non-palmitoylated tmTNFα is localized outside rafts while that S-palmitoylated on Cys30—in rafts of the plasma membrane. tmTNFα is cleaved by ADAM17 protease in both these plasma membrane environments giving rise to sTNFα, which subsequently activates TNF receptor (TNFR) 1 receptor leading to activation of NFκB and ERK1/2. However, only the raft-residing tmTNFα is further processed by SPPL2b protease to yield ICD, which activates the promoter of interleukin (IL)-1β and expression of IL-12. On the other hand, a pool of S-palmitoylated tmTNFα interacts in rafts with TNFR1 preventing its activation by sTNFα. (B) tmTNFα is transported from the endoplasmic reticulum via Golgi apparatus and recycling endosomes [1, 2] to the plasma membrane [3]. In the plasma membrane, TNFα is cleaved by ADAM17 giving rise to sTNFα [4] or is internalized [5] and either returns from the endosomes to the plasma membrane [6, 3] or is directed to lysosomes for degradation [7]. ε-N-myristoylation of tmTNFα at Lys19 and Lys20 facilitates its degradation [5, 7] at the expense of processing to sTNFα [4]. Oligomerization of tmTNFα and TNFR1 is not shown.