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Cellular Exposure to Chloroacetanilide Herbicides Induces Distinct Protein Destabilization Profiles

[Image: see text] Herbicides in the widely used chloroacetanilide class harbor a potent electrophilic moiety, which can damage proteins through nucleophilic substitution. In general, damaged proteins are subject to misfolding. Accumulation of misfolded proteins compromises cellular integrity by disr...

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Autores principales: Quanrud, Guy M., Lyu, Ziqi, Balamurugan, Sunil V., Canizal, Carolina, Wu, Hoi-Ting, Genereux, Joseph C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10367052/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37427419
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.3c00338
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author Quanrud, Guy M.
Lyu, Ziqi
Balamurugan, Sunil V.
Canizal, Carolina
Wu, Hoi-Ting
Genereux, Joseph C.
author_facet Quanrud, Guy M.
Lyu, Ziqi
Balamurugan, Sunil V.
Canizal, Carolina
Wu, Hoi-Ting
Genereux, Joseph C.
author_sort Quanrud, Guy M.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Herbicides in the widely used chloroacetanilide class harbor a potent electrophilic moiety, which can damage proteins through nucleophilic substitution. In general, damaged proteins are subject to misfolding. Accumulation of misfolded proteins compromises cellular integrity by disrupting cellular proteostasis networks, which can further destabilize the cellular proteome. While direct conjugation targets can be discovered through affinity-based protein profiling, there are few approaches to probe how cellular exposure to toxicants impacts the stability of the proteome. We apply a quantitative proteomics methodology to identify chloroacetanilide-destabilized proteins in HEK293T cells based on their binding to the H31Q mutant of the human Hsp40 chaperone DNAJB8. We find that a brief cellular exposure to the chloroacetanilides acetochlor, alachlor, and propachlor induces misfolding of dozens of cellular proteins. These herbicides feature distinct but overlapping profiles of protein destabilization, highly concentrated in proteins with reactive cysteine residues. Consistent with the recent literature from the pharmacology field, reactivity is driven by neither inherent nucleophilic nor electrophilic reactivity but is idiosyncratic. We discover that propachlor induces a general increase in protein aggregation and selectively targets GAPDH and PARK7, leading to a decrease in their cellular activities. Hsp40 affinity profiling identifies a majority of propachlor targets identified by competitive activity-based protein profiling (ABPP), but ABPP can only identify about 10% of protein targets identified by Hsp40 affinity profiling. GAPDH is primarily modified by the direct conjugation of propachlor at a catalytic cysteine residue, leading to global destabilization of the protein. The Hsp40 affinity strategy is an effective technique to profile cellular proteins that are destabilized by cellular toxin exposure. Raw proteomics data is available through the PRIDE Archive at PXD030635.
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spelling pubmed-103670522023-07-26 Cellular Exposure to Chloroacetanilide Herbicides Induces Distinct Protein Destabilization Profiles Quanrud, Guy M. Lyu, Ziqi Balamurugan, Sunil V. Canizal, Carolina Wu, Hoi-Ting Genereux, Joseph C. ACS Chem Biol [Image: see text] Herbicides in the widely used chloroacetanilide class harbor a potent electrophilic moiety, which can damage proteins through nucleophilic substitution. In general, damaged proteins are subject to misfolding. Accumulation of misfolded proteins compromises cellular integrity by disrupting cellular proteostasis networks, which can further destabilize the cellular proteome. While direct conjugation targets can be discovered through affinity-based protein profiling, there are few approaches to probe how cellular exposure to toxicants impacts the stability of the proteome. We apply a quantitative proteomics methodology to identify chloroacetanilide-destabilized proteins in HEK293T cells based on their binding to the H31Q mutant of the human Hsp40 chaperone DNAJB8. We find that a brief cellular exposure to the chloroacetanilides acetochlor, alachlor, and propachlor induces misfolding of dozens of cellular proteins. These herbicides feature distinct but overlapping profiles of protein destabilization, highly concentrated in proteins with reactive cysteine residues. Consistent with the recent literature from the pharmacology field, reactivity is driven by neither inherent nucleophilic nor electrophilic reactivity but is idiosyncratic. We discover that propachlor induces a general increase in protein aggregation and selectively targets GAPDH and PARK7, leading to a decrease in their cellular activities. Hsp40 affinity profiling identifies a majority of propachlor targets identified by competitive activity-based protein profiling (ABPP), but ABPP can only identify about 10% of protein targets identified by Hsp40 affinity profiling. GAPDH is primarily modified by the direct conjugation of propachlor at a catalytic cysteine residue, leading to global destabilization of the protein. The Hsp40 affinity strategy is an effective technique to profile cellular proteins that are destabilized by cellular toxin exposure. Raw proteomics data is available through the PRIDE Archive at PXD030635. American Chemical Society 2023-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10367052/ /pubmed/37427419 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.3c00338 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Quanrud, Guy M.
Lyu, Ziqi
Balamurugan, Sunil V.
Canizal, Carolina
Wu, Hoi-Ting
Genereux, Joseph C.
Cellular Exposure to Chloroacetanilide Herbicides Induces Distinct Protein Destabilization Profiles
title Cellular Exposure to Chloroacetanilide Herbicides Induces Distinct Protein Destabilization Profiles
title_full Cellular Exposure to Chloroacetanilide Herbicides Induces Distinct Protein Destabilization Profiles
title_fullStr Cellular Exposure to Chloroacetanilide Herbicides Induces Distinct Protein Destabilization Profiles
title_full_unstemmed Cellular Exposure to Chloroacetanilide Herbicides Induces Distinct Protein Destabilization Profiles
title_short Cellular Exposure to Chloroacetanilide Herbicides Induces Distinct Protein Destabilization Profiles
title_sort cellular exposure to chloroacetanilide herbicides induces distinct protein destabilization profiles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10367052/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37427419
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.3c00338
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