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Identification of Human N-Myristoylated Proteins from Human Complementary DNA Resources by Cell-Free and Cellular Metabolic Labeling Analyses

To identify physiologically important human N-myristoylated proteins, 90 cDNA clones predicted to encode human N-myristoylated proteins were selected from a human cDNA resource (4,369 Kazusa ORFeome project human cDNA clones) by two bioinformatic N-myristoylation prediction systems, NMT-The MYR Pred...

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Autores principales: Takamitsu, Emi, Otsuka, Motoaki, Haebara, Tatsuki, Yano, Manami, Matsuzaki, Kanako, Kobuchi, Hirotsugu, Moriya, Koko, Utsumi, Toshihiko
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4550359/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26308446
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136360
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author Takamitsu, Emi
Otsuka, Motoaki
Haebara, Tatsuki
Yano, Manami
Matsuzaki, Kanako
Kobuchi, Hirotsugu
Moriya, Koko
Utsumi, Toshihiko
author_facet Takamitsu, Emi
Otsuka, Motoaki
Haebara, Tatsuki
Yano, Manami
Matsuzaki, Kanako
Kobuchi, Hirotsugu
Moriya, Koko
Utsumi, Toshihiko
author_sort Takamitsu, Emi
collection PubMed
description To identify physiologically important human N-myristoylated proteins, 90 cDNA clones predicted to encode human N-myristoylated proteins were selected from a human cDNA resource (4,369 Kazusa ORFeome project human cDNA clones) by two bioinformatic N-myristoylation prediction systems, NMT-The MYR Predictor and Myristoylator. After database searches to exclude known human N-myristoylated proteins, 37 cDNA clones were selected as potential human N-myristoylated proteins. The susceptibility of these cDNA clones to protein N-myristoylation was first evaluated using fusion proteins in which the N-terminal ten amino acid residues were fused to an epitope-tagged model protein. Then, protein N-myristoylation of the gene products of full-length cDNAs was evaluated by metabolic labeling experiments both in an insect cell-free protein synthesis system and in transfected human cells. As a result, the products of 13 cDNA clones (FBXL7, PPM1B, SAMM50, PLEKHN, AIFM3, C22orf42, STK32A, FAM131C, DRICH1, MCC1, HID1, P2RX5, STK32B) were found to be human N-myristoylated proteins. Analysis of the role of protein N-myristoylation on the intracellular localization of SAMM50, a mitochondrial outer membrane protein, revealed that protein N-myristoylation was required for proper targeting of SAMM50 to mitochondria. Thus, the strategy used in this study is useful for the identification of physiologically important human N-myristoylated proteins from human cDNA resources.
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spelling pubmed-45503592015-09-01 Identification of Human N-Myristoylated Proteins from Human Complementary DNA Resources by Cell-Free and Cellular Metabolic Labeling Analyses Takamitsu, Emi Otsuka, Motoaki Haebara, Tatsuki Yano, Manami Matsuzaki, Kanako Kobuchi, Hirotsugu Moriya, Koko Utsumi, Toshihiko PLoS One Research Article To identify physiologically important human N-myristoylated proteins, 90 cDNA clones predicted to encode human N-myristoylated proteins were selected from a human cDNA resource (4,369 Kazusa ORFeome project human cDNA clones) by two bioinformatic N-myristoylation prediction systems, NMT-The MYR Predictor and Myristoylator. After database searches to exclude known human N-myristoylated proteins, 37 cDNA clones were selected as potential human N-myristoylated proteins. The susceptibility of these cDNA clones to protein N-myristoylation was first evaluated using fusion proteins in which the N-terminal ten amino acid residues were fused to an epitope-tagged model protein. Then, protein N-myristoylation of the gene products of full-length cDNAs was evaluated by metabolic labeling experiments both in an insect cell-free protein synthesis system and in transfected human cells. As a result, the products of 13 cDNA clones (FBXL7, PPM1B, SAMM50, PLEKHN, AIFM3, C22orf42, STK32A, FAM131C, DRICH1, MCC1, HID1, P2RX5, STK32B) were found to be human N-myristoylated proteins. Analysis of the role of protein N-myristoylation on the intracellular localization of SAMM50, a mitochondrial outer membrane protein, revealed that protein N-myristoylation was required for proper targeting of SAMM50 to mitochondria. Thus, the strategy used in this study is useful for the identification of physiologically important human N-myristoylated proteins from human cDNA resources. Public Library of Science 2015-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4550359/ /pubmed/26308446 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136360 Text en © 2015 Takamitsu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Takamitsu, Emi
Otsuka, Motoaki
Haebara, Tatsuki
Yano, Manami
Matsuzaki, Kanako
Kobuchi, Hirotsugu
Moriya, Koko
Utsumi, Toshihiko
Identification of Human N-Myristoylated Proteins from Human Complementary DNA Resources by Cell-Free and Cellular Metabolic Labeling Analyses
title Identification of Human N-Myristoylated Proteins from Human Complementary DNA Resources by Cell-Free and Cellular Metabolic Labeling Analyses
title_full Identification of Human N-Myristoylated Proteins from Human Complementary DNA Resources by Cell-Free and Cellular Metabolic Labeling Analyses
title_fullStr Identification of Human N-Myristoylated Proteins from Human Complementary DNA Resources by Cell-Free and Cellular Metabolic Labeling Analyses
title_full_unstemmed Identification of Human N-Myristoylated Proteins from Human Complementary DNA Resources by Cell-Free and Cellular Metabolic Labeling Analyses
title_short Identification of Human N-Myristoylated Proteins from Human Complementary DNA Resources by Cell-Free and Cellular Metabolic Labeling Analyses
title_sort identification of human n-myristoylated proteins from human complementary dna resources by cell-free and cellular metabolic labeling analyses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4550359/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26308446
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136360
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