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Identification of lysine methylation in the core GTPase domain by GoMADScan

RAS is the founding member of a superfamily of GTPases and regulates signaling pathways involved in cellular growth control. While recent studies have shown that the activation state of RAS can be controlled by lysine ubiquitylation and acetylation, the existence of lysine methylation of the RAS sup...

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Autores principales: Yoshino, Hirofumi, Yin, Guowei, Kawaguchi, Risa, Popov, Konstantin I., Temple, Brenda, Sasaki, Mika, Kofuji, Satoshi, Wolfe, Kara, Kofuji, Kaori, Okumura, Koichi, Randhawa, Jaskirat, Malhotra, Akshiv, Majd, Nazanin, Ikeda, Yoshiki, Shimada, Hiroko, Kahoud, Emily Rose, Haviv, Sasson, Iwase, Shigeki, Asara, John M., Campbell, Sharon L., Sasaki, Atsuo T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6685615/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31390367
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219436
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author Yoshino, Hirofumi
Yin, Guowei
Kawaguchi, Risa
Popov, Konstantin I.
Temple, Brenda
Sasaki, Mika
Kofuji, Satoshi
Wolfe, Kara
Kofuji, Kaori
Okumura, Koichi
Randhawa, Jaskirat
Malhotra, Akshiv
Majd, Nazanin
Ikeda, Yoshiki
Shimada, Hiroko
Kahoud, Emily Rose
Haviv, Sasson
Iwase, Shigeki
Asara, John M.
Campbell, Sharon L.
Sasaki, Atsuo T.
author_facet Yoshino, Hirofumi
Yin, Guowei
Kawaguchi, Risa
Popov, Konstantin I.
Temple, Brenda
Sasaki, Mika
Kofuji, Satoshi
Wolfe, Kara
Kofuji, Kaori
Okumura, Koichi
Randhawa, Jaskirat
Malhotra, Akshiv
Majd, Nazanin
Ikeda, Yoshiki
Shimada, Hiroko
Kahoud, Emily Rose
Haviv, Sasson
Iwase, Shigeki
Asara, John M.
Campbell, Sharon L.
Sasaki, Atsuo T.
author_sort Yoshino, Hirofumi
collection PubMed
description RAS is the founding member of a superfamily of GTPases and regulates signaling pathways involved in cellular growth control. While recent studies have shown that the activation state of RAS can be controlled by lysine ubiquitylation and acetylation, the existence of lysine methylation of the RAS superfamily GTPases remains unexplored. In contrast to acetylation, methylation does not alter the side chain charge and it has been challenging to deduce its impact on protein structure by conventional amino acid substitutions. Herein, we investigate lysine methylation on RAS and RAS-related GTPases. We developed GoMADScan (Go language-based Modification Associated Database Scanner), a new user-friendly application that scans and extracts posttranslationally modified peptides from databases. The GoMADScan search on PhosphoSitePlus databases identified methylation of conserved lysine residues in the core GTPase domain of RAS superfamily GTPases, including residues corresponding to RAS Lys-5, Lys-16, and Lys-117. To follow up on these observations, we immunoprecipitated endogenous RAS from HEK293T cells, conducted mass spectrometric analysis and found that RAS residues, Lys-5 and Lys-147, undergo dimethylation and monomethylation, respectively. Since mutations of Lys-5 have been found in cancers and RASopathies, we set up molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to assess the putative impact of Lys-5 dimethylation on RAS structure. Results from our MD analyses predict that dimethylation of Lys-5 does not significantly alter RAS conformation, suggesting that Lys-5 methylation may alter existing protein interactions or create a docking site to foster new interactions. Taken together, our findings uncover the existence of lysine methylation as a novel posttranslational modification associated with RAS and the RAS superfamily GTPases, and putative impact of Lys-5 dimethylation on RAS structure.
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spelling pubmed-66856152019-08-15 Identification of lysine methylation in the core GTPase domain by GoMADScan Yoshino, Hirofumi Yin, Guowei Kawaguchi, Risa Popov, Konstantin I. Temple, Brenda Sasaki, Mika Kofuji, Satoshi Wolfe, Kara Kofuji, Kaori Okumura, Koichi Randhawa, Jaskirat Malhotra, Akshiv Majd, Nazanin Ikeda, Yoshiki Shimada, Hiroko Kahoud, Emily Rose Haviv, Sasson Iwase, Shigeki Asara, John M. Campbell, Sharon L. Sasaki, Atsuo T. PLoS One Research Article RAS is the founding member of a superfamily of GTPases and regulates signaling pathways involved in cellular growth control. While recent studies have shown that the activation state of RAS can be controlled by lysine ubiquitylation and acetylation, the existence of lysine methylation of the RAS superfamily GTPases remains unexplored. In contrast to acetylation, methylation does not alter the side chain charge and it has been challenging to deduce its impact on protein structure by conventional amino acid substitutions. Herein, we investigate lysine methylation on RAS and RAS-related GTPases. We developed GoMADScan (Go language-based Modification Associated Database Scanner), a new user-friendly application that scans and extracts posttranslationally modified peptides from databases. The GoMADScan search on PhosphoSitePlus databases identified methylation of conserved lysine residues in the core GTPase domain of RAS superfamily GTPases, including residues corresponding to RAS Lys-5, Lys-16, and Lys-117. To follow up on these observations, we immunoprecipitated endogenous RAS from HEK293T cells, conducted mass spectrometric analysis and found that RAS residues, Lys-5 and Lys-147, undergo dimethylation and monomethylation, respectively. Since mutations of Lys-5 have been found in cancers and RASopathies, we set up molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to assess the putative impact of Lys-5 dimethylation on RAS structure. Results from our MD analyses predict that dimethylation of Lys-5 does not significantly alter RAS conformation, suggesting that Lys-5 methylation may alter existing protein interactions or create a docking site to foster new interactions. Taken together, our findings uncover the existence of lysine methylation as a novel posttranslational modification associated with RAS and the RAS superfamily GTPases, and putative impact of Lys-5 dimethylation on RAS structure. Public Library of Science 2019-08-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6685615/ /pubmed/31390367 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219436 Text en © 2019 Yoshino 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yoshino, Hirofumi
Yin, Guowei
Kawaguchi, Risa
Popov, Konstantin I.
Temple, Brenda
Sasaki, Mika
Kofuji, Satoshi
Wolfe, Kara
Kofuji, Kaori
Okumura, Koichi
Randhawa, Jaskirat
Malhotra, Akshiv
Majd, Nazanin
Ikeda, Yoshiki
Shimada, Hiroko
Kahoud, Emily Rose
Haviv, Sasson
Iwase, Shigeki
Asara, John M.
Campbell, Sharon L.
Sasaki, Atsuo T.
Identification of lysine methylation in the core GTPase domain by GoMADScan
title Identification of lysine methylation in the core GTPase domain by GoMADScan
title_full Identification of lysine methylation in the core GTPase domain by GoMADScan
title_fullStr Identification of lysine methylation in the core GTPase domain by GoMADScan
title_full_unstemmed Identification of lysine methylation in the core GTPase domain by GoMADScan
title_short Identification of lysine methylation in the core GTPase domain by GoMADScan
title_sort identification of lysine methylation in the core gtpase domain by gomadscan
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6685615/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31390367
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0219436
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