亨廷顿蛋白
生物
亨廷顿蛋白
磷酸蛋白质组学
蛋白激酶A
磷酸化
细胞生物学
亨廷顿病
生物化学
蛋白质磷酸化
突变体
基因
医学
疾病
病理
作者
Yejin Lee,Hyeongju Kim,Doug Barker,Ravi Vijayvargia,Ranjit Singh Atwal,Harrison Specht,Hasmik Keshishian,Steven A. Carr,Ramee Lee,Seung Kwak,Kyung-gi Hyun,Jacob M. Loupe,Marcy E. MacDonald,Ji‐Joon Song,Ihn Sik Seong
摘要
Abstract Huntington’s disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by an inherited unstable HTT CAG repeat that expands further, thereby eliciting a disease process that may be initiated by polyglutamine-expanded huntingtin or a short polyglutamine-product. Phosphorylation of selected candidate residues is reported to mediate polyglutamine-fragment degradation and toxicity. Here to support the discovery of phosphosites involved in the life-cycle of (full-length) huntingtin, we employed mass spectrometry-based phosphoproteomics to systematically identify sites in purified huntingtin and in the endogenous protein by proteomic and phosphoproteomic analyses of members of an HD neuronal progenitor cell panel. Our results bring total huntingtin phosphosites to 95, with more located in the N-HEAT domain relative to numbers in the Bridge and C-HEAT domains. Moreover, phosphorylation of C-HEAT Ser2550 by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), the top hit in kinase activity screens, was found to hasten huntingtin degradation, such that levels of the catalytic subunit (PRKACA) were inversely related to huntingtin levels. Taken together, these findings highlight categories of phosphosites that merit further study and provide a phosphosite kinase pair (pSer2550-PKA) with which to investigate the biological processes that regulate huntingtin degradation and thereby influence the steady state levels of huntingtin in HD cells.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI