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Studies on protein N-terminal acetylation in bacteria

Posted on:2013-04-29Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Texas Christian UniversityCandidate:Bernal Perez, Lina FernandaFull Text:PDF
GTID:1454390008970413Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
N-terminal (Nα) protein acetylation, one of the most common post-translational modifications in eukaryotes, plays a pivotal role in the stability, activity and targeting of certain proteins (Chapter 1). This protein modification is significantly less frequent in prokaryotes. In Escherichia coli, the only Nα-acetyltransferases identified are RimI, RimJ, and RimL, which acetylate the ribosomal proteins S18, S5 and L7/L12, respectively. Although most eukaryotic proteins are not acetylated when ectopically expressed in E. coli, partial or complete Nα-acetylation has been reported for several recombinant proteins. Just recently, it was demonstrated that Nα -acetylation of the thymosin α1 fusion proteins is catalyzed by RimJ. For most other proteins, however, the underlying mechanism of Nα-acetylation remains unknown.;We recently observed that the Z-domain protein, a small three-helix bundle protein derived from the Staphylococcal protein A, is N α-acetylated only under certain conditions. We decided to use the Z-domain as a model protein to study the Nα-acetylation in E. coli. We revealed that the Nα-acetylation of the Z-domain depends on the E. coli strains, expression vectors and amino acid residues near the N-terminus, and is enhanced by high cellular levels of RimJ (Chapter 2). In order to systematically study the sequence dependence of the N-terminal methionine cleavage and RimJ-mediated Nα-acetylation in E. coli, the Z-domain variants differing by the second or third amino acid residue were expressed and analyzed by mass spectrometry (Chapter 3). The initiating methionine residue of the Z-domain was removed only when a small and uncharged amino acid residue was in the second position. Only subsequent to the cleavage of the initiating methionine residue, the RimJ-catalyzed N-terminal acetylation mainly occurred at the N-terminal serine and threonine residues and was significantly enhanced by a hydrophobic or negatively charged residue in the penultimate position.;Although primarily used for analysis of N-terminal acetylation, mass spectrometry often requires careful sample preparation and expensive instrumentation. Therefore, in order to find a simple and sensitive method to analyze the acetylation status of proteins, we developed a fluorogenic derivatization method using 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzofurazan (NBD-Cl) (Chapter 4). The unacetylated protein selectively reacted with NBD-Cl at neutral pH to provide high fluorescence. In contrast, the Nα-acetylated protein was essentially non-fluorescent under the same conditions despite the presence of many internal lysine residues. This method should be particularly useful for a large scale high-throughput proteomic analysis of protein Nα-acetylation.
Keywords/Search Tags:Protein, Acetylation, N&alpha, N-terminal, Residue
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