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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Biomolecular NMR Année : 2012

Cell signaling, post-translational protein modifications and NMR spectroscopy.

Résumé

Post-translationally modified proteins make up the majority of the proteome and establish, to a large part, the impressive level of functional diversity in higher, multi-cellular organisms. Most eukaryotic post-translational protein modifications (PTMs) denote reversible, covalent additions of small chemical entities such as phosphate-, acyl-, alkyl- and glycosyl-groups onto selected subsets of modifiable amino acids. In turn, these modifications induce highly specific changes in the chemical environments of individual protein residues, which are readily detected by high-resolution NMR spectroscopy. In the following, we provide a concise compendium of NMR characteristics of the main types of eukaryotic PTMs: serine, threonine, tyrosine and histidine phosphorylation, lysine acetylation, lysine and arginine methylation, and serine, threonine O-glycosylation. We further delineate the previously uncharacterized NMR properties of lysine propionylation, butyrylation, succinylation, malonylation and crotonylation, which, altogether, define an initial reference frame for comprehensive PTM studies by high-resolution NMR spectroscopy.

Dates et versions

hal-00765863 , version 1 (17-12-2012)

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Citer

Francois-Xavier Theillet, Caroline Smet-Nocca, Stamatios Liokatis, Rossukon Thongwichian, Jonas Kosten, et al.. Cell signaling, post-translational protein modifications and NMR spectroscopy.. Journal of Biomolecular NMR, 2012, 54 (3), pp.217-36. ⟨10.1007/s10858-012-9674-x⟩. ⟨hal-00765863⟩

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