4.4 Article

Investigation of the impact of PTMs on the protein backbone conformation

Journal

AMINO ACIDS
Volume 51, Issue 7, Pages 1065-1079

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00726-019-02747-w

Keywords

Rigidity; Mobility; Deformability; N-Glycosylation; Phosphorylation; Methylation; Statistics; Renin endopeptidase; Liver carboxylesterase; Cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2); Actin

Funding

  1. Ministry of Research (France)
  2. University of Paris Diderot
  3. Sorbonne Paris Cite
  4. National Institute for Blood Transfusion (INTS, France)
  5. Institute for Health and Medical Research (INSERM, France)
  6. French Ministry of Research
  7. INTS (SESAME Grant)
  8. GENCI (Grand Equipement National de Calcul Intensif) [c2013037147]
  9. Indo-French Centre for the Promotion of Advanced Research/CEFIPRA [5302-2]
  10. Laboratory of Excellence GR-Ex [ANR-11-LABX-0051]
  11. French National Research Agency [ANR-11-IDEX-0005-02]
  12. French National Research Agency (ANR): NaturaDyRe [ANR-2010-CD2I-014-04]

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Post-translational modifications (PTMs) are known to play a critical role in the regulation of protein functions. Their impact on protein structures and their link to disorder regions have already been spotted in the past decade. Nonetheless, the high diversity of PTM types and the multiple schemes of protein modifications (multiple PTMs, of different types, at different time, etc.) make difficult the direct confrontation of PTM annotations and protein structure data. Therefore, we analyzed the impact of the residue modifications on the protein structures at the local level. Thanks to a dedicated structure database, namely PTM-SD, a large screen of PTMs have been done and analyzed at local protein conformation levels using the structural alphabet protein blocks (PBs). We investigated the relation between PTMs and the backbone conformation of modified residues, of their local environment, and at the level of the complete protein structure. The two main PTM types (N-glycosylation and phosphorylation) have been studied in non-redundant datasets, and then four different proteins were focused, covering three types of PTMs: N-glycosylation in renin endopeptidase and liver carboxylesterase, phosphorylation in cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2), and methylation in actin. We observed that PTMs could either stabilize or destabilize the backbone structure, at a local and global scale, and that these effects depend on the PTM types.

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