4.8 Article

Conserved phosphorylation hotspots in eukaryotic protein domain families

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-09952-x

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation
  2. NCCR RNA Disease
  3. Novartis Foundation
  4. Olga Mayenfisch Stiftung
  5. European Research Council [EUR-IBIO260676, ERC-2014-STG 638884 PhosFunc]
  6. Boehringer Ingelheim Fonds PhD fellowship

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Protein phosphorylation is the best characterized post-translational modification that regulates almost all cellular processes through diverse mechanisms such as changing protein conformations, interactions, and localization. While the inventory for phosphorylation sites across different species has rapidly expanded, their functional role remains poorly investigated. Here, we combine 537,321 phosphosites from 40 eukaryotic species to identify highly conserved phosphorylation hotspot regions within domain families. Mapping these regions onto structural data reveals that they are often found at interfaces, near catalytic residues and tend to harbor functionally important phosphosites. Notably, functional studies of a phospho-deficient mutant in the C-terminal hotspot region within the ribosomal S11 domain in the yeast ribosomal protein uS11 shows impaired growth and defective cytoplasmic 20S pre-rRNA processing at 16 degrees C and 20 degrees C. Altogether, our study identifies phosphorylation hotspots for 162 protein domains suggestive of an ancient role for the control of diverse eukaryotic domain families.

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