4.7 Article

Control of protein palmitoylation by regulating substrate recruitment to a zDHHC-protein acyltransferase

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY
Volume 3, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-020-01145-3

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Funding

  1. British Heart Foundation [FS/14/68/30988, RG/17/15/33106]
  2. MRC [G0700903] Funding Source: UKRI

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Although palmitoylation regulates numerous cellular processes, as yet efforts to manipulate this post-translational modification for therapeutic gain have proved unsuccessful. The Na-pump accessory sub-unit phospholemman (PLM) is palmitoylated by zDHHC5. Here, we show that PLM palmitoylation is facilitated by recruitment of the Na-pump alpha sub-unit to a specific site on zDHHC5 that contains a juxtamembrane amphipathic helix. Site-specific palmitoylation and GlcNAcylation of this helix increased binding between the Na-pump and zDHHC5, promoting PLM palmitoylation. In contrast, disruption of the zDHHC5-Na-pump interaction with a cell penetrating peptide reduced PLM palmitoylation. Our results suggest that by manipulating the recruitment of specific substrates to particular zDHHC-palmitoyl acyl transferases, the palmitoylation status of individual proteins can be selectively altered, thus opening the door to the development of molecular modulators of protein palmitoylation for the treatment of disease. The Na-pump accessory sub-unit phospholemman (PLM) is palmitoylated by the acyltransferase zDHHC5. Plain & Howie et al identify a binding site on zDHHC5 for the Na-pump, discover that the interaction is regulated by post-translational modifications near this binding site, and find that disrupting the zDHHC5-Na-pump interaction reduces PLM palmitoylation.

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