Physicochemical sequence characteristics that influence S-palmitoylation propensity. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Over the past 30 years, several hundred eukaryotic proteins spanning from yeast to man have been shown to be S-palmitoylated. This post-translational modification involves the reversible addition of a 16-carbon saturated fatty acyl chain onto the cysteine residue of a protein where it regulates protein membrane association and distribution, conformation, and stability. However, the large-scale proteome-wide discovery of new palmitoylated proteins has been hindered by the difficulty of identifying a palmitoylation consensus sequence. Using a bioinformatics approach, we show that the enrichment of hydrophobic and basic residues, the cellular context of the protein, and the structural features of the residues surrounding the palmitoylated cysteine all influence the likelihood of palmitoylation. We developed a new palmitoylation predictor that incorporates these identified features, and this predictor achieves a Matthews Correlation Coefficient of .74 using 10-fold cross validation, and significantly outperforms existing predictors on unbiased testing sets. This demonstrates that palmitoylation sites can be predicted with accuracy by taking into account not only physiochemical properties of the modified cysteine and its surrounding residues, but also structural parameters and the subcellular localization of the modified cysteine. This will allow for improved predictions of palmitoylated residues in uncharacterized proteins. A web-based version of this predictor is currently under development.

authors

  • Reddy, Krishna
  • Malipeddi, Jashwanth
  • DeForte, Shelly
  • Pejaver, Vikas
  • Radivojac, Predrag
  • Uversky, Vladimir N
  • Deschenes, Robert J

publication date

  • August 7, 2016

Research

keywords

  • Cysteine
  • Lipoylation
  • Protein Processing, Post-Translational
  • Proteome

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 84981164749

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1080/07391102.2016.1217275

PubMed ID

  • 27498722

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 35

issue

  • 11