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Mapping protein carboxymethylation sites provides insights into their role in proteostasis and cell proliferation

Simone Di Sanzo, Katrin Spengler, Anja Leheis, Joanna Kirkpatrick, Theresa L. Rändler, Tim Baldensperger, Therese Dau, Christian Henning, Luca Parca, Christian Marx, Zhao‐Qi Wang, Marcus A. Glomb, Alessandro Ori‬‬, Regine Heller

Nature Communications · 2021 · ▲ 25 citations

Abstract

Posttranslational mechanisms play a key role in modifying the abundance and function of cellular proteins. Among these, modification by advanced glycation end products has been shown to accumulate during aging and age-associated diseases but specific protein targets and functional consequences remain largely unexplored. Here, we devise a proteomic strategy to identify sites of carboxymethyllysine modification, one of the most abundant advanced glycation end products. We identify over 1000 sites of protein carboxymethylation in mouse and primary human cells treated with the glycating agent glyoxal. By using quantitative proteomics, we find that protein glycation triggers a proteotoxic response and indirectly affects the protein degradation machinery. In primary endothelial cells, we show that glyoxal induces cell cycle perturbation and that carboxymethyllysine modification reduces acetylation of tubulins and impairs microtubule dynamics. Our data demonstrate the relevance of carboxymethyllysine modification for cellular function and pinpoint specific protein networks that might become compromised during aging.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1038/s41467-021-26982-6
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2026-06-10 MST

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APA
Sanzo, S.D., Spengler, K., Leheis, A., Kirkpatrick, J., Rändler, T.L., Baldensperger, T., Dau, T., Henning, C., Parca, L., Marx, C., Wang, Z., Glomb, M.A., Ori‬‬, A., &amp; Heller, R. (2021). Mapping protein carboxymethylation sites provides insights into their role in proteostasis and cell proliferation. <em>Nature Communications</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-26982-6
Vancouver
Sanzo SD, Spengler K, Leheis A, Kirkpatrick J, Rändler TL, Baldensperger T, et al. Mapping protein carboxymethylation sites provides insights into their role in proteostasis and cell proliferation. Nature Communications. 2021. doi:10.1038/s41467-021-26982-6.
BibTeX
@article{simone2021Mappin, title = {Mapping protein carboxymethylation sites provides insights into their role in proteostasis and cell proliferation}, author = {Simone Di Sanzo and Katrin Spengler and Anja Leheis and Joanna Kirkpatrick and Theresa L. Rändler and Tim Baldensperger and Therese Dau and Christian Henning and Luca Parca and Christian Marx and Zhao‐Qi Wang and Marcus A. Glomb and Alessandro Ori‬‬ and Regine Heller}, journal = {Nature Communications}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-021-26982-6}, }

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