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Analysis of human acetylation stoichiometry defines mechanistic constraints on protein regulation

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Lysine acetylation is a reversible posttranslational modification that occurs at thousands of sites on human proteins. However, the stoichiometry of acetylation remains poorly characterized, and is important for understanding acetylation-dependent… Click to show full abstract

Lysine acetylation is a reversible posttranslational modification that occurs at thousands of sites on human proteins. However, the stoichiometry of acetylation remains poorly characterized, and is important for understanding acetylation-dependent mechanisms of protein regulation. Here we provide accurate, validated measurements of acetylation stoichiometry at 6829 sites on 2535 proteins in human cervical cancer (HeLa) cells. Most acetylation occurs at very low stoichiometry (median 0.02%), whereas high stoichiometry acetylation (>1%) occurs on nuclear proteins involved in gene transcription and on acetyltransferases. Analysis of acetylation copy numbers show that histones harbor the majority of acetylated lysine residues in human cells. Class I deacetylases target a greater proportion of high stoichiometry acetylation compared to SIRT1 and HDAC6. The acetyltransferases CBP and p300 catalyze a majority (65%) of high stoichiometry acetylation. This resource dataset provides valuable information for evaluating the impact of individual acetylation sites on protein function and for building accurate mechanistic models.Many human proteins are regulated by lysine acetylation, but the degree of acetylation at individual sites is poorly characterized. Here, the authors measure acetylation stoichiometry in the HeLa cell proteome, providing a resource to assess mechanistic constraints on acetylation-mediated protein regulation.

Keywords: protein regulation; acetylation stoichiometry; acetylation; stoichiometry; stoichiometry acetylation

Journal Title: Nature Communications
Year Published: 2019

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