Using Functional Proteome Microarrays to Study Protein Lysine Acetylation
pmid: 23381860
Using Functional Proteome Microarrays to Study Protein Lysine Acetylation
Emergence of proteome microarray provides a versatile platform to globally explore biological functions of broad significance. In the past decade, researchers have successfully fabricated functional proteome microarrays by printing individually purified proteins at a high-throughput, proteome-wide scale on one single slide. These arrays have been used to profile protein posttranslational modifications, including phosphorylation, ubiquitylation, acetylation, and nitrosylation. In this chapter, we summarize our work of using the yeast proteome microarrays to connect protein lysine acetylation substrates to their upstream modifying enzyme, the nucleosome acetyltransferase of H4 (NuA4), which is the only essential acetyltransferase in yeast. We further prove that the reversible acetylation on critical cell metabolism-related enzymes controls life span in yeast. Our studies represent a paradigm shift for the functional dissection of a crucial acetylation enzyme affecting aging and longevity pathways.
- National Taiwan University Hospital Taiwan
- Johns Hopkins Medicine United States
- Johns Hopkins University United States
- National Taiwan University of Arts Taiwan
Fungal Proteins, Proteome, Lysine, Yeasts, Protein Array Analysis, Acetylation, Protein Processing, Post-Translational, Histone Acetyltransferases
Fungal Proteins, Proteome, Lysine, Yeasts, Protein Array Analysis, Acetylation, Protein Processing, Post-Translational, Histone Acetyltransferases
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