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From the journals: MCP

Courtney Chandler
Feb. 17, 2022

Using automated UbiFast to profile ubiquitination. Picturing light, dark and protein degradation. Identifying an enzyme that promotes pancreatic cancer. Read about papers on these topics recently published in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

Automated profiling of ubiquitination

Ubiquitylation is a post-translational protein modification that can regulate a variety of cellular functions including protein turnover through the ubiquitin–proteasome system. Dysregulation of ubiquitylation enzymes can lead to activation or deactivation of pathways implicated in diseases, including cancer and neurodegeneration. Some treatments targeting these pathways exist; however, to develop new therapeutics, researchers need a better understanding of how ubiquitin modification influences disease.

Ubiquitin (yellow) can modify proteins and target them for degradation by the
proteosome (right, violet) and can regulate pathways implicated in disease formation.

A team led by Keith Rivera of the Broad Institute recently developed an automated adaptation of UbiFast — a method to identify protein ubiquitylation sites in a high-throughput and multiplexed manner — and was published in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

With UbiFast, protein samples from cells or tissues are cleaved to peptide fragments, and an antibody is used to enrich for ubiquitin modification sites. Chemical tags are coupled with the antibody enrichment to label samples individually. Labeled peptides from multiple samples can be analyzed in one run using liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry to identify the modified proteins.

In their new method, magnetic beads coupled to the antibody allow sample processing steps, including washing and tagging, to be automated using a 96-well plate format in a robotic magnetic particle processor. This increased sample throughput and also decreased sample processing time and variability across experimental replicates.

To compare the manual and automated UbiFast methods, the group used patient-derived breast cancer xenograft tissue; they found that automation significantly increased depth of coverage of the ubiquitylome.

In addition to providing fast, high-throughput analysis of ubiquitylation, the protocol can be adapted to study other post-translational modifications to cellular processes, such as sumoylation or phosphorylation. Given the role post-translational modifications play in homeostasis and disease, higher-throughput experiments can advance understanding of cellular processes and better identify potential therapeutic targets.

Light, dark and protein degradation

Light is essential for photosynthetic organisms. It provides energy and can regulate cellular processes including protein expression and degradation. Yet researchers lacked a global picture of which proteins are targeted for degradation by light and how they are targeted until a recent study by a team of researchers from China and the U.S. led by Weiyang Chen of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. , published in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics, the researchers studied light-regulated protein degradation events in the photosynthetic organism Synechocystis, a strain of single-cell cyanobacteria that resemble chloroplasts in plants. They used quantitative proteomics to identify proteins with degradation induced by light and also by dark.

The team found that the light-dependent degradation was regulated by the redox status of the intracellular environment. Light-dependent degradation favored a reducing environment that may serve as a more general mechanism underlying light-dependent protein degradation. Their results expand our knowledge of the light-regulated protein quality control mechanism in photosynthetic organisms, which is critical for maintaining intracellular homeostasis during day–night alternation. Photosynthetic organisms are the dominant contributors of oxygen to Earth’s atmosphere and provide much of the food humans consume, so understanding their quality control systems is important.

IDing a cancer-promoting enzyme

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma, or PDAC, is the most common type of pancreatic cancer and the third leading cause of cancer-related death in the U.S. Glycans, sugar-based polymers that coat cells and decorate proteins, are crucial for modulating biological processes and are emerging as important biomarkers of PDAC and other cancers. Recently, Emma Kurz, Shuhui Chen and a team of researchers from New York University analyzed the glycan content in a mouse modified to develop early-stage pancreatic cancer and in human PDAC patient samples to identify glycans involved in cancer formation.

In , recently published in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics, the team found that an enzyme called ST6GAL1 that transfers sialic acid to glycans is overexpressed in human PDAC cells. They next tested the role of ST6GAL1 in the mouse model of pancreatic cancer by knocking out ST6GAL1 in the pancreas. With ST6GAL1 deleted, the researchers observed delayed cancer formation and a decrease in the fibrosis that is a hallmark of pancreatic cancer, suggesting ST6GAL1 plays a role in promoting PDAC. This work highlights how systems-based approaches can be used to identify glycans of interest that subsequently can be tested in clinically relevant disease models. It also paves the way for future work to target glycosylation enzymes therapeutically in pancreatic cancer.

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Courtney Chandler

Courtney Chandler is a biochemist and microbiologist in Baltimore, Md., and a careers columnist for 91ÑÇÉ«´«Ã½ Today.

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