Formyl-methionine as an N-degron of a eukaryotic N-end rule pathway

Authors
Kim, Jeong-MokSeok, Ok-HeeJu, ShinyeongHeo, Ji-EunYeom, JeonghunKim, Da-SomYoo, Joo-YeonVarshavsky, AlexanderLee, CheoljuHwang, Cheol-Sang
Issue Date
2018-11
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Citation
Science, v.362, no.6418, pp.1019 - +
Abstract
In bacteria, nascent proteins bear the pretranslationally generated N-terminal (Nt) formyl-methionine (fMet) residue. Nt-fMet of bacterial proteins is a degradation signal, termed fMet/N-degron. By contrast, proteins synthesized by cytosolic ribosomes of eukaryotes were presumed to bear unformylated Nt-Met. Here we found that the yeast formyltransferase Fmt1, although imported into mitochondria, could also produce Nt-formylated proteins in the cytosol. Nt-formylated proteins were strongly up-regulated in stationary phase or upon starvation for specific amino acids. This up-regulation strictly required the Gcn2 kinase, which phosphorylates Fmt1 and mediates its retention in the cytosol. We also found that the Nt-fMet residues of Nt-formylated proteins act as fMet/N-degrons and identified the Psh1 ubiquitin ligase as the recognition component of the eukaryotic fMet/N-end rule pathway, which destroys Nt-formylated proteins.
Keywords
E3 UBIQUITIN LIGASE; HISTONE H3 VARIANT; TERMINAL ACETYLATION; STRUCTURAL BASIS; SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE; FLUORESCENT PROTEINS; CELLULAR-PROTEINS; TRANSFER-RNA; DEGRADATION; RECOGNITION
ISSN
0036-8075
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/120723
DOI
10.1126/science.aat0174
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KIST Article > 2018
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