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      Autonomous Synthesis of Functional, Permanently Phosphorylated Proteins for Defining the Interactome of Monomeric 14-3-3ζ

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          Abstract

          14-3-3 proteins are dimeric hubs that bind hundreds of phosphorylated “clients” to regulate their function. Installing stable, functional mimics of phosphorylated amino acids into proteins offers a powerful strategy to study 14-3-3 function in cellular-like environments, but a previous genetic code expansion (GCE) system to translationally install nonhydrolyzable phosphoserine (nhpSer), with the γ-oxygen replaced with CH 2, site-specifically into proteins has seen limited usage. Here, we achieve a 40-fold improvement in this system by engineering into Escherichia coli a six-step biosynthetic pathway that produces nhpSer from phosphoenolpyruvate. Using this autonomous “PermaPhos” expression system, we produce three biologically relevant proteins with nhpSer and confirm that nhpSer mimics the effects of phosphoserine for activating GSK3β phosphorylation of the SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid protein, promoting 14-3-3/client complexation, and monomerizing 14-3-3 dimers. Then, to understand the biological function of these phosphorylated 14-3-3ζ monomers (containing nhpSer at Ser58), we isolate its interactome from HEK293T lysates and compare it with that of wild-type 14-3-3ζ. These data identify two new subsets of 14-3-3 client proteins: (i) those that selectively bind dimeric 14-3-3ζ and (ii) those that selectively bind monomeric 14-3-3ζ. We discover that monomeric—but not dimeric—14-3-3ζ interacts with cereblon, an E3 ubiquitin-ligase adaptor protein of pharmacological interest.

          Abstract

          An autonomous E. coli system to genetically encode a functional nonhydrolyzable phosphoserine mimic into proteins is created and used to reveal how 14-3-3 phosphorylation rewires its interactome.

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          One-step inactivation of chromosomal genes in Escherichia coli K-12 using PCR products.

          We have developed a simple and highly efficient method to disrupt chromosomal genes in Escherichia coli in which PCR primers provide the homology to the targeted gene(s). In this procedure, recombination requires the phage lambda Red recombinase, which is synthesized under the control of an inducible promoter on an easily curable, low copy number plasmid. To demonstrate the utility of this approach, we generated PCR products by using primers with 36- to 50-nt extensions that are homologous to regions adjacent to the gene to be inactivated and template plasmids carrying antibiotic resistance genes that are flanked by FRT (FLP recognition target) sites. By using the respective PCR products, we made 13 different disruptions of chromosomal genes. Mutants of the arcB, cyaA, lacZYA, ompR-envZ, phnR, pstB, pstCA, pstS, pstSCAB-phoU, recA, and torSTRCAD genes or operons were isolated as antibiotic-resistant colonies after the introduction into bacteria carrying a Red expression plasmid of synthetic (PCR-generated) DNA. The resistance genes were then eliminated by using a helper plasmid encoding the FLP recombinase which is also easily curable. This procedure should be widely useful, especially in genome analysis of E. coli and other bacteria because the procedure can be done in wild-type cells.
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            PhosphoSitePlus, 2014: mutations, PTMs and recalibrations

            PhosphoSitePlus® (PSP, http://www.phosphosite.org/), a knowledgebase dedicated to mammalian post-translational modifications (PTMs), contains over 330 000 non-redundant PTMs, including phospho, acetyl, ubiquityl and methyl groups. Over 95% of the sites are from mass spectrometry (MS) experiments. In order to improve data reliability, early MS data have been reanalyzed, applying a common standard of analysis across over 1 000 000 spectra. Site assignments with P > 0.05 were filtered out. Two new downloads are available from PSP. The ‘Regulatory sites’ dataset includes curated information about modification sites that regulate downstream cellular processes, molecular functions and protein-protein interactions. The ‘PTMVar’ dataset, an intersect of missense mutations and PTMs from PSP, identifies over 25 000 PTMVars (PTMs Impacted by Variants) that can rewire signaling pathways. The PTMVar data include missense mutations from UniPROTKB, TCGA and other sources that cause over 2000 diseases or syndromes (MIM) and polymorphisms, or are associated with hundreds of cancers. PTMVars include 18 548 phosphorlyation sites, 3412 ubiquitylation sites, 2316 acetylation sites, 685 methylation sites and 245 succinylation sites.
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              PISCES: a protein sequence culling server.

              PISCES is a public server for culling sets of protein sequences from the Protein Data Bank (PDB) by sequence identity and structural quality criteria. PISCES can provide lists culled from the entire PDB or from lists of PDB entries or chains provided by the user. The sequence identities are obtained from PSI-BLAST alignments with position-specific substitution matrices derived from the non-redundant protein sequence database. PISCES therefore provides better lists than servers that use BLAST, which is unable to identify many relationships below 40% sequence identity and often overestimates sequence identity by aligning only well-conserved fragments. PDB sequences are updated weekly. PISCES can also cull non-PDB sequences provided by the user as a list of GenBank identifiers, a FASTA format file, or BLAST/PSI-BLAST output.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ACS Cent Sci
                ACS Cent Sci
                oc
                acscii
                ACS Central Science
                American Chemical Society
                2374-7943
                2374-7951
                10 April 2023
                26 April 2023
                : 9
                : 4
                : 816-835
                Affiliations
                []Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, Oregon State University , 2011 Agricultural and Life Sciences, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, United States
                []Department of Chemistry, Oregon State University , 153 Gilbert Hall, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, United States
                [§ ]e-MSion Inc. , 2121 NE Jack London St., Corvallis, Oregon 97330, United States
                []A.N. Bach Institute of Biochemistry, Federal Research Center of Biotechnology of the Russian Academy of Sciences , 119071 Moscow, Russia
                Author notes
                [* ]Telephone: (541) 737-4870. Fax: (541) 737-0481. Email: rick.cooley@ 123456oregonstate.edu .
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8608-1416
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1855-4653
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2932-4941
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3928-2757
                Article
                10.1021/acscentsci.3c00191
                10141581
                37122473
                abd23576-c990-474f-9a39-b9b0d1d96147
                © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society

                Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 13 February 2023
                Funding
                Funded by: National Science Foundation, doi 10.13039/100000001;
                Award ID: MCB 2034446
                Funded by: Oregon Health and Science University, doi 10.13039/100006668;
                Award ID: NA
                Funded by: Collins Medical Trust, doi 10.13039/100002028;
                Award ID: NA
                Funded by: M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust, doi 10.13039/100000937;
                Award ID: 2014162
                Funded by: National Institute of General Medical Sciences, doi 10.13039/100000057;
                Award ID: RM1-GM144227
                Funded by: National Institute of General Medical Sciences, doi 10.13039/100000057;
                Award ID: 5R01GM131168-02
                Funded by: National Institutes of Health, doi 10.13039/100000002;
                Award ID: 1S10OD020111-01
                Funded by: National Institutes of Health, doi 10.13039/100000002;
                Award ID: 1S10OD018518
                Categories
                Research Article
                Custom metadata
                oc3c00191
                oc3c00191

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