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Discovering the N‑Terminal Methylome by Repurposing of Proteomic Datasets

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posted on 2021-08-12, 15:37 authored by Panyue Chen, Tiago Jose Paschoal Sobreira, Mark C. Hall, Tony R. Hazbun
Protein α-N-methylation is an underexplored post-translational modification involving the covalent addition of methyl groups to the free α-amino group at protein N-termini. To systematically explore the extent of α-N-terminal methylation in yeast and humans, we reanalyzed publicly accessible proteomic datasets to identify N-terminal peptides contributing to the α-N-terminal methylome. This repurposing approach found evidence of α-N-methylation of established and novel protein substrates with canonical N-terminal motifs of established α-N-terminal methyltransferases, including human NTMT1/2 and yeast Tae1. NTMT1/2 are implicated in cancer and aging processes but have unclear and context-dependent roles. Moreover, α-N-methylation of noncanonical sequences was surprisingly prevalent, suggesting unappreciated and cryptic methylation events. Analysis of the amino acid frequencies of α-N-methylated peptides revealed a [S]1-[S/A/Q]2 pattern in yeast and [A/N/G]1-[A/S/V]2-[A/G]3 in humans, which differs from the canonical motif. We delineated the distribution of the two types of prevalent N-terminal modifications, acetylation and methylation, on amino acids at the first position. We tested three potentially methylated proteins and confirmed the α-N-terminal methylation of Hsp31 by additional proteomic analysis and immunoblotting. The other two proteins, Vma1 and Ssa3, were found to be predominantly acetylated, indicating that proteomic searching for α-N-terminal methylation requires careful consideration of mass spectra. This study demonstrates the feasibility of reprocessing proteomic data for global α-N-terminal methylome investigations.

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