An efficient proteome-wide strategy for discovery and characterization of cellular nucleotide-protein interactions

Yan Ting Lim(Nanyang Technological University), Nayana Prabhu(Nanyang Technological University), Lingyun Dai(Nanyang Technological University), Ka Diam Go(Nanyang Technological University), Dan Chen(Nanyang Technological University), Lekshmy Sreekumar(Nanyang Technological University), Louise Egeblad(Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences), Staffan Eriksson(Karolinska Institutet), Liyan Chen(Nanyang Technological University), Saranya Veerappan(Nanyang Technological University), Hsiangling Teo(Nanyang Technological University), Chris Soon Heng Tan(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Johan Lengqvist(Karolinska Institutet), Andreas Larsson(Nanyang Technological University), Radoslaw M. Sobota(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), P. Nordlund(Agency for Science, Technology and Research)
PLoS ONE
December 6, 2018
Cited by 53Open Access
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Abstract

Metabolite-protein interactions define the output of metabolic pathways and regulate many cellular processes. Although diseases are often characterized by distortions in metabolic processes, efficient means to discover and study such interactions directly in cells have been lacking. A stringent implementation of proteome-wide Cellular Thermal Shift Assay (CETSA) was developed and applied to key cellular nucleotides, where previously experimentally confirmed protein-nucleotide interactions were well recaptured. Many predicted, but never experimentally confirmed, as well as novel protein-nucleotide interactions were discovered. Interactions included a range of different protein families where nucleotides serve as substrates, products, co-factors or regulators. In cells exposed to thymidine, a limiting precursor for DNA synthesis, both dose- and time-dependence of the intracellular binding events for sequentially generated thymidine metabolites were revealed. Interactions included known cancer targets in deoxyribonucleotide metabolism as well as novel interacting proteins. This stringent CETSA based strategy will be applicable for a wide range of metabolites and will therefore greatly facilitate the discovery and studies of interactions and specificities of the many metabolites in human cells that remain uncharacterized.


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