Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030066
Title: Towards complete sets of farnesylated and geranylgeranylated proteins
Authors: Maurer-Stroh S. 
Koranda M.
Benetka W.
Schneider G.
Sirota F.L.
Eisenhaber F.
Keywords: chaperone
dimethylallyltransferase
farnesyl diphosphate
ggti 298
guanosine triphosphatase
mevalonic acid
n [[5 [(2 amino 3 mercaptopropyl)amino][1,1' biphenyl] 2 yl]carbonyl]methionine methyl ester
prickle1 protein
prickle2 protein
protein
protein farnesyltransferase inhibitor
protein rab28
proteinn brofti
unclassified drug
virus protein
membrane lipid
membrane protein
amino acid sequence
article
cellular distribution
data base
drug mechanism
human
mathematical analysis
nonhuman
nucleotide sequence
prediction
prenylation
protein analysis
protein degradation
protein domain
protein family
protein function
protein modification
protein motif
chemistry
genetics
metabolism
methodology
molecular evolution
protein prenylation
sequence alignment
sequence analysis
sequence homology
Mimivirus
Conserved Sequence
Evolution, Molecular
Membrane Lipids
Membrane Proteins
Protein Interaction Mapping
Protein Prenylation
Sequence Alignment
Sequence Analysis, Protein
Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
Issue Date: 2007
Citation: Maurer-Stroh S., Koranda M., Benetka W., Schneider G., Sirota F.L., Eisenhaber F. (2007). Towards complete sets of farnesylated and geranylgeranylated proteins. PLoS Computational Biology 3 (4) : 634-648. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030066
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Three different prenyltransferases attach isoprenyl anchors to C-terminal motifs in substrate proteins. These lipid anchors serve for membrane attachment or protein-protein interactions in many pathways. Although well-tolerated selective prenyltransferase inhibitors are clinically available, their mode of action remains unclear since the known substrate sets of the various prenyltransferases are incomplete. The Prenylation Prediction Suite (PrePS) has been applied for large-scale predictions of prenylated proteins. To prioritize targets for experimental verification, we rank the predictions by their functional importance estimated by evolutionary conservation of the prenylation motifs within protein families. The ranked lists of predictions are accessible as PRENbase (http://mendel.imp.univie.ac.at/sat/PrePS/PRENbase) and can be queried for verification status, type of modifying enzymes (anchor type), and taxonomic distribution. Our results highlight a large group of plant metal-binding chaperones as well as several newly predicted proteins involved in ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation, enriching the known functional repertoire of prenylated proteins. Furthermore, we identify two possibly prenylated proteins in Mimivirus. The section HumanPRENbase provides complete lists of predicted prenylated human proteins - for example, the list of farnesyltransferase targets that cannot become substrates of geranylgeranyltransferase 1 and, therefore, are especially affected by farnesyltransferase inhibitors (FTIs) used in cancer and anti-parasite therapy. We report direct experimental evidence verifying the prediction of the human proteins Prickle1, Prickle2, the BRO1 domain-containing FLJ32421 (termed BROFTI), and Rab28 (short isoform) as exclusive farnesyltransferase targets. We introduce PRENbase, a database of large-scale predictions of protein prenylation substrates ranked by evolutionary conservation of the motif. Experimental evidence is presented for the selective farnesylation of targets with an evolutionary conserved modification site. � 2007 Maurer-Stroh et al.
Source Title: PLoS Computational Biology
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/161868
ISSN: 1553734X
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030066
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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