Dana Shkolnik, Subhasis Dey, Mahdi Hasan, Michael J. Matunis, Ashraf Brik
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Chemical Protein Synthesis Combined with Protein Cell Delivery Reveals New Insights on the Maturation Process of SUMO2
The Small Ubiquitin-like Modifier (SUMO) is a crucial post-translational modifier of proteins, playing a key role in various cellular functions. All SUMOs are synthesized as precursor proteins that must be proteolytically processed. However, the maturation process of cleaving the extending C-terminal tail, preceding SUMOylation of substrates, remains poorly understood, especially within cellular environments. Chemical protein synthesis coupled with cell delivery offers great opportunities to prepare SUMO analogues to investigate this process in vitro and in live cells. Applying this unique combination we show that SUMO2 analogues containing the native tail undergo rapid cleavage and nuclear localisation, while a Gly93Ala mutation impairs cleavage and alters localisation. Tail mutations (Val94Glu, Tyr95Ala) affected cleavage rates, highlighting roles in SUMO-SENP protease interactions. In cells, analogoues containing tail mutations underwent cleavage and subsequently incorporated into PML-NBs. These findings advance our understanding of SUMO2 maturation and provide a foundation for future studies of this process for different SUMO paralogues in various cell lines and tissues.
期刊介绍:
Chemical Science is a journal that encompasses various disciplines within the chemical sciences. Its scope includes publishing ground-breaking research with significant implications for its respective field, as well as appealing to a wider audience in related areas. To be considered for publication, articles must showcase innovative and original advances in their field of study and be presented in a manner that is understandable to scientists from diverse backgrounds. However, the journal generally does not publish highly specialized research.