Myristoylation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Myristoylation is an irreversible, post-translational protein modification found in animals, plants, fungi and viruses. In this protein modification a myristoyl group (derived from myristic acid) is covalently attached via an amide bond to the alpha-amino group of an N-terminal glycine residue of a nascent polypeptide. The modification is catalyzed by the enzyme N-myristoyltransferase, and occurs most commonly on glycine residues exposed during co-translational N-terminal methionine removal. Myristoylation also occurs post-translationally, for example when previously internal glycine residues become exposed by caspase cleavage during apoptosis. Myristoylation plays a vital role in membrane targeting and signal transduction in plant responses to environmental stress.
[edit] References
- Podell S and Gribskovi M. (2004) "Predicting N-terminal myristoylation sites in plant proteins", BMC Genomics, 5, 37.
- Zha J, Weiler S, Oh KJ, Wei MC, Korsmeyer SJ (2000) "Posttranslational N-myristoylation of BID as a molecular switch for targeting mitochondria and apoptosis", Science 290, 1761-1765.
[edit] External link
Protein primary structure and posttranslational modifications | ||
---|---|---|
General: | Protein biosynthesis | Peptide bond | Proteolysis | Racemization | N-O acyl shift | |
N-terminus: | Acetylation | Formylation | Myristoylation | Pyroglutamate | |
C-terminus: | Amidation | Glycosyl phosphatidylinositol (GPI) | |
Lysine: | Methylation | Acetylation | Hydroxylation | Ubiquitination | SUMOylation | Desmosine | |
Cysteine: | Disulfide bond | Prenylation | Palmitoylation | |
Serine/Threonine: | Phosphorylation | Glycosylation | |
Tyrosine: | Phosphorylation | Sulfation | |
Asparagine: | Deamidation | Glycosylation | |
Aspartate: | Succinimide formation | |
Glutamate: | Carboxylation | |
Arginine: | Citrullination | Methylation | |
Proline: | Hydroxylation | |
←Amino acids | Secondary structure→ |