NMT1 and NMT2 are lysine myristoyltransferases regulating the ARF6 GTPase cycle

Lysine fatty acylation in mammalian cells was discovered nearly three decades ago, yet the enzymes catalyzing it remain unknown. Unexpectedly, we find that human N-terminal glycine myristoyltransferases (NMT) 1 and 2 can efficiently myristoylate specific lysine residues. They modify ADP-ribosylation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2020-02, Vol.11 (1), p.1067-1067, Article 1067
Hauptverfasser: Kosciuk, Tatsiana, Price, Ian R., Zhang, Xiaoyu, Zhu, Chengliang, Johnson, Kayla N., Zhang, Shuai, Halaby, Steve L., Komaniecki, Garrison P., Yang, Min, DeHart, Caroline J., Thomas, Paul M., Kelleher, Neil L., Fromme, J. Christopher, Lin, Hening
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Lysine fatty acylation in mammalian cells was discovered nearly three decades ago, yet the enzymes catalyzing it remain unknown. Unexpectedly, we find that human N-terminal glycine myristoyltransferases (NMT) 1 and 2 can efficiently myristoylate specific lysine residues. They modify ADP-ribosylation factor 6 (ARF6) on lysine 3 allowing it to remain on membranes during the GTPase cycle. We demonstrate that the NAD + -dependent deacylase SIRT2 removes the myristoyl group, and our evidence suggests that NMT prefers the GTP-bound while SIRT2 prefers the GDP-bound ARF6. This allows the lysine myrisotylation-demyristoylation cycle to couple to and promote the GTPase cycle of ARF6. Our study provides an explanation for the puzzling dissimilarity of ARF6 to other ARFs and suggests the existence of other substrates regulated by this previously unknown function of NMT. Furthermore, we identified a NMT/SIRT2-ARF6 regulatory axis, which may offer new ways to treat human diseases. Lysine fatty acylation is an important protein posttranslational modification but mammalian lysine fatty acyl transferases have remained unknown so far. Here the authors report that the human N-terminal glycine myristoyltransferases 1 and 2 catalyze the addition of myristoyl chains to specific lysine residues and show that they myristoylate ARF6 lysine 3, which explains the unusual membrane binding properties of ARF6.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-14893-x