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Coenzyme A binding sites induce proximal acylation across protein families

Chris Carrico, Andrew Cruz, Marius Walter, Jesse G. Meyer, Cameron Wehrfritz, Samah Shah, Lei Wei, Birgit Schilling, Eric Verdin

2023Scientific Reports17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lysine Nɛ-acylations, such as acetylation or succinylation, are post-translational modifications that regulate protein function. In mitochondria, lysine acylation is predominantly non-enzymatic, and only a specific subset of the proteome is acylated. Coenzyme A (CoA) can act as an acyl group carrier via a thioester bond, but what controls the acylation of mitochondrial lysines remains poorly understood. Using published datasets, here we found that proteins with a CoA-binding site are more likely to be acetylated, succinylated, and glutarylated. Using computational modeling, we show that lysine residues near the CoA-binding pocket are highly acylated compared to those farther away. We hypothesized that acyl-CoA binding enhances acylation of nearby lysine residues. To test this hypothesis, we co-incubated enoyl-CoA hydratase short chain 1 (ECHS1), a CoA-binding mitochondrial protein, with succinyl-CoA and CoA. Using mass spectrometry, we found that succinyl-CoA induced widespread lysine succinylation and that CoA competitively inhibited ECHS1 succinylation. CoA-induced inhibition at a particular lysine site correlated inversely with the distance between that lysine and the CoA-binding pocket. Our study indicated that CoA acts as a competitive inhibitor of ECHS1 succinylation by binding to the CoA-binding pocket. Together, this suggests that proximal acylation at CoA-binding sites is a primary mechanism for lysine acylation in the mitochondria.

Topics & Concepts

AcylationBinding sitePlasma protein bindingCofactorChemistryBinding pocketCoenzyme AComputational biologyBiochemistryBioinformaticsBiologyEnzymeReductaseCatalysisNeurological diseases and metabolismSirtuins and Resveratrol in MedicineUbiquitin and proteasome pathways
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