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In Proteomics

PARylation plays critical roles in regulating multiple cellular processes such as DNA damage response and repair, transcription, RNA processing, and stress response. More than 300 human proteins have been found to be modified by PARylation on acidic residues, i.e., Asp (D) and Glu (E). We used the deep-learning tool AlphaFold to predict protein-protein interactions (PPIs) and their interfaces for these proteins based on coevolution signals from joint multiple sequence alignments. AlphaFold predicted 260 confident PPIs involving PARylated proteins, and about one quarter of these PPIs have D/E-PARylation sites in their predicted PPI interfaces. AlphaFold predictions offer novel insights into the mechanisms of PARylation regulations by providing structural details of the PPI interfaces. D/E-PARylation sites have a preference to occur in coil regions and disordered regions, and PPI interfaces containing D/E-PARylation sites tend to occur between short linear sequence motifs in disordered regions and globular domains. The hub protein PCNA is predicted to interact with more than 20 proteins via the common PIP box motif and the structurally variable flanking regions. D/E-PARylation sites were found in the interfaces of key components of the RNA transcription and export complex, the SF3a spliceosome complex, and H/ACA and C/D small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein complexes, suggesting that systematic PARylation have a profound effect in regulating multiple RNA-related processes such as RNA nuclear export, splicing, and modification. Finally, PARylation of SUMO2 could modulate its interaction with CHAF1A, thereby representing a potential mechanism for the cross-talk between PARylation and SUMOylation in regulation of chromatin remodeling. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Pei Jimin, Zhang Jing, Wang Xu-Dong, Kim Chiho, Yu Yonghao, Cong Qian

2022-Dec-01

D/E-PARylation, coevolution, interaction interface, protein-protein interaction