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FICD activity and AMPylation remodelling modulate human neurogenesis.

Nature communications (2020-01-26)
Pavel Kielkowski, Isabel Y Buchsbaum, Volker C Kirsch, Nina C Bach, Micha Drukker, Silvia Cappello, Stephan A Sieber
RÉSUMÉ

Posttranslational modification (PTM) of proteins represents an important cellular mechanism for controlling diverse functions such as signalling, localisation or protein-protein interactions. AMPylation (also termed adenylylation) has recently been discovered as a prevalent PTM for regulating protein activity. In human cells AMPylation has been exclusively studied with the FICD protein. Here we investigate the role of AMPylation in human neurogenesis by introducing a cell-permeable propargyl adenosine pronucleotide probe to infiltrate cellular AMPylation pathways and report distinct modifications in intact cancer cell lines, human-derived stem cells, neural progenitor cells (NPCs), neurons and cerebral organoids (COs) via LC-MS/MS as well as imaging methods. A total of 162 AMP modified proteins were identified. FICD-dependent AMPylation remodelling accelerates differentiation of neural progenitor cells into mature neurons in COs, demonstrating a so far unknown trigger of human neurogenesis.

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Z-Arg-Arg-7-amido-4-methylcoumarin hydrochloride
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5-Norbornene-2-endo,3-endo-dimethanol, 98%