Actin polymerization and cell motility are affected by NAA80-mediated posttranslational N-terminal acetylation of actin

Actin is the most abundant protein in our cells, and also one of the most studied. Nevertheless, an important modifier of actin, the N-terminal acetyltransferase (NAT) for actin, remained unknown until now. The recent identification of the enzyme that catalyzes actin acetylation, has opened up for f...

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Main Authors: Henriette Aksnes, Michael Marie, Thomas Arnesen, Adrian Drazic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-07-01
Series:Communicative & Integrative Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19420889.2018.1526572
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spelling doaj-480106e2849a49718780aae30c058bf22021-03-02T10:15:30ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCommunicative & Integrative Biology1942-08892018-07-0111410.1080/19420889.2018.15265721526572Actin polymerization and cell motility are affected by NAA80-mediated posttranslational N-terminal acetylation of actinHenriette Aksnes0Michael Marie1Thomas Arnesen2Adrian Drazic3University of BergenUniversity of BergenUniversity of BergenUniversity of BergenActin is the most abundant protein in our cells, and also one of the most studied. Nevertheless, an important modifier of actin, the N-terminal acetyltransferase (NAT) for actin, remained unknown until now. The recent identification of the enzyme that catalyzes actin acetylation, has opened up for functional studies of unacetylated actin using knockout cells. This enzyme, called NAA80 (Nα-acetyltransferase 80) or NatH, belongs to the NAT family of enzymes, which together provides N-terminal acetylation for around 80 % of the human proteome. In many cases, N-terminal acetylation is essential. In the case of actin, the acetyl group that NAA80 attaches to actin plays an important role in actin’s polymerization properties as well as in actin’s function in cell migration.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19420889.2018.1526572Acetyltransferaseactincell motilitycytoskeletonNAA80NatHN-terminal acetylation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Henriette Aksnes
Michael Marie
Thomas Arnesen
Adrian Drazic
spellingShingle Henriette Aksnes
Michael Marie
Thomas Arnesen
Adrian Drazic
Actin polymerization and cell motility are affected by NAA80-mediated posttranslational N-terminal acetylation of actin
Communicative & Integrative Biology
Acetyltransferase
actin
cell motility
cytoskeleton
NAA80
NatH
N-terminal acetylation
author_facet Henriette Aksnes
Michael Marie
Thomas Arnesen
Adrian Drazic
author_sort Henriette Aksnes
title Actin polymerization and cell motility are affected by NAA80-mediated posttranslational N-terminal acetylation of actin
title_short Actin polymerization and cell motility are affected by NAA80-mediated posttranslational N-terminal acetylation of actin
title_full Actin polymerization and cell motility are affected by NAA80-mediated posttranslational N-terminal acetylation of actin
title_fullStr Actin polymerization and cell motility are affected by NAA80-mediated posttranslational N-terminal acetylation of actin
title_full_unstemmed Actin polymerization and cell motility are affected by NAA80-mediated posttranslational N-terminal acetylation of actin
title_sort actin polymerization and cell motility are affected by naa80-mediated posttranslational n-terminal acetylation of actin
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Communicative & Integrative Biology
issn 1942-0889
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Actin is the most abundant protein in our cells, and also one of the most studied. Nevertheless, an important modifier of actin, the N-terminal acetyltransferase (NAT) for actin, remained unknown until now. The recent identification of the enzyme that catalyzes actin acetylation, has opened up for functional studies of unacetylated actin using knockout cells. This enzyme, called NAA80 (Nα-acetyltransferase 80) or NatH, belongs to the NAT family of enzymes, which together provides N-terminal acetylation for around 80 % of the human proteome. In many cases, N-terminal acetylation is essential. In the case of actin, the acetyl group that NAA80 attaches to actin plays an important role in actin’s polymerization properties as well as in actin’s function in cell migration.
topic Acetyltransferase
actin
cell motility
cytoskeleton
NAA80
NatH
N-terminal acetylation
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19420889.2018.1526572
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AT michaelmarie actinpolymerizationandcellmotilityareaffectedbynaa80mediatedposttranslationalnterminalacetylationofactin
AT thomasarnesen actinpolymerizationandcellmotilityareaffectedbynaa80mediatedposttranslationalnterminalacetylationofactin
AT adriandrazic actinpolymerizationandcellmotilityareaffectedbynaa80mediatedposttranslationalnterminalacetylationofactin
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