Post-translational modification
Post-translational modification (PTM) refers to the covalent and generally enzymatic modification of proteins following protein biosynthesis. Proteins are synthesized by ribosomes translating mRNA into polypeptide chains, which may then undergo PTM to form the mature protein product. PTMs are important components in cell signaling, as for example when prohormones are converted to hormones.
Post-translational modifications can occur on the amino acid side chains or at the protein's C- or N- termini.[1] They can extend the chemical repertoire of the 20 standard amino acids by modifying an existing functional group or introducing a new one such as phosphate. Phosphorylation is a very common mechanism for regulating the activity of enzymes and is the most common post-translational modification.[2] Many eukaryotic and prokaryotic proteins also have carbohydrate molecules attached to them in a process called glycosylation, which can promote protein folding and improve stability as well as serving regulatory functions. Attachment of lipid molecules, known as lipidation, often targets a protein or part of a protein attached to the cell membrane.
Other forms of post-translational modification consist of cleaving peptide bonds, as in processing a propeptide to a mature form or removing the initiator methionine residue. The formation of disulfide bonds from cysteine residues may also be referred to as a post-translational modification.[3] For instance, the peptide hormone insulin is cut twice after disulfide bonds are formed, and a propeptide is removed from the middle of the chain; the resulting protein consists of two polypeptide chains connected by disulfide bonds.
Some types of post-translational modification are consequences of oxidative stress. Carbonylation is one example that targets the modified protein for degradation and can result in the formation of protein aggregates.[4][5] Specific amino acid modifications can be used as biomarkers indicating oxidative damage.[6]
Sites that often undergo post-translational modification are those that have a functional group that can serve as a nucleophile in the reaction: the hydroxyl groups of serine, threonine, and tyrosine; the amine forms of lysine, arginine, and histidine; the thiolate anion of cysteine; the carboxylates of aspartate and glutamate; and the N- and C-termini. In addition, although the amide of asparagine is a weak nucleophile, it can serve as an attachment point for glycans. Rarer modifications can occur at oxidized methionines and at some methylenes in side chains.[7]
Post-translational modification of proteins can be experimentally detected by a variety of techniques, including mass spectrometry, Eastern blotting, and Western blotting. Additional methods are provided in the external links sections.
PTMs involving addition of functional groups
Addition by an enzyme in vivo
Hydrophobic groups for membrane localization
- myristoylation (a type of acylation), attachment of myristate, a C14 saturated acid
- palmitoylation (a type of acylation), attachment of palmitate, a C16 saturated acid
- isoprenylation or prenylation, the addition of an isoprenoid group (e.g. farnesol and geranylgeraniol)
- glypiation, glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor formation via an amide bond to C-terminal tail
Cofactors for enhanced enzymatic activity
- lipoylation (a type of acylation), attachment of a lipoate (C8) functional group
- flavin moiety (FMN or FAD) may be covalently attached
- heme C attachment via thioether bonds with cysteines
- phosphopantetheinylation, the addition of a 4'-phosphopantetheinyl moiety from coenzyme A, as in fatty acid, polyketide, non-ribosomal peptide and leucine biosynthesis
- retinylidene Schiff base formation
Modifications of translation factors
- diphthamide formation (on a histidine found in eEF2)
- ethanolamine phosphoglycerol attachment (on glutamate found in eEF1α)[8]
- hypusine formation (on conserved lysine of eIF5A (eukaryotic) and aIF5A (archaeal))
- beta-Lysine addition on a conserved lysine of the elongation factor P (EFP) in most bacteria.[9] EFP is a homolog to eIF5A (eukaryotic) and aIF5A (archaeal) (see above).
Smaller chemical groups
- acylation, e.g. O-acylation (esters), N-acylation (amides), S-acylation (thioesters)
- acetylation, the addition of an acetyl group, either at the N-terminus of the protein or at lysine residues.[10] The reverse is called deacetylation.
- formylation
- alkylation, the addition of an alkyl group, e.g. methyl, ethyl
- methylation the addition of a methyl group, usually at lysine or arginine residues. The reverse is called demethylation.
- amidation at C-terminus. Formed by oxidative dissociation of a C-terminal Gly residue.[11]
- amide bond formation
- amino acid addition
- arginylation, a tRNA-mediation addition
- polyglutamylation, covalent linkage of glutamic acid residues to the N-terminus of tubulin and some other proteins.[12] (See tubulin polyglutamylase)
- polyglycylation, covalent linkage of one to more than 40 glycine residues to the tubulin C-terminal tail
- amino acid addition
- butyrylation
- gamma-carboxylation dependent on Vitamin K[13]
- glycosylation, the addition of a glycosyl group to either arginine, asparagine, cysteine, hydroxylysine, serine, threonine, tyrosine, or tryptophan resulting in a glycoprotein. Distinct from glycation, which is regarded as a nonenzymatic attachment of sugars.
- O-GlcNAc, addition of N-acetylglucosamine to serine or threonine residues in a β-glycosidic linkage
- polysialylation, addition of polysialic acid, PSA, to NCAM
- malonylation
- hydroxylation: addition of an oxygen atom to the side-chain of a Pro or Lys residue
- iodination: addition of an iodine atom to the aromatic ring of a tyrosine residue (e.g. in thyroglobulin)
- nucleotide addition such as ADP-ribosylation
- phosphate ester (O-linked) or phosphoramidate (N-linked) formation
- phosphorylation, the addition of a phosphate group, usually to serine, threonine, and tyrosine (O-linked), or histidine (N-linked)
- adenylylation, the addition of an adenylyl moiety, usually to tyrosine (O-linked), or histidine and lysine (N-linked)
- uridylylation, the addition of an uridylyl-group (i.e. uridine monophosphate, UMP), usually to tyrosine
- propionylation
- pyroglutamate formation
- S-glutathionylation
- S-nitrosylation
- S-sulfenylation (aka S-sulphenylation), reversible covalent addition of one oxygen atom to the thiol group of a cysteine residue[14]
- S-sulfinylation, normally irreversible covalent addition of two oxygen atoms to the thiol group of a cysteine residue[14]
- S-sulfonylation, normally irreversible covalent addition of three oxygen atoms to the thiol group of a cysteine residue, resulting in the formation of a cysteic acid residue[14]
- succinylation addition of a succinyl group to lysine
- sulfation, the addition of a sulfate group to a tyrosine.
Non-enzymatic additions in vivo
- glycation, the addition of a sugar molecule to a protein without the controlling action of an enzyme.
- carbamylation the addition of Isocyanic acid to a protein's N-terminus or the side-chain of Lys.[15]
- carbonylation the addition of carbon monoxide to other organic/inorganic compounds.
- spontaneous isopeptide bond formation, as found in many surface proteins of Gram-positive bacteria.[16]
Non-enzymatic additions in vitro
- biotinylation: covalent attachment of a biotin moiety using a biotinylation reagent, typically for the purpose of labeling a protein.
- carbamylation: the addition of Isocyanic acid to a protein's N-terminus or the side-chain of Lys or Cys residues, typically resulting from exposure to urea solutions.[17]
- oxidation: addition of one or more Oxygen atoms to a susceptible side-chain, principally of Met, Trp, His or Cys residues. Formation of disulfide bonds between Cys residues.
- pegylation: covalent attachment of polyethylene glycol (PEG) using a pegylation reagent, typically to the N-terminus or the side-chains of Lys residues. Pegylation is used to improve the efficacy of protein pharmaceuticals.
Other proteins or peptides
- ISGylation, the covalent linkage to the ISG15 protein (Interferon-Stimulated Gene 15)[18]
- SUMOylation, the covalent linkage to the SUMO protein (Small Ubiquitin-related MOdifier)[19]
- ubiquitination, the covalent linkage to the protein ubiquitin.
- neddylation, the covalent linkage to Nedd
- pupylation, the covalent linkage to the prokaryotic ubiquitin-like protein
Chemical modification of amino acids
- citrullination, or deimination, the conversion of arginine to citrulline[20]
- deamidation, the conversion of glutamine to glutamic acid or asparagine to aspartic acid
- eliminylation, the conversion to an alkene by beta-elimination of phosphothreonine and phosphoserine, or dehydration of threonine and serine[21]
Structural changes
- disulfide bridges, the covalent linkage of two cysteine amino acids
- proteolytic cleavage, cleavage of a protein at a peptide bond
- isoaspartate formation, via the cyclisation of asparagine or aspartic acid amino-acid residues
- racemization
- of serine by protein-serine epimerase
- of alanine in dermorphin, a frog opioid peptide
- of methionine in deltorphin, also a frog opioid peptide
- protein splicing, self-catalytic removal of inteins analogous to mRNA processing
Statistics
Common PTMs by frequency
In 2011, statistics of each post-translational modification experimentally and putatively detected have been compiled using proteome-wide information from the Swiss-Prot database.[22] The 10 most common experimentally found modifications were as follows:[23]
Frequency | Modification |
---|---|
58383 | Phosphorylation |
6751 | Acetylation |
5526 | N-linked glycosylation |
2844 | Amidation |
1619 | Hydroxylation |
1523 | Methylation |
1133 | O-linked glycosylation |
878 | Ubiquitylation |
826 | Pyrrolidone carboxylic acid |
504 | Sulfation |
Common PTMs by residue
Some common post-translational modifications to specific amino-acid residues are shown below. Modifications occur on the side-chain unless indicated otherwise.
Databases and tools
Protein sequences contain sequence motifs that are recognized by modifying enzymes, and which can be documented or predicted in PTM databases. With the large number of different modifications being discovered, there is a need to document this sort of information in databases. PTM information can be collected through experimental means or predicted from high-quality, manually curated data. Numerous databases have been created, often with a focus on certain taxonomic groups (e.g. human proteins) or other features.
List of resources
- PhosphoSitePlus[25] – A database of comprehensive information and tools for the study of mammalian protein post-translational modification
- ProteomeScout[26] – A database of proteins and post-translational modifications experimentally
- Human Protein Reference Database[26] – A database for different modifications and understand different proteins, their class, and function/process related to disease causing proteins
- PROSITE[27] – A database of Consensus patterns for many types of PTM's including sites
- Protein Information Resource (PIR)[28] – A database to acquire a collection of annotations and structures for PTMs.
- dbPTM[24] – A database that shows different PTM's and information regarding their chemical components/structures and a frequency for amino acid modified site
- Uniprot has PTM information although that may be less comprehensive than in more specialized databases.
- The O-GlcNAc Database[30][31] - A curated database for protein O-GlcNAcylation and referencing more than 14 000 protein entries and 10 000 O-GlcNAc sites.
Tools
List of software for visualization of proteins and their PTMs
- PyMOL[32] – introduce a set of common PTM's into protein models
- AWESOME[33] – Interactive tool to see the role of single nucleotide polymorphisms to PTM's
- Chimera[34] – Interactive Database to visualize molecules
Case examples
- Cleavage and formation of disulfide bridges during the production of insulin
- PTM of histones as regulation of transcription: RNA polymerase control by chromatin structure
- PTM of RNA polymerase II as regulation of transcription
- Cleavage of polypeptide chains as crucial for lectin specificity[35]
Addiction
A major feature of addiction is its persistence. The addictive phenotype can be lifelong, with drug craving and relapse occurring even after decades of abstinence.[36] Post-translational modifications consisting of epigenetic alterations of histone protein tails in specific regions of the brain appear to be crucial to the molecular basis of addictions.[36][37][38] Once particular post-translational epigenetic modifications occur, they appear to be long lasting "molecular scars" that may account for the persistence of addictions.[36][39]
Cigarette smokers (about 21% of the US population in 2013)[40]) are usually addicted to nicotine.[41] After 7 days of nicotine treatment of mice, the post-translational modifications consisting of acetylation of both histone H3 and histone H4 was increased at the FosB promoter in the nucleus accumbens of the brain, causing a 61% increase in FosB expression.[42] This also increases expression of the splice variant Delta FosB. In the nucleus accumbens of the brain, Delta FosB functions as a "sustained molecular switch" and "master control protein" in the development of an addiction.[43][44] Similarly, after 15 days of nicotine treatment of rats, the post-translational modification consisting of 3-fold increased acetylation of histone H4 occurs at the promoter of the dopamine D1 receptor (DRD1) gene in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) of the rats. This caused increased dopamine release in the PFC reward-related brain region, and such increased dopamine release is recognized as an important factor for addiction.[45][46]
About 7% of the US population is addicted to alcohol. In rats exposed to alcohol for up to 5 days, there was an increase in the post-translational modification of histone 3 lysine 9 acetylation, H3K9ac, in the pronociceptin promoter in the brain amygdala complex. This acetylation is an activating mark for pronociceptin. The nociceptin/nociceptin opioid receptor system is involved in the reinforcing or conditioning effects of alcohol.[47]
Cocaine addiction occurs in about 0.5% of the US population. Repeated cocaine administration in mice induces post-translational modifications including hyperacetylation of histone 3 (H3) or histone 4 (H4) at 1,696 genes in one brain reward region [the nucleus accumbens] and deacetylation at 206 genes.[48][49] At least 45 genes, shown in previous studies to be upregulated in the nucleus accumbens of mice after chronic cocaine exposure, were found to be associated with post-translational hyperacetylation of histone H3 or histone H4. Many of these individual genes are directly related to aspects of addiction associated with cocaine exposure.[49][50]
In 2013, 22.7 million persons aged 12 or older in the United States needed treatment for an illicit drug or alcohol use problem (8.6 percent of persons aged 12 or older).[40]
See also
References
- ^ Pratt, Donald Voet; Judith G. Voet; Charlotte W. (2006). Fundamentals of biochemistry : life at the molecular level (2. ed.). Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-21495-3.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Khoury GA, Baliban RC, Floudas CA (September 2011). "Proteome-wide post-translational modification statistics: frequency analysis and curation of the swiss-prot database". Scientific Reports. 1: 90. Bibcode:2011NatSR...1E..90K. doi:10.1038/srep00090. PMC 3201773. PMID 22034591.
- ^ Lodish H, Berk A, Zipursky SL, et al. (2000). "17.6, Post-Translational Modifications and Quality Control in the Rough ER". Molecular Cell Biology (4th ed.). New York: W. H. Freeman. ISBN 978-0-7167-3136-8.
- ^ Dalle-Donne I, Aldini G, Carini M, Colombo R, Rossi R, Milzani A (2006). "Protein carbonylation, cellular dysfunction, and disease progression". Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine. 10 (2): 389–406. doi:10.1111/j.1582-4934.2006.tb00407.x. PMC 3933129. PMID 16796807.
- ^ Grimsrud PA, Xie H, Griffin TJ, Bernlohr DA (August 2008). "Oxidative stress and covalent modification of protein with bioactive aldehydes". The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 283 (32): 21837–41. doi:10.1074/jbc.R700019200. PMC 2494933. PMID 18445586.
- ^ Gianazza E, Crawford J, Miller I (July 2007). "Detecting oxidative post-translational modifications in proteins". Amino Acids. 33 (1): 51–6. doi:10.1007/s00726-006-0410-2. PMID 17021655. S2CID 23819101.
- ^ Walsh, Christopher T. (2006). Posttranslational modification of proteins : expanding nature's inventory. Englewood: Roberts and Co. Publ. ISBN 9780974707730. : 12–14
- ^ Whiteheart SW, Shenbagamurthi P, Chen L, Cotter RJ, Hart GW, et al. (August 1989). "Murine elongation factor 1 alpha (EF-1 alpha) is posttranslationally modified by novel amide-linked ethanolamine-phosphoglycerol moieties. Addition of ethanolamine-phosphoglycerol to specific glutamic acid residues on EF-1 alpha". The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 264 (24): 14334–41. doi:10.1016/S0021-9258(18)71682-7. PMID 2569467.
- ^ Roy H, Zou SB, Bullwinkle TJ, Wolfe BS, Gilreath MS, Forsyth CJ, Navarre WW, Ibba M (August 2011). "The tRNA synthetase paralog PoxA modifies elongation factor-P with (R)-β-lysine". Nature Chemical Biology. 7 (10): 667–9. doi:10.1038/nchembio.632. PMC 3177975. PMID 21841797.
- ^ Ali, Ibraheem; Conrad, Ryan J.; Verdin, Eric; Ott, Melanie (2018). "Lysine Acetylation Goes Global: From Epigenetics to Metabolism and Therapeutics". Chemical Reviews. 118 (3): 1216–1252. doi:10.1021/acs.chemrev.7b00181. PMC 6609103. PMID 29405707.
- ^ Bradbury AF, Smyth DG (March 1991). "Peptide amidation". Trends in Biochemical Sciences. 16 (3): 112–5. doi:10.1016/0968-0004(91)90044-v. PMID 2057999.
- ^ Eddé B, Rossier J, Le Caer JP, Desbruyères E, Gros F, Denoulet P (January 1990). "Posttranslational glutamylation of alpha-tubulin". Science. 247 (4938): 83–5. Bibcode:1990Sci...247...83E. doi:10.1126/science.1967194. PMID 1967194.
- ^ Walker CS, Shetty RP, Clark K, Kazuko SG, Letsou A, Olivera BM, Bandyopadhyay PK, et al. (March 2001). "On a potential global role for vitamin K-dependent gamma-carboxylation in animal systems. Evidence for a gamma-glutamyl carboxylase in Drosophila". The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 276 (11): 7769–74. doi:10.1074/jbc.M009576200. PMID 11110799.
- ^ a b c Chung HS, et al. (January 2013). "Cysteine oxidative posttranslational modifications: emerging regulation in the cardiovascular system". Circulation Research. 112 (2): 382–92. doi:10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.112.268680. PMC 4340704. PMID 23329793.
- ^ Jaisson S, Pietrement C, Gillery P (November 2011). "Carbamylation-derived products: bioactive compounds and potential biomarkers in chronic renal failure and atherosclerosis". Clinical Chemistry. 57 (11): 1499–505. doi:10.1373/clinchem.2011.163188. PMID 21768218.
- ^ Kang HJ, Baker EN (April 2011). "Intramolecular isopeptide bonds: protein crosslinks built for stress?". Trends in Biochemical Sciences. 36 (4): 229–37. doi:10.1016/j.tibs.2010.09.007. PMID 21055949.
- ^ Stark GR, Stein WH, Moore X (1960). "Reactions of the Cyanate Present in Aqueous Urea with Amino Acids and Proteins". J Biol Chem. 235 (11): 3177–3181. doi:10.1016/S0021-9258(20)81332-5.
- ^ Malakhova OA, Yan M, Malakhov MP, Yuan Y, Ritchie KJ, Kim KI, Peterson LF, Shuai K, Zhang DE (February 2003). "Protein ISGylation modulates the JAK-STAT signaling pathway". Genes & Development. 17 (4): 455–60. doi:10.1101/gad.1056303. PMC 195994. PMID 12600939.
- ^ Van G. Wilson (Ed.) (2004). Sumoylation: Molecular Biology and Biochemistry Archived 2005-02-09 at the Wayback Machine. Horizon Bioscience. ISBN 0-9545232-8-8.
- ^ Klareskog L, Rönnelid J, Lundberg K, Padyukov L, Alfredsson L (2008). "Immunity to citrullinated proteins in rheumatoid arthritis". Annual Review of Immunology. 26: 651–75. doi:10.1146/annurev.immunol.26.021607.090244. PMID 18173373.
- ^ Brennan DF, Barford D (March 2009). "Eliminylation: a post-translational modification catalyzed by phosphothreonine lyases". Trends in Biochemical Sciences. 34 (3): 108–14. doi:10.1016/j.tibs.2008.11.005. PMID 19233656.
- ^ Khoury GA, Baliban RC, Floudas CA (September 2011). "Proteome-wide post-translational modification statistics: frequency analysis and curation of the swiss-prot database". Scientific Reports. 1 (90): 90. Bibcode:2011NatSR...1E..90K. doi:10.1038/srep00090. PMC 3201773. PMID 22034591.
- ^ "Proteome-Wide Post-Translational Modification Statistics". selene.princeton.edu. Archived from the original on 2012-08-30. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
- ^ a b Lee TY, Huang HD, Hung JH, Huang HY, Yang YS, Wang TH (January 2006). "dbPTM: an information repository of protein post-translational modification". Nucleic Acids Research. 34 (Database issue): D622-7. doi:10.1093/nar/gkj083. PMC 1347446. PMID 16381945.
- ^ Hornbeck PV, Zhang B, Murray B, Kornhauser JM, Latham V, Skrzypek E (January 2015). "PhosphoSitePlus, 2014: mutations, PTMs and recalibrations". Nucleic Acids Research. 43 (Database issue): D512-20. doi:10.1093/nar/gku1267. PMC 4383998. PMID 25514926.
- ^ a b Goel R, Harsha HC, Pandey A, Prasad TS (February 2012). "Human Protein Reference Database and Human Proteinpedia as resources for phosphoproteome analysis". Molecular BioSystems. 8 (2): 453–63. doi:10.1039/c1mb05340j. PMC 3804167. PMID 22159132.
- ^ Sigrist CJ, Cerutti L, de Castro E, Langendijk-Genevaux PS, Bulliard V, Bairoch A, Hulo N (January 2010). "PROSITE, a protein domain database for functional characterization and annotation". Nucleic Acids Research. 38 (Database issue): D161-6. doi:10.1093/nar/gkp885. PMC 2808866. PMID 19858104.
- ^ Garavelli JS (January 2003). "The RESID Database of Protein Modifications: 2003 developments". Nucleic Acids Research. 31 (1): 499–501. doi:10.1093/nar/gkg038. PMC 165485. PMID 12520062.
- ^ Audagnotto M, Dal Peraro M (2017-03-31). "In silico prediction tools and molecular modeling". Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal. 15: 307–319. doi:10.1016/j.csbj.2017.03.004. PMC 5397102. PMID 28458782.
- ^ Wulff-Fuentes E, Berendt RR, Massman L, Danner L, Malard F, Vora J, Kahsay R, Olivier-Van Stichelen S (January 2021). "The human O-GlcNAcome database and meta-analysis". Scientific Data. 8 (1): 25. doi:10.1038/s41597-021-00810-4. PMC 7820439. PMID 33479245.
- ^ Malard F, Wulff-Fuentes E, Berendt RR, Didier G, Olivier-Van Stichelen S (July 2021). "Automatization and self-maintenance of the O-GlcNAcome catalog: a smart scientific database". Database (Oxford). 2021: 1. doi:10.1093/database/baab039. PMC 8288053. PMID 34279596.
- ^ Warnecke A, Sandalova T, Achour A, Harris RA (November 2014). "PyTMs: a useful PyMOL plugin for modeling common post-translational modifications". BMC Bioinformatics. 15 (1): 370. doi:10.1186/s12859-014-0370-6. PMC 4256751. PMID 25431162.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ Yang Y, Peng X, Ying P, Tian J, Li J, Ke J, Zhu Y, Gong Y, Zou D, Yang N, Wang X, Mei S, Zhong R, Gong J, Chang J, Miao X (January 2019). "AWESOME: a database of SNPs that affect protein post-translational modifications". Nucleic Acids Research. 47 (D1): D874–D880. doi:10.1093/nar/gky821. PMC 6324025. PMID 30215764.
- ^ Morris JH, Huang CC, Babbitt PC, Ferrin TE (September 2007). "structureViz: linking Cytoscape and UCSF Chimera". Bioinformatics. 23 (17): 2345–7. doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btm329. PMID 17623706.
- ^ "1tp8 - Proteopedia, life in 3D". www.proteopedia.org.
- ^ a b c Robison AJ, Nestler EJ (October 2011). "Transcriptional and epigenetic mechanisms of addiction". Nature Reviews. Neuroscience. 12 (11): 623–37. doi:10.1038/nrn3111. PMC 3272277. PMID 21989194.
- ^ Hitchcock LN, Lattal KM (2014). "Histone-mediated epigenetics in addiction". Epigenetics and Neuroplasticity—Evidence and Debate. Progress in Molecular Biology and Translational Science. Vol. 128. pp. 51–87. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-800977-2.00003-6. ISBN 9780128009772. PMC 5914502. PMID 25410541.
- ^ McQuown SC, Wood MA (April 2010). "Epigenetic regulation in substance use disorders". Current Psychiatry Reports. 12 (2): 145–53. doi:10.1007/s11920-010-0099-5. PMC 2847696. PMID 20425300.
- ^ Dabin J, Fortuny A, Polo SE (June 2016). "Epigenome Maintenance in Response to DNA Damage". Molecular Cell. 62 (5): 712–27. doi:10.1016/j.molcel.2016.04.006. PMC 5476208. PMID 27259203.
- ^ a b Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Results from the 2013 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: Summary of National Findings, NSDUH Series H-48, HHS Publication No. (SMA) 14-4863. Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 2014
- ^ Abuse, National Institute on Drug. "Is nicotine addictive?".
- ^ Levine A, Huang Y, Drisaldi B, Griffin EA, Pollak DD, Xu S, Yin D, Schaffran C, Kandel DB, Kandel ER (November 2011). "Molecular mechanism for a gateway drug: epigenetic changes initiated by nicotine prime gene expression by cocaine". Science Translational Medicine. 3 (107): 107ra109. doi:10.1126/scitranslmed.3003062. PMC 4042673. PMID 22049069.
- ^ Ruffle JK (November 2014). "Molecular neurobiology of addiction: what's all the (Δ)FosB about?". The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse. 40 (6): 428–37. doi:10.3109/00952990.2014.933840. PMID 25083822. S2CID 19157711.
- ^ Nestler EJ, Barrot M, Self DW (September 2001). "DeltaFosB: a sustained molecular switch for addiction". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 98 (20): 11042–6. Bibcode:2001PNAS...9811042N. doi:10.1073/pnas.191352698. PMC 58680. PMID 11572966.
- ^ Gozen O, Balkan B, Yildirim E, Koylu EO, Pogun S (September 2013). "The epigenetic effect of nicotine on dopamine D1 receptor expression in rat prefrontal cortex". Synapse. 67 (9): 545–52. doi:10.1002/syn.21659. PMID 23447334. S2CID 24129123.
- ^ Publishing, Harvard Health. "How addiction hijacks the brain - Harvard Health".
- ^ D'Addario C, Caputi FF, Ekström TJ, Di Benedetto M, Maccarrone M, Romualdi P, Candeletti S (February 2013). "Ethanol induces epigenetic modulation of prodynorphin and pronociceptin gene expression in the rat amygdala complex". Journal of Molecular Neuroscience. 49 (2): 312–9. doi:10.1007/s12031-012-9829-y. PMID 22684622. S2CID 14013417.
- ^ Walker DM, Nestler EJ (2018). "Neuroepigenetics and addiction". Neurogenetics, Part II. Handbook of Clinical Neurology. Vol. 148. pp. 747–765. doi:10.1016/B978-0-444-64076-5.00048-X. ISBN 9780444640765. PMC 5868351. PMID 29478612.
- ^ a b Renthal W, Kumar A, Xiao G, Wilkinson M, Covington HE, Maze I, Sikder D, Robison AJ, LaPlant Q, Dietz DM, Russo SJ, Vialou V, Chakravarty S, Kodadek TJ, Stack A, Kabbaj M, Nestler EJ (May 2009). "Genome-wide analysis of chromatin regulation by cocaine reveals a role for sirtuins". Neuron. 62 (3): 335–48. doi:10.1016/j.neuron.2009.03.026. PMC 2779727. PMID 19447090.
- ^ https://www.drugsandalcohol.ie/12728/1/NIDA_Cocaine.pdf
External links
(Wayback Machine copy)
- List of posttranslational modifications in ExPASy
- Browse SCOP domains by PTM — from the dcGO database
- Statistics of each post-translational modification from the Swiss-Prot database
(Wayback Machine)
- AutoMotif Server - A Computational Protocol for Identification of Post-Translational Modifications in Protein Sequences
- Functional analyses for site-specific phosphorylation of a target protein in cells
- Detection of Post-Translational Modifications after high-accuracy MSMS
- Overview and description of commonly used post-translational modification detection techniques