Cell cycle profiling reveals protein oscillation, phosphorylation, and localization dynamics

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Abstract

The cell cycle is a highly conserved process involving the coordinated separation of a single cell into two daughter cells. To relate transcriptional regulation across the cell cycle with oscillatory changes in protein abundance and activity, we carried out a proteome- and phospho-proteome- wide mass spectrometry profiling. We compared protein dynamics with gene transcription, revealing many transcriptionally regulated G2 mRNAs that only produce a protein shift after mitosis. Integration of CRISPR/Cas9 survivability studies further highlighted proteins essential for cell viability. Analyzing the dynamics of phosphorylation events and protein solubility dynamics over the cell cycle, we characterize predicted phospho-peptide motif distributions and predict cell cycle-dependent translocating proteins, as exemplified by the S-adenosylmethionine synthase MAT2A. Our study implicates this enzyme in translocating to the nucleus after the G1/S-checkpoint, which enables epigenetic histone methylation maintenance during DNA replication. Taken together, this data set provides a unique integrated resource with novel insights on cell cycle dynamics.

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APA

Herr, P., Boström, J., Rullman, E., Rudd, S. G., Vesterlund, M., Lehtiö, J., … Altun, M. (2020). Cell cycle profiling reveals protein oscillation, phosphorylation, and localization dynamics. Molecular and Cellular Proteomics, 19(4), 608–623. https://doi.org/10.1074/mcp.RA120.001938

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