Issue 6, 2013

Protein lysine acetylation analysis: current MS-based proteomic technologies

Abstract

Protein lysine acetylation (Kac), including histone acetylation and non-nuclear protein acetylation, is a dynamic and reversible post-translational modification for cellular regulation. The modified proteins play a key role in regulating chromatin structure, transcriptional activity and metabolic pathways, thus contributing to diverse cellular processes like transcription, cell cycle regulation, apoptosis and senescence. Therefore, targeting protein acetylation represents a potentially promising strategy for certain diseases, such as cancer. However, global identification of protein acetylation is a major bottleneck due to its dynamic property and rather low abundance. Tremendous efforts have been made to develop mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomic technologies for this purpose from diverse cellular sources. The present review has tried to provide an overview of current strategies employed for Kac identification from histone to system-wide Kac analysis, including enrichment techniques, chromatographic separation strategies, and mass spectrometry methods.

Graphical abstract: Protein lysine acetylation analysis: current MS-based proteomic technologies

Article information

Article type
Critical Review
Submitted
21 Aug 2012
Accepted
13 Jan 2013
First published
16 Jan 2013

Analyst, 2013,138, 1628-1636

Protein lysine acetylation analysis: current MS-based proteomic technologies

K. Zhang, S. Tian and E. Fan, Analyst, 2013, 138, 1628 DOI: 10.1039/C3AN36837H

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