Issue 5, 2025

Identification of microproteins with transactivation activity by polyalanine motif selection

Abstract

Microproteins are an emerging class of proteins that are encoded by small open reading frames (smORFs) less than or equal to 100 amino acids. The functions of several microproteins have been illuminated through phenotypic screening or protein–protein interaction studies, but thousands of microproteins remain uncharacterized. The functional characterization of microproteins is challenging due to a lack of sequence homology. Here, we demonstrate a strategy to enrich microproteins that contain specific motifs as a means to more rapidly characterize microproteins. Specifically, we used the fact that polyalanine motifs are associated with nuclear proteins to select 58 candidate microproteins to screen for transactivation function. We identified three microproteins with transactivation activity when tested as GAL4-fusions in a cell-based luciferase assay. The results support the continued use of the motif selection strategy for the discovery of microprotein function.

Graphical abstract: Identification of microproteins with transactivation activity by polyalanine motif selection

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Nov 2024
Accepted
26 Feb 2025
First published
06 Mar 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Chem. Biol., 2025,6, 800-808

Identification of microproteins with transactivation activity by polyalanine motif selection

A. Agrawal and A. Saghatelian, RSC Chem. Biol., 2025, 6, 800 DOI: 10.1039/D4CB00277F

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