Proteomics

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Half-lives of aspirin-mediated lysine acetylations


ABSTRACT: Aspirin, or acetylsalicylic acid is widely used to control pain, inflammation and fever. An important property of aspirin is its ability to acetylate multiple cellular proteins with some pharmacological functions explicable by the irreversible acetylation of cyclooxygenases at active site serine residues. We have used a labeled form of aspirin, aspirin-d3 to acetylate proteins in cultured human cells, and unambiguously identified over 12000 sites of acetylation, using acetylated lysine peptide enrichment combined with mass-spectrometry-based proteomics. Aspirin increases lysine acetylation occupancy of the majority of detected endogenous sites, but leaves almost unchanged a small group that are already highly acetylated. We show that cells are remarkably tolerant of this acetylation insult unless endogenous deacetylases are inhibited. This work raises the possibility that rather than single protein effects, some of the clinical features of aspirin may be the consequence of multiple concurrent protein modifications, and that combining aspirin with lysine deacetylase inhibitors may have important medical implications.

INSTRUMENT(S): Q Exactive

ORGANISM(S): Homo Sapiens (human)

TISSUE(S): Epithelial Cell, Cell Culture

DISEASE(S): Cervix Carcinoma

SUBMITTER: Mike Tatham  

LAB HEAD: Ronald Thomas Hay

PROVIDER: PXD003655 | Pride | 2019-03-05

REPOSITORIES: Pride

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Publications

A Proteomic Approach to Analyze the Aspirin-mediated Lysine Acetylome.

Tatham Michael H MH   Cole Christian C   Scullion Paul P   Wilkie Ross R   Westwood Nicholas J NJ   Stark Lesley A LA   Hay Ronald T RT  

Molecular & cellular proteomics : MCP 20161202 2


Aspirin, or acetylsalicylic acid is widely used to control pain, inflammation and fever. Important to this function is its ability to irreversibly acetylate cyclooxygenases at active site serines. Aspirin has the potential to acetylate other amino acid side-chains, leading to the possibility that aspirin-mediated lysine acetylation could explain some of its as-yet unexplained drug actions or side-effects. Using isotopically labeled aspirin-d<sub>3</sub>, in combination with acetylated lysine pur  ...[more]

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