Hi all. I am wondering if there is such a way to have a PTM 'permanent' on a protein?
I am wanting to look at APE1 acetylation and is it possible to generate the acetylation to where it cannot be removed?
Thanks in advance.
Non-deacetylable Protein?
Started by rocketfan86, Mar 22 2010 10:54 AM
3 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 22 March 2010 - 10:54 AM
#2
Posted 23 March 2010 - 05:15 AM
rocketfan86, on Mar 22 2010, 07:54 PM, said:
Hi all. I am wondering if there is such a way to have a PTM 'permanent' on a protein?
I am wanting to look at APE1 acetylation and is it possible to generate the acetylation to where it cannot be removed?
Thanks in advance.
I am wanting to look at APE1 acetylation and is it possible to generate the acetylation to where it cannot be removed?
Thanks in advance.
Well, you can create a mutant mimicking an constitutive acetylation status. If you know the lysine/s that are acetylated you can change them from K to Q
"He must be very ignorant for he answers every question he is asked" Voltaire
"This is SPARTA!"
"I´m the goddamn batman"
"This is SPARTA!"
"I´m the goddamn batman"
#3
Posted 23 March 2010 - 12:58 PM
laurequillo, on Mar 23 2010, 08:15 AM, said:
rocketfan86, on Mar 22 2010, 07:54 PM, said:
Hi all. I am wondering if there is such a way to have a PTM 'permanent' on a protein?
I am wanting to look at APE1 acetylation and is it possible to generate the acetylation to where it cannot be removed?
Thanks in advance.
I am wanting to look at APE1 acetylation and is it possible to generate the acetylation to where it cannot be removed?
Thanks in advance.
Well, you can create a mutant mimicking an constitutive acetylation status. If you know the lysine/s that are acetylated you can change them from K to Q
Hi there. Can you explain how glutamine acts as an acetylation mark? Thanks.
#4
Posted 24 March 2010 - 02:25 AM
rocketfan86, on Mar 23 2010, 09:58 PM, said:
laurequillo, on Mar 23 2010, 08:15 AM, said:
rocketfan86, on Mar 22 2010, 07:54 PM, said:
Hi all. I am wondering if there is such a way to have a PTM 'permanent' on a protein?
I am wanting to look at APE1 acetylation and is it possible to generate the acetylation to where it cannot be removed?
Thanks in advance.
I am wanting to look at APE1 acetylation and is it possible to generate the acetylation to where it cannot be removed?
Thanks in advance.
Well, you can create a mutant mimicking an constitutive acetylation status. If you know the lysine/s that are acetylated you can change them from K to Q
Hi there. Can you explain how glutamine acts as an acetylation mark? Thanks.
It mimicks an Ac-K. It is the classical way to check the function of an acetylation site. You change the K to A/R to create a non-acetylable mutant and you change K to Q to create the Acetyl-mimic mutant. It is similar that the mutations to create phospho mutants or phospho-mimic mutants.
"He must be very ignorant for he answers every question he is asked" Voltaire
"This is SPARTA!"
"I´m the goddamn batman"
"This is SPARTA!"
"I´m the goddamn batman"













