Acetylation of proteinsIn biology, i.e. in living cells, acetylation occurs as a co-translational and post-translational modification of proteins, for example, histones and tubulins. N-alpha-terminal AcetylationAcetylation of the N-terminal alpha-amine of proteins is a widespread modification in eukaryotes. 40-50% of yeast proteins, and 80-90% of human proteins are modified in this manner, and the pattern of modification is found to be conserved throughout evolution. The modification is performed by N-alpha-acetyltransferases (NATs), a sub-family of the GNAT superfamily of acetyltransferases, which also include histone acetyl transferases. The GNATs transfer the acetylgroup from acetyl-coenzyme A to the amine group. The NATs have been most extensively studied in yeast. Here three NAT complexes, NatA/B/C, have been found to perform most N-alpha-terminal acetylations. They have sequence specificity for their substrates, and it is believed that they are associated with the ribosome, where they acetylate nascent polypeptides co-translationally. In humans, only one NAT complex , the human NatA, has been identified and characterized. Subunits of the human NatA complex have been coupled to cancer-related processes such as hypoxia-response and the beta-catenin pathway. It has been found to be over-expressed in papillary thyroid carcinoma and neuroblastoma. Despite being such a conserved and widespread modification, little is known about the biological role of N-alpha-terminal acetylation. Proteins such as actin and tropomyosin have been found to be dependent of NatB acetylation to form proper actin filaments. This is yet only an example of the potential importance of this modification. Histone Acetylation and DeacetylationIn histone acetylation and deacetylation, the histones are acetylated and deacetylated on lysine residues in the N-terminal tail as part of gene regulation. Typically, these reactions are catalyzed by enzymes with "histone acetyltransferase" (HAt) or "histone deacetylase" (HDAc) activity. Although it should be noted that HATs and HDACs can modify the acetylation status of non-histone proteins as well. Tubulin Acetylation and DeacetylationTubulin Acetylation and Deacetylation system is well worked out in Chlamydomonas. A Tubulin acetyltransferase located in the axoneme acetylates a specific lysine residue in the α-tubulin subunit in assembled microtubule. Once disassembled, this acetylation can be removed by another specific deacetylase which is cytosolic. Thus the axonemal microtubules (long half life) carry this signature acetylation absent from cytosolic microtubules (short half life). See also
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