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Liu X, Cai YD, Hou C, Liu X, Luo Y, Mendiola AJP, Xu X, Luo Y, Zheng H, Zhao C, Chen CH, Zhang Y, Xiang YK, Ma J, Chiu JC. O-GlcNAcylation of nuclear proteins in the mouse liver exhibit daily oscillations that are influenced by meal timing. PLoS biology 2025 23(9) 40997131
Abstract:
The liver circadian clock and hepatic transcriptome are highly responsive to metabolic signals generated from feeding-fasting rhythm. Previous studies have identified a number of nutrient-sensitive signaling pathways that could interpret metabolic input to regulate rhythmic hepatic biology. Here, we investigated the role of O-GlcNAcylation, a nutrient-sensitive post-translational modification (PTM) in mediating metabolic regulation of rhythmic biology in the liver. We observe daily oscillation of global nuclear protein O-GlcNAcylation in the liver of mice subjected to night-restricted feeding (NRF) using label-free global O-GlcNAc proteomics. Additional site-specific O-GlcNAc analysis by tandem mass tag mass spectrometry further supports temporal differences in O-GlcNAcylation by revealing day-night differences. Proteins involved in gene expression are enriched among rhythmically O-GlcNAcylated proteins, suggesting rhythmic O-GlcNAcylation may directly regulate the hepatic transcriptome. We show that rhythmic O-GlcNAcylation can also indirectly modulate nuclear proteins by interacting with phosphorylation. Several proteins harboring O-GlcNAcylation-phosphorylation interplay motif exhibit rhythmic O-GlcNAcylation and phosphorylation. Specifically, we show that O-GlcNAcylation occurs at a phospho-degron of a key circadian transcriptional activator, circadian locomotor output cycles kaput (CLOCK), thus regulating its stability and transcriptional output. Finally, we report that day-restricted feeding (DRF) in the nocturnal mouse significantly alters O-GlcNAcylation pattern. Whereas global O-GlcNAcylation analysis indicates dampening of global O-GlcNAcylation rhythm in mice fed under DRF, site-specific analysis reveals differential responses of O-GlcNAc sites when timing of food intake is altered. Notably, a substantial number of O-GlcNAcylation sites exhibit inverted day-night profiles when mice are subjected to DRF. This suggests the dysregulation of daily nuclear protein O-GlcNAcylation rhythm may contribute to the disruption in liver transcriptome previously observed in DRF condition. In summary, our results provide new mechanistic insights into metabolic regulation of hepatic transcriptional regulators via interplay between O-GlcNAcylation and phosphorylation and shed light on the deleterious effects of improper mealtimes.
O-GlcNAc proteins:
A0A075B680, A0A087WQ44, A0A087WSN6, A0A0A6YVV8, A0A0B6VMB2, A0A0F7QZE4, A0A0G2JGY6, A0A0R4J092, A0A0U1RNL9, A0A1I7Q4G8, A0A1N9PTV1, A0A1Y7VP67, A0A286YCY7, A2A654, ZMYM4, TM201, MED14, A2ADB1, A2AJ72, S35D1, BCORL, A2AQR4, A2ATN3, MGAP, KANL3, PHRF1, B1AR09, B1ASA5, B2RQG2, B2RR24, B2RT41, B2RUQ2, EP300, RBM25, B7ZNL9, D3YWX2, D3Z0K6, D3Z2U7, E9PUF4, E9PUH7, FIBA, E9PV38, SET1A, PARP4, PRR12, E9Q1A5, E9Q1M6, ICE1, E9Q3L4, ANR11, ARI1B, SETD2, YTDC1, ZC3HD, ARID2, E9Q7G1, E9Q9V3, E9Q9Y2, E9QAN9, E9QAP7, E9QKL0, E9QMD3, E9QNA7, F6R9G0, F6T8X6, BICRA, G3UVU2, G3X8Q1, G3X928, G3X961, G3X972, G3X9Q0, PCF11, G5E896, H9KV00, ERR1, GTPB1, HNF6, CLOCK, GLU2B, ATN1, IMA3, KLF12, CALU, AF10, ZN143, SP3, KDM6A, ZN106, ZFR, CCNK, PIAS1, LGMN, SP1, IGHG3, CFAH, EGR1, ITB1, ATX1L, CATB, ITPR1, B4GT1, HNF1A, PGH1, A1AT2, NFYA, PO2F1, 3BHS3, HNF1B, CEBPB, CELF1, RXRA, VTNC, NKTR, SUH, ANT3, G6PC1, FOXA1, FOXK1, STAT3, CBP, FKBP2, FOSL2, RFX1, LMNA, STS, MAT1, PON1, CEBPA, ATX1, RD23B, KMT2A, FUS, PAXB1, LMA2L, MRTFB, SUMO2, PP1B, RS11, SMD3, NFYB, SUMO1, ZHX1, TIAR, TBX3, NFYC, ATF1, ERG, NFIB, RBBP6, GABPA, CREB1, S30BP, NFIA, ZEP1, SPA3M, PPA5, CLUS, GATA4, CHD8, CDK12, Q3T9J2, KHDC4, Q3TGN5, PRC2C, CIART, K22E, YETS2, Q3U1M7, LMF1, FOXK2, PUF60, RREB1, ZEP2, UD3A1, ZCCHV, PRRC1, SFSWA, PRD10, ERMP1, Q3UXF4, TMED1, ZBT45, Q569X9, LIN54, TASO2, RESF1, ZN652, NUFP2, KDM6B, Q5PRE9, Q5RIM6, RBM27, UTP18, Q5SUT0, MED13, Q5SXC4, SFR19, UIMC1, A1CF, SIN3A, CSK21, CAPR1, MEF2A, RBBP7, KLF3, NCOA2, USF1, CTCF, GATA6, TS101, HCFC1, ZN148, HIRA, LASP1, RAI1, MAFK, PRG2, SPTB2, SSXT, TAF6, UD19, NUP62, UD11, MEF2D, TIF1A, USF2, CDK13, JHD2C, HECD1, Q6DI81, SCAF8, NOMO1, FND3B, Q6NXL1, ZMIZ1, NSD3, UGGG1, ALG8, AHDC1, PTN23, PIGS, NUP98, NFRKB, GNAS1, ONEC2, FNBP4, CNOT1, NU188, SPCS3, PICAL, HUWE1, CPEB4, PRR14, ATX2L, NACC1, MCAF1, KANL1, NU214, PR40B, UBN2, TNC18, UBP2L, ZN598, Q80ZX0, DDX42, LPP, TET3, E41L5, SP130, ZC3HE, SUN2, EST2E, NCEH1, ARI5B, EMSY, TM260, RFOX2, TM209, KMT2C, ASPH, SRRM2, NUP54, CPSF7, TOX4, IFIX, CREST, Z385B, PIGT, PGLT1, YTHD3, KAT6A, ASXL2, ZN609, POGZ, SREK1, ZHX2, ZHX3, P20D1, MBNL2, RBM14, PIAS2, CNOT2, ITCH, DIDO1, EPC1, SCYL2, G6PE, TCRG1, BCOR, CCAR1, Q8CHB3, ADNP2, BICRL, EP400, PHC3, P66A, FWCH1, PDLI5, NUP42, ZMIZ2, BTD, UD3A2, ESRP2, TAF10, ZBT20, Q8K154, GT251, ALG3, BRD3, I2BPL, PO121, SF3A1, EST2A, SF3B4, Q8R084, ZBT44, MTSS1, TMED4, ZC3HA, UBQL1, NUP58, BRD8, ATX7, STAB2, RBM12, RBPS2, MED25, MAVS, ALG12, HNRL1, CDIPT, SRSF4, P66B, TAF9, MCR, SFPQ, MBOA5, UBAP2, SMAP1, NCOA5, RBM47, CREL1, SC16B, BAZ2A, RBM5, RISC, ALS2, BCL7B, TMCO1, SYDC, CIC, MED15, WAC, MED1, GORS2, RBM10, ZN281, MLXPL, ANR17, ZN318, TRI33, PCYOX, NECP1, RBM33, SSRA, CREL2, PINX1, INT12, SP2, PHF14, SUN1, APMAP, FIP1, AP2B1, RPN2, LMAN2, AKAP8, MYPT1, RSRC1, EIF3F, Q9EQC8, ERAP1, SALL1, Q9ERL0, RBP2, RTN3, PALLD, TF2H2, ANM1, NUP50, HAKAI, HYOU1, ELOV1, ZN207, DOPP1, CCNT1, TBL1X, PO210, VKGC, QKI, UBQL2, HIPK2, COP1, PR40A, FOXO1, PIGN, MAN1, GANP, ENTP5, NFAT5, CARM1, FOXO3, FBLN5, IF2H, Q9Z1A1, DEAF1, HTAI2, HNRPF, ITPR2, S4R1W8, V9GX43
Species: Mus musculus
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Chuh KN, Zaro BW, Piller F, Piller V, Pratt MR. Changes in metabolic chemical reporter structure yield a selective probe of O-GlcNAc modification. Journal of the American Chemical Society 2014 136(35) 25153642
Abstract:
Metabolic chemical reporters (MCRs) of glycosylation are analogues of monosaccharides that contain bioorthogonal functionalities and enable the direct visualization and identification of glycoproteins from living cells. Each MCR was initially thought to report on specific types of glycosylation. We and others have demonstrated that several MCRs are metabolically transformed and enter multiple glycosylation pathways. Therefore, the development of selective MCRs remains a key unmet goal. We demonstrate here that 6-azido-6-deoxy-N-acetyl-glucosamine (6AzGlcNAc) is a specific MCR for O-GlcNAcylated proteins. Biochemical analysis and comparative proteomics with 6AzGlcNAc, N-azidoacetyl-glucosamine (GlcNAz), and N-azidoacetyl-galactosamine (GalNAz) revealed that 6AzGlcNAc exclusively labels intracellular proteins, while GlcNAz and GalNAz are incorporated into a combination of intracellular and extracellular/lumenal glycoproteins. Notably, 6AzGlcNAc cannot be biosynthetically transformed into the corresponding UDP sugar-donor by the canonical salvage-pathway that requires phosphorylation at the 6-hydroxyl. In vitro experiments showed that 6AzGlcNAc can bypass this roadblock through direct phosphorylation of its 1-hydroxyl by the enzyme phosphoacetylglucosamine mutase (AGM1). Taken together, 6AzGlcNAc enables the specific analysis of O-GlcNAcylated proteins, and these results suggest that specific MCRs for other types of glycosylation can be developed. Additionally, our data demonstrate that cells are equipped with a somewhat unappreciated metabolic flexibility with important implications for the biosynthesis of natural and unnatural carbohydrates.
O-GlcNAc proteins:
A1BN54, A2A4Z1, A2A6U3, A2AFJ1, A2AG83, A2AL12, A2AMW0, A2AMY5, LAS1L, B1AU75, OTUD4, B7FAU9, B7ZP47, D3YUC9, D3YVJ7, SAFB1, D3Z4W3, E9PVC5, E9PZM7, E9Q066, E9Q2X6, E9Q310, E9Q5L7, E9Q7M2, E9Q986, F6T2Z7, G3UZ44, G3UZI2, G3X8Q0, G3X8Y3, G3X928, G3X972, G3X9V0, G5E8E1, H3BKK2, J3JS94, CAN2, DPYL2, AIP, HDAC1, MP2K3, GSH0, DHX15, ZW10, AKAP2, SLK, NMT1, E41L2, SRPK1, PARG, SPD2A, LDHA, ANXA2, RIR1, ANXA1, LMNB1, LEG1, G3P, TPIS, COF1, FAS, CBX3, BCAT1, MCM3, MAP4, FKBP4, HMGB2, AIMP1, MP2K1, SYWC, RANG, UBP4, PTN11, RAB5C, DNLI1, CAP1, STAT3, EPS15, PURA, MSH2, ALD2, PURA2, NEDD4, GFPT1, PCY1A, ICAL, HDGF, UBP10, ACTN4, EF2, TB182, SF3B6, PCBP1, PSME3, PFD3, MTPN, DNJA1, SUMO1, IF5A1, UB2L3, HDAC2, ELAV1, 4EBP2, PYRG1, TCPB, BOP1, DAB2, XDH, UBA1, LARP7, CNN2, PP4R2, PSA, Q3TFP0, GUAA, METK2, FA98A, Q3TT92, UAP1L, NOL9, FUBP2, Q3U4W8, YRDC, NOL8, COBL1, CSTOS, LRRF1, Q3V3Y9, DDX17, MDC1, TENS3, Q5UE59, SRC8, SAMH1, KHDR1, SPB6, CAPR1, PAPS1, ASNS, LAP2B, LAP2A, PPM1G, CDC37, FXR1, PCBP2, KPCI, DDX3X, TSN, DBNL, CYTB, ZYX, RALY, SQSTM, TPP2, PEAK1, NOP58, TPM4, LTV1, ZC11A, Q6P5B5, SMHD1, GGA2, TXLNA, JUPI2, UBE2O, LARP1, 2AAA, MTCH2, DEK, MBB1A, ATX2L, OTUB1, MAP6, AFTIN, FLNB, PI42B, ZN598, SAFB2, GRWD1, CPPED, LPP, PEF1, IF4B, SYAC, RUFY1, PRUN1, CTF18, AHSA1, RCC2, IPO5, CKAP4, PPR18, HEAT3, SRRM2, HAT1, MAP1S, TLK1, CND2, THOP1, SEP11, TBL3, SEP10, UBA6, SYEP, GNL3, PDLI5, HMCS1, PKHO2, NEK9, ANLN, MATR3, CBR3, MEPCE, ERF3A, SPART, TDIF2, MCMBP, UBP15, MAVS, Q8VCQ8, PSMD2, FLNC, CPIN1, ACLY, MK67I, RINI, PUS7, CSDE1, DUS3L, KCC1A, TTC1, TADBP, RIN1, NONO, RRAGC, SERB, UBQL4, OGFR, NPM3, GLOD4, MTAP, CYB5B, PSMD9, CHSP1, OCAD1, RANB3, MFR1L, TBC15, CYBP, ZCHC8, GARS, CD37L, UB2V1, HNRPM, Q9D4G5, NOP56, IPYR, CNN3, KAP0, PLIN3, AKAP8, XRN2, MYPT1, PUR6, WDR4, SENP3, LIMA1, ANM1, NUP50, DDX20, IQGA1, MBNL1, ELOV1, DCLK1, BAG3, PPCE, CAF1A, LIMD1, DREB, TOM40, DEST, FOXO1, NFKB2, PDC6I, COR1C, TAGL2, CARM1, MTNB, GBP2, P5CS, EIF3G, SAE2, USO1, HNRPF, KEAP1
Species: Mus musculus
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Zaro BW, Yang YY, Hang HC, Pratt MR. Chemical reporters for fluorescent detection and identification of O-GlcNAc-modified proteins reveal glycosylation of the ubiquitin ligase NEDD4-1. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011 108(20) 21540332
Abstract:
The dynamic modification of nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins by the monosaccharide N-acetyl-glucosamine (GlcNAc) continues to emerge as an important regulator of many biological processes. Herein we describe the development of an alkynyl-modified GlcNAc analog (GlcNAlk) as a new chemical reporter of O-GlcNAc modification in living cells. This strategy is based on metabolic incorporation of reactive functionality into the GlcNAc biosynthetic pathway. When combined with the Cu(I)-catalyzed [3 + 2] azide-alkyne cycloaddition, this chemical reporter allowed for the robust in-gel fluorescent visualization of O-GlcNAc and affinity enrichment and identification of O-GlcNAc-modified proteins. Using in-gel fluorescence detection, we characterized the metabolic fates of GlcNAlk and the previously reported azido analog, GlcNAz. We confirmed previous results that GlcNAz can be metabolically interconverted to GalNAz, whereas GlcNAlk does not, thereby yielding a more specific metabolic reporter of O-GlcNAc modification. We also used GlcNAlk, in combination with a biotin affinity tag, to identify 374 proteins, 279 of which were not previously reported, and we subsequently confirmed the enrichment of three previously uncharacterized proteins. Finally we confirmed the O-GlcNAc modification of the ubiquitin ligase NEDD4-1, the first reported glycosylation of this protein.
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