Wu_2004_Mol.Biol.Cell_15_2907

Reference

Title : Organellar proteomics reveals Golgi arginine dimethylation - Wu_2004_Mol.Biol.Cell_15_2907
Author(s) : Wu CC , Maccoss MJ , Mardones G , Finnigan C , Mogelsvang S , Yates JR, 3rd , Howell KE
Ref : Mol Biology of the cell , 15 :2907 , 2004
Abstract :

The Golgi complex functions to posttranslationally modify newly synthesized proteins and lipids and to sort them to their sites of function. In this study, a stacked Golgi fraction was isolated by classical cell fractionation, and the protein complement (the Golgi proteome) was characterized using multidimensional protein identification technology. Many of the proteins identified are known residents of the Golgi, and 64% of these are predicted transmembrane proteins. Proteins localized to other organelles also were identified, strengthening reports of functional interfacing between the Golgi and the endoplasmic reticulum and cytoskeleton. Importantly, 41 proteins of unknown function were identified. Two were selected for further analysis, and Golgi localization was confirmed. One of these, a putative methyltransferase, was shown to be arginine dimethylated, and upon further proteomic analysis, arginine dimethylation was identified on 18 total proteins in the Golgi proteome. This survey illustrates the utility of proteomics in the discovery of novel organellar functions and resulted in 1) a protein profile of an enriched Golgi fraction; 2) identification of 41 previously uncharacterized proteins, two with confirmed Golgi localization; 3) the identification of arginine dimethylated residues in Golgi proteins; and 4) a confirmation of methyltransferase activity within the Golgi fraction.

PubMedSearch : Wu_2004_Mol.Biol.Cell_15_2907
PubMedID: 15047867
Gene_locus related to this paper: ratno-hyep

Related information

Gene_locus ratno-hyep

Citations formats

Wu CC, Maccoss MJ, Mardones G, Finnigan C, Mogelsvang S, Yates JR, 3rd, Howell KE (2004)
Organellar proteomics reveals Golgi arginine dimethylation
Mol Biology of the cell 15 :2907

Wu CC, Maccoss MJ, Mardones G, Finnigan C, Mogelsvang S, Yates JR, 3rd, Howell KE (2004)
Mol Biology of the cell 15 :2907