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. 2019 Oct 15;116(42):21256-21261.
doi: 10.1073/pnas.1906768116. Epub 2019 Oct 2.

Mining for protein S-sulfenylation in Arabidopsis uncovers redox-sensitive sites

Affiliations

Mining for protein S-sulfenylation in Arabidopsis uncovers redox-sensitive sites

Jingjing Huang et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. .

Abstract

Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is an important messenger molecule for diverse cellular processes. H2O2 oxidizes proteinaceous cysteinyl thiols to sulfenic acid, also known as S-sulfenylation, thereby affecting the protein conformation and functionality. Although many proteins have been identified as S-sulfenylation targets in plants, site-specific mapping and quantification remain largely unexplored. By means of a peptide-centric chemoproteomics approach, we mapped 1,537 S-sulfenylated sites on more than 1,000 proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana cells. Proteins involved in RNA homeostasis and metabolism were identified as hotspots for S-sulfenylation. Moreover, S-sulfenylation frequently occurred on cysteines located at catalytic sites of enzymes or on cysteines involved in metal binding, hinting at a direct mode of action for redox regulation. Comparison of human and Arabidopsis S-sulfenylation datasets provided 155 conserved S-sulfenylated cysteines, including Cys181 of the Arabidopsis MITOGEN-ACTIVATED PROTEIN KINASE4 (AtMAPK4) that corresponds to Cys161 in the human MAPK1, which has been identified previously as being S-sulfenylated. We show that, by replacing Cys181 of recombinant AtMAPK4 by a redox-insensitive serine residue, the kinase activity decreased, indicating the importance of this noncatalytic cysteine for the kinase mechanism. Altogether, we quantitatively mapped the S-sulfenylated cysteines in Arabidopsis cells under H2O2 stress and thereby generated a comprehensive view on the S-sulfenylation landscape that will facilitate downstream plant redox studies.

Keywords: Arabidopsis; S-sulfenylation; chemoproteomics; posttranslational modification; redox regulation.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no competing interest.

Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Quantitative Cys-SOH identification in Arabidopsis. (A) Workflow for in vivo S-sulfenylation labeling and analysis in Arabidopsis cell cultures. The BTD-based probe was sketched as an arrow (chemical warhead) followed by 3 lines indicating the alkyne handle. (B) Mapping of the 1,537 identified Cys-SOHs sites on 1,394 (Araport11) proteins, of which 200 proteins were identified to be S-sulfenylated previously (–19) (Right) and 1,194 were discovered as protein targets (Left) (Dataset S1). (C) Ratios (RH2O2/Control, y axis) plotted for 463 Cys-SOH sites quantified in at least 2 out of 3 replicates (x axis). Ratios of at least 1.5-fold increases (red, 92 Cys-SOHs) or decreases (green, 3 Cys-SOHs) are shown. (Inset) For the catalytic Cys of MsrB3/7/8/9 (encircled in bold), the extracted-ion chromatogram is displayed (H2O2/light in red, and control/heavy in blue).
Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.
Subcellular localization distribution and functional enrichment of S-sulfenylation events. (A) Subcellular distribution of 809 S-sulfenylated proteins defined as high-confidence markers (HCMs) by the Multiple Marker Abundance Profiling tool (28, 29). Organelles are colored proportionally to the S-sulfenylated HCMs. (B) Gene set enrichment of S-sulfenylated proteins for KEGG pathways (blue) and custom protein classes (SI Appendix, Materials and Methods) (Top). Fold enrichment (y axis) is plotted as a function of statistical significance (minus log Q value, x axis). Node size corresponds to the number of S-sulfenylated proteins. Bar chart outlining the number of Cys-SOHs for the enriched KEGG pathways and protein classes (Bottom). Induced Cys-SOHs (RH2O2/Ctrl ≥ 1.5) are plotted, and their respective proportion is displayed. (C) Cys-SOH domain enrichment (SI Appendix, Materials and Methods). Fold enrichment (y axis) is plotted as a function of statistical significance (minus log Q value, x axis). Node size is scaled to the number of Cys-SOHs. ER, endoplasmic reticulum; PM, plasma membrane.
Fig. 3.
Fig. 3.
Evolutionary comparison of Arabidopsis and human Cys-SOH sites. (A) Overrepresentation motifs of Cys-SOH sequence windows (−6 to +6 residues) of human (20) and Arabidopsis BTD-labeled sites constructed by iceLogo (39). Basic residues Lys, Arg, and His are in blue, and Cys is in red. (B) Overview of Arabidopsis Cys-SOH alignment scenarios and their occurrence. (C) Examples of Arabidopsis (green)–human (blue) protein sequence alignments with exact alignments of S-sulfenylation events (red, with protein position indicated). Ratios (RH2O2/Ctrl) were derived from this study (Dataset S1), with the number of biological replicates indicated between parentheses, and as reported for human RKO cells treated with H2O2 (23).
Fig. 4.
Fig. 4.
Sulfenylation of Cys181 of AtMAPK4 that is crucial for the kinase activity. (A) S-sulfenylation of the H2O2-sensitive Cys in the MAP kinase signature (PS01351 PROSITE pattern) in Arabidopsis (Cys176 in AtMAPK3; Cys181 in AtMAPK4; Cys201 in AtMAPK6; and Cys178 in AtMAPK11) and human (Cys161 in HsMAPK1). (B) Dimedone blot showing AtMAPK4 S-sulfenylation under 1 mM H2O2 for 1 h. (C). Annotated spectrum match of ‘DLKPSNLLLNANC181DLK’ with Cys181 modified by dimedone (+138.0 Da). (D) Kinase activity of AtMAPK4 and its C181S variant as measured on phosphorimage displaying myelic basic protein (MBP) phosphorylation with [32P]ATP. (E) Kinase activity of autophosphorylated (Pi) and nonautophosphorylated AtMAPK4 and its C181S variant as measured by quantitative Cerenkov counting after 45 min of incubation with MBP.

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