Proteome-level assessment of origin, prevalence and function of leucine-aspartic acid (LD) motifs
Motivation
Leucine-aspartic acid (LD) motifs are short linear interaction motifs (SLiMs) that link paxillin family proteins to factors controlling cell adhesion, motility and survival. The existence and importance of LD motifs beyond the paxillin family is poorly understood.
Results
To enable a proteome-wide assessment of LD motifs, we developed an active learning based framework (LD motif finder; LDMF) that iteratively integrates computational predictions with experimental validation. Our analysis of the human proteome revealed a dozen new proteins containing LD motifs. We found that LD motif signalling evolved in unicellular eukaryotes more than 800 Myr ago, with paxillin and vinculin as core constituents, and nuclear export signal as a likely source of de novo LD motifs. We show that LD motif proteins form a functionally homogenous group, all being involved in cell morphogenesis and adhesion. This functional focus is recapitulated in cells by GFP-fused LD motifs, suggesting that it is intrinsic to the LD motif sequence, possibly through their effect on binding partners. Our approach elucidated the origin and dynamic adaptations of an ancestral SLiM, and can serve as a guide for the identification of other SLiMs for which only few representatives are known.
Other Information
Published in: Bioinformatics
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
See article on publisher's website: https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btz703
Funding
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology - KAUST (BAS/1/1056-01-01, BAS/1/1084-01-01, BAS/1/1085-01-01).
King Abdullah University of Science and Technology - KAUST (OSR (URF/1/1976-04, URF/1/1976-06, URF/1/3007-01, URF/1/1976-02, BAS/1/1606-01-01).
Office of Sponsored Research (OSR-2015-CRG4-2602).
History
Language
- English
Publisher
Oxford University PressPublication Year
- 2019
License statement
This Item is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.Institution affiliated with
- Hamad Bin Khalifa University
- College of Science and Engineering - HBKU