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Abstract

Post-translational modification (PTM) serves as a regulatory mechanism for protein function, influencing their stability, interactions, activity and localization, and is critical in many signaling pathways. The best characterized PTM is phosphorylation, whereby a phosphate is added to an acceptor residue, most commonly serine, threonine and tyrosine in metazoans. As proteins are often phosphorylated at multiple sites, identifying those sites that are important for function is a challenging problem. Considering that any given phosphorylation site might be non-functional, prioritizing evolutionarily conserved phosphosites provides a general strategy to identify the putative functional sites. To facilitate the identification of conserved phosphosites, we generated a large-scale phosphoproteomics dataset from Drosophila embryos collected from six closely-related species. We built iProteinDB (https://www.flyrnai.org/tools/iproteindb/), a resource integrating these data with other high-throughput PTM datasets, including vertebrates, and manually curated information for Drosophila. At iProteinDB, scientists can view the PTM landscape for any Drosophila protein and identify predicted functional phosphosites based on a comparative analysis of data from closely-related Drosophila species. Further, iProteinDB enables comparison of PTM data from Drosophila to that of orthologous proteins from other model organisms, including human, mouse, rat, Xenopus tropicalis, Danio rerio, and Caenorhabditis elegans.

Details

Title
iProteinDB: An Integrative Database of Drosophila Post-translational Modifications
Author
Hu, Yanhui 1 ; Sopko, Richelle 2 ; Chung, Verena 1 ; Foos, Marianna 2 ; Studer, Romain A 3 ; Landry, Sean D 4 ; Liu, Daniel 5 ; Rabinow, Leonard 2 ; Gnad, Florian 4 ; Beltrao, Pedro 3 ; Perrimon, Norbert 6 

 Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA 02115; Drosophila RNAi Screening Center, Harvard Medical School, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA 02115 
 Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA 02115 
 European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), European Bioinformatics Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge CB10 1SD, UK 
 Department of Bioinformatics, Cell Signaling Technology Inc., 3 Trask Lane, Danvers, MA 01923 
 Drosophila RNAi Screening Center, Harvard Medical School, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA 02115 
 Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA 02115; Drosophila RNAi Screening Center, Harvard Medical School, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA 02115; Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA 02115 
Pages
1-11
Publication year
2019
Publication date
Jan 1, 2019
Publisher
Oxford University Press
e-ISSN
21601836
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3169763141
Copyright
© 2019 Hu et al..