Nascent alt-protein chemoproteomics reveals a pre-60S assembly checkpoint inhibitor

  • Xiongwen Cao
  • , Alexandra Khitun
  • , Cecelia M. Harold
  • , Carson J. Bryant
  • , Shu Jian Zheng
  • , Susan J. Baserga
  • , Sarah A. Slavoff*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

23 Scopus citations

Abstract

Many unannotated microproteins and alternative proteins (alt-proteins) are coencoded with canonical proteins, but few of their functions are known. Motivated by the hypothesis that alt-proteins undergoing regulated synthesis could play important cellular roles, we developed a chemoproteomic pipeline to identify nascent alt-proteins in human cells. We identified 22 actively translated alt-proteins or N-terminal extensions, one of which is post-transcriptionally upregulated by DNA damage stress. We further defined a nucleolar, cell-cycle-regulated alt-protein that negatively regulates assembly of the pre-60S ribosomal subunit (MINAS-60). Depletion of MINAS-60 increases the amount of cytoplasmic 60S ribosomal subunit, upregulating global protein synthesis and cell proliferation. Mechanistically, MINAS-60 represses the rate of late-stage pre-60S assembly and export to the cytoplasm. Together, these results implicate MINAS-60 as a potential checkpoint inhibitor of pre-60S assembly and demonstrate that chemoproteomics enables hypothesis generation for uncharacterized alt-proteins. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)643-651
Number of pages9
JournalNature Chemical Biology
Volume18
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2022
Externally publishedYes

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