Nanobody-thioesterase chimeras to specifically target protein palmitoylation
The complexity of the cellular proteome is massively expanded by a repertoire of chemically distinct reversible post-translational modifications (PTMs) that control protein localisation, interactions, and function. The temporal and spatial control of these PTMs is central to organism physiology, and mis-regulation of PTMs is a hallmark of many diseases. Here we present an approach to manipulate PTMs on target proteins using nanobodies fused to enzymes that control these PTMs. Anti-GFP nanobodies fused to thioesterases (which depalmitoylate protein cysteines) depalmitoylate GFP tagged substrates. A chemogenetic approach to enhance nanobody affinity for its target enables temporal control of target depalmitoylation. Using a thioesterase fused to a nanobody directed against the Ca(v)1.2 beta subunit we reduce palmitoylation of the Ca(v)1.2 alpha subunit, modifying the channel’s voltage dependence and arrhythmia susceptibility in stem cell derived cardiac myocytes. We conclude that nanobody enzyme chimeras represent an approach to specifically manipulate PTMs, with applications in both the laboratory and the clinic.
History
School affiliated with
- College of Health and Science (Research Outputs)
- School of Natural Sciences (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Nature CommunicationsVolume
16Pages/Article Number
1445Publisher
Nature ResearchExternal DOI
eISSN
2041-1723Date Submitted
2024-02-18Date Accepted
2025-01-27Date of Final Publication
2025-02-07Will your conference paper be published in proceedings?
- N/A