¾«Æ·¹ú²úÒ»Çø¶þÇøÌÒÉ«

Journal News

From the journals: ¾«Æ·¹ú²úÒ»Çø¶þÇøÌÒÉ«

Sarah May
Jan. 19, 2022

Making heads or tails of flatworm regeneration. Lighting the path to discovery of dark immunopeptides. Exploring the relations between acylations. Read about papers on these topics recently published in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

Making heads or tails of flatworm regeneration

Flatworms have the extraordinary ability to regrow most of their bodies — even a new head and tail — after amputation. Humans can only regenerate certain tissues, mainly the fingertips and liver. If we understood how to turn on regeneration in humans, we potentially could activate it to restore other damaged tissues and organs.

Cut in half, the flatworm Schmidtea mediterranea regenerates into two complete worms.

Regeneration only occurs when cells are in the right environment. The extracellular matrix, a scaffold that covers the outside of cells, could lay the foundation for new tissue growth and carry the biological signals that turn on regeneration. But researchers do not know which components of the extracellular matrix enable organisms like the flatworm to regenerate lost or damaged tissue.

In a published in the journal , Ekasit Sonpho and colleagues at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research used three techniques to remove the cells of Schmidtea mediterranea, a type of flatworm, leaving behind a purified extracellular matrix. Performing liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry, the researchers identified proteins in the flatworm’s extracellular matrix, with each isolation technique enriching for a different set of proteins. After knocking down 39 candidate extracellular matrix proteins in S. mediterranea by RNA interference, one protein — heparan sulfate proteoglycan — emerged as a key factor in tissue regeneration. Its presence enabled flatworms to survive in the early days after tissue injury.

The authors highlight the feasibility of using S. mediterranea as a model system for studying the function of the extracellular matrix, particularly in whole-body regeneration. Compared to other regenerative model organisms, such as axolotls and zebra fish, researchers can use flatworms to more easily identify extracellular matrix proteins and determine their roles in regeneration through loss-of-function screens. These new tools could give us clues to the process of regeneration and its potential applications for human health.

 

Lighting the path to discovery of dark immunopeptides

Immune system T cells can recognize and destroy cancer cells. Most cells break down some of their own proteins into short peptides, called immunopeptides, which they present to T cells like showing an ID. When a cancer cell presents a mutated immunopeptide, T cells recognize it as a fake ID and trigger an immune response to destroy the cancer cell. These mutations could allow scientists to target T cells directly to cancer cells. But researchers have found it challenging to identify the immunopeptides with mutations or other alterations because their sequences do not match the conventional sequences in protein databases. Lacking easy detection, they are known as dark immunopeptides.

In a in the journal , Katherine Scull and colleagues at Monash University performed RNA sequencing on the acute myeloid leukemia cell line THP-1 and used those results to create a protein database that includes both conventional and unconventional immunopeptide sequences. By the conventional method, the researchers identified 14,000 immunopeptides in THP-1 cells. Their new method captured over 85% of these immunopeptides and led to the discovery of an additional 1,029 unconventional peptides not found in protein databases. Their workflow may help scientists identify dark immunopeptides in other cancers and develop cancer-specific vaccines.

 

Exploring the relations between acylations

One type of protein modification, known as acylation, or the addition of an acyl group, can occur at the side chain of lysine residues. Acyl groups come in several varieties, including acetyl and succinyl groups. Acylation can impact a protein’s function drastically by regulating its activity, stability and location within the cell. Researchers don’t know if different acylations work together to perform their biological roles in gene transcription, metabolism and aging.

Yujiao Yang, Hong Zhang and colleagues at the Chinese Academy of Sciences used immunoaffinity to enrich for proteins with modified lysine and mass spectrometry to quantify global acetylation and succinylation of the bacteria Streptomyces coelicolor. Their in the journal shows that many lysine residues can be both acetylated and succinylated, suggesting that they could compete to modify the same lysine. Of the proteins with lysine acylations, approximately 75% were both acetylated and succinylated, either at the same lysine or different lysine residues. For central metabolism proteins, the percentage was even higher. Knocking out the desuccinylase ScCobB2, which removes succinylation, also affected protein acetylation, suggesting there is crosstalk in regulating lysine acylations. Overall, the authors provide new protein targets for studying lysine acetylation and succinylation in metabolism.

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Sarah May

Sarah May is a scientific writer at the University of Chicago.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Science

Science highlights or most popular articles

Parsing plant pigment pathways
Webinar

Parsing plant pigment pathways

June 13, 2025

Erich Grotewold of Michigan State University, an ASBMB Breakthroughs speaker, discusses his work on the genetic regulation of flavonoid biosynthesis.

Calcium channel linked to cancer drug resistance
Journal News

Calcium channel linked to cancer drug resistance

June 12, 2025

Researchers discover a protein associated with carboplatin-resistant retinoblastoma, suggesting this protein could be a promising therapeutic target. Read more about this recent Journal of Biological Chemistry paper.

Host fatty acids enhance dengue virus infectivity
Journal News

Host fatty acids enhance dengue virus infectivity

June 12, 2025

Researchers in Germany find that viral replication depends on host enzymes that synthesize lipids, revealing potential metabolic targets for antiviral intervention. Read more about this recent Journal of Biological Chemistry paper.

Antibodies inhibit hyperactive protein disposal
Journal News

Antibodies inhibit hyperactive protein disposal

June 12, 2025

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, identify an enzyme inhibitor, offering new tools to study diseases like cystic fibrosis, neurodegeneration and cancer. Read more about this recent Journal of Biological Chemistry paper.

Scientists find unexpected correlation between age and HDL-C levels
Journal News

Scientists find unexpected correlation between age and HDL-C levels

June 3, 2025

In a 30-year multicenter study, researchers determined what factors predict HDL-C concentration. In their analysis, they found that HDL-C levels grew with increasing age and physical activity.

Butter, olive oil, coconut oil — what to choose?
Journal News

Butter, olive oil, coconut oil — what to choose?

May 28, 2025

Depending on the chain length and origin of the fat, regular fat consumption changes the specific makeup of fats in bloodstream and affect mild to severe cholesterol patterns. Read about this recent Journal of Lipid Research study.