s (NATs).
N-terminal acetylation is one of the most common co-translational covalent modifications of proteins in
eukaryotes, and it is crucial for the regulation and function of different proteins. N-terminal acetylation plays an important role in the synthesis, stability and localization of proteins. About 85% of all human proteins and 68% in
yeast are acetylated at their Nα-terminus. Several proteins from
prokaryotes and
archaea are also modified by N-terminal acetylation. N-terminal Acetylation is catalyzed by a set of enzyme complexes, the
N-terminal acetyltransferases (NATs). NATs transfer an acetyl group from
acetyl-coenzyme A (Ac-CoA) to the α-amino group of the first
amino acid residue of the protein. Different NATs are responsible for the acetylation of nascent protein N-terminal, and the acetylation was found to be irreversible so far.
N-terminal acetyltransferases To date, seven different NATs have been found in humans - NatA, NatB, NatC, NatD, NatE, NatF and NatH. Each of these different enzyme complexes is specific for different amino acids or amino acid sequences which is shown in the following table.
Table 1. The Composition and Substrate specificity of NATs. NatA ''. The green chains represent the auxiliary subunit Naa15 and the cyan chains the catalytic subunit Naa10. (PDB ID: 4KVM) NatA is composed of two subunits, the catalytic
subunit Naa10 and the auxiliary subunit Naa15. NatA subunits are more complex in higher
eukaryotes than in lower eukaryotes. In addition to the genes
NAA10 and
NAA15, the mammal-specific genes
NAA11 and
NAA16, make functional gene products, which form different active NatA complexes. Four possible hNatA catalytic-auxiliary dimers are formed by these four proteins. However, Naa10/Naa15 is the most abundant NatA. NatA acetylates
Ser,
Ala-,
Gly-, Thr-,
Val- and
Cys N-termini after the initiator
methionine is removed by methionine amino-peptidases. These amino acids are more frequently expressed in the N-terminal of proteins in eukaryotes, so NatA is the major NAT corresponding to the whole number of its potential substrates. Several different interaction partners are involved in the N-terminal acetylation by NatA. Huntingtin interacting protein K (HYPK) interacts with hNatA on the
ribosome to affect the N-terminal acetylation of a subset of NatA substrates. Subunits hNaa10 and hNaa15 will increase the tendency for aggregation of Huntingtin if HYPK is depleted.
Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α has also been found to interact with hNaa10 to inhibit hNaa10-mediated activation of β-catenin transcriptional activity.
NatB NatB complexes are composed of the catalytic subunit Naa20p and the auxiliary subunit Naa25p, which are both found in yeast and humans. In
yeast, all the NatB subunits are ribosome-associated; but in humans, NatB subunits are both found to be ribosome-associated and non-ribosomal form. NatB acetylates the N-terminal methionine of substrates starting with
Met-
Glu-,
Met-
Asp-,
Met-
Asn- or
Met-
Gln- N termini.
NatC NatC complex consists of one catalytic subunit Naa30p and two auxiliary subunits Naa35p and Naa38p. All three subunits are found on the ribosome in yeast, but they are also found in non-ribosomal NAT forms like Nat2. NatC complex acetylates the N-terminal methionine of substrates
Met-
Leu-,
Met-Ile-,
Met-Trp- or
Met-
Phe N-termini.
NatD NatD is only composed with the catalytic unit Naa40p and Naa40p and it is conceptually different form the other NATs. At first, only two substrates, H2A and H4 have been identified in yeast and humans. Secondly, the substrate specificity of Naa40p lies within the first 30-50 residues which are quite larger than the substrate specificity of other NATs. The acetylation of histones by NatD is partially associate with ribosomes and the amino acids substrates are the very N-terminal residues, which makes it different from
lysine N-acetyltransferases (KATs).
NatE NatE complex consists with subunit Naa50p and two NatA subunits, Naa10p and Naa15p. The N terminus of Naa50p substrates is different from those acetylated by the NatA activity of Naa10p. NAA50 in plants is essential to control plant growth, development, and stress responses and NAA50 function is highly conserved between humans and plants.
NatF NatF is a NAT that is composed of the Naa60 enzyme. Initially, it was thought that NatF was only found in higher eukaryotes, since it was absent from yeast. However, it was later found that Naa60 is found throughout the eukaryotic domain, but was secondarily lost in the fungi lineage. Compared to yeast, NatF contributes to the higher abundance of N-terminal acetylation in humans. NatF complex acetylates the N-terminal methionine of substrates
Met-
Lys-,
Met-
Leu-,
Met-Ile-,
Met-Trp- and
Met-
Phe N termini which are partly overlapping with NatC and NatE. The organellar localization of Naa60 is mediated by its unique C-terminus, which consists of two alpha helices that peripherally associate with the membrane and mediate interactions with
PI(4)P.
NAA80/NatH NAA80/NatH is an N-terminal acetyltransferase that specifically acetylates the N-terminus of
actin.
N-terminal acetylation function Protein stability N-terminal acetylation of proteins can affect protein stability, but the results and mechanism were not very clear until now. It was believed that N-terminal acetylation protects proteins from being degraded as Nα-acetylation N-termini were supposed to block N-terminal ubiquitination and subsequent
protein degradation. However, several studies have shown that the N-terminal acetylated protein have a similar degradation rate as proteins with a non-blocked N-terminus.
Protein localization N-terminal acetylation has been shown that it can steer the localization of proteins. Arl3p is one of the 'Arf-like' (Arl)
GTPases, which is crucial for the organization of membrane traffic. It requires its Nα-acetyl group for its targeting to the Golgi membrane by the interaction with Golgi membrane-residing protein Sys1p. If the
Phe or Tyr is replaced by an
Ala at the N-terminal of Arl3p, it can no longer localized to the Golgi membrane, indicating that Arl3p needs its natural N-terminal residues which could be acetylated for proper localization.
Metabolism and apoptosis Protein N-terminal acetylation has also been proved to relate with cell cycle regulation and apoptosis with protein knockdown experiments. Knockdown of the NatA or the NatC complex leads to the induction of
p53-dependent
apoptosis, which may indicate that the anti-apoptotic proteins were less or no longer functional because of reduced protein N-terminal acetylation. But in contrast, the
caspase-2, which is acetylated by NatA, can interact with the adaptor protein RIP associated Ich-1/Ced-3 homologous protein with a death domain (RAIDD). This could activate caspase-2 and induce
cell apoptosis.
Protein synthesis Ribosome proteins play an important role in the protein synthesis, which could also be N-terminal acetylated. The N-terminal acetylation of the ribosome proteins may have an effect on protein synthesis. A decrease of 27% and 23% in the protein synthesis rate was observed with NatA and NatB deletion strains. A reduction of translation fidelity was observed in the NatA deletion strain and a defect in ribosome was noticed in the NatB deletion strain.
Cancer NATs have been suggested to act as both onco-proteins and tumor suppressors in human cancers, and NAT expression may be increased and decreased in cancer cells. Ectopic expression of hNaa10p increased
cell proliferation and up regulation of gene involved in cell survival proliferation and
metabolism. Overexpression of hNaa10p was in the urinary
bladder cancer,
breast cancer and
cervical carcinoma. But a high level expression of hNaa10p could also suppress tumor growth and a reduced level of expressed hNaa10p is associated with a poor prognosis, large tumors and more lymph node metastases.
Table 2. Overview of the expression of NatA subunits in various cancer tissues == Lysine acetylation and deacetylation ==