The putative myristoylome of Physcomitrium patens reveals conserved features of myristoylation in basal land plants

Plant cell reports(2023)

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Abstract
Keymessage The putative myristoylome of moss P. patens opens an avenue for studying myristoylation substrates in non-canonical model plants. A myristoylation signal was shown sufficient for membrane targeting and useful for membrane dynamics visualization during cell growth. Abstract N -myristoylation (MYR) is one form of lipid modification catalyzed by N -myristoyltransferase that enables protein-membrane association. MYR is highly conserved in all eukaryotes. However, the study of MYR is limited to a few models such as yeasts, humans, and Arabidopsis. Here, using prediction tools, we report the characterization of the putative myristoylome of the moss Physcomitrium patens . We show that basal land plants display a similar signature of MYR to Arabidopsis and may have organism-specific substrates. Phylogenetically, MYR signals have mostly co-evolved with protein function but also exhibit variability in an organism-specific manner. We also demonstrate that the MYR motif of a moss brassinosteroid-signaling kinase is an efficient plasma membrane targeting signal and labels lipid-rich domains in tip-growing cells. Our results provide insights into the myristoylome in a basal land plant and lay the foundation for future studies on MYR and its roles in plant evolution.
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Key words
Brassinosteroid-signaling kinase,Calcineurin B-like protein,Calcium-dependent protein kinase,Myristoylation,Physcomitrium patens,Plasma membrane,Tip growth
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