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Kee, Jung-Min
Bioorganic and Chembio Lab.
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Chasing Phosphohistidine, an Elusive Sibling in the Phosphoamino Acid Family

Alternative Title
Chasing Phosphohistidine, an Elusive Sibling in the Phosphoamino Acid Fa mily
Author(s)
Kee, Jung-MinMuir, Tom W.
Issued Date
2012-01
DOI
10.1021/cb200445w
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/13328
Fulltext
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/cb200445w
Citation
ACS CHEMICAL BIOLOGY, v.7, no.1, pp.44 - 51
Abstract
This year (2012) marks the 50th anniversary of the discovery of protein histidine phosphorylation. Phosphorylation of histidine (pHis) is now widely recognized as being critical to signaling processes in prokaryotes and lower eukaryotes. However, the modification is also becoming more widely reported in mammalian cellular processes and implicated in certain human disease states such as cancer and inflammation. Nonetheless, much remains to be understood about the role and extent of the modification in mammalian cell biology. Studying the functional role of pHis in signaling, either in vitro or in vivo, has proven devilishly hard, largely due to the chemical instability of the modification. As a consequence, we are currently handicapped by a chronic lack of chemical and biochemical tools with which to study histidine phosphorylation. Here, we discuss the challenges associated with studying the chemical biology of pHis and review recent., progress that offers some hope that long-awaited biochemical reagents for studying this elusive posttranslational modification (PTM) might soon be available
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
ISSN
1554-8929
Keyword (Author)
Posttranslational modification (PTM)PhosphoproteomicsHistidine phosphorylationPhosphoramidateHistidine kinaseTwo-component signaling systemPhosphohistidine analogueProtein semisynthesis
Keyword
NUCLEOSIDE DIPHOSPHATE KINASEPROTEIN HISTIDINE PHOSPHORYLATIONATP-CITRATE LYASE2-COMPONENT SIGNAL-TRANSDUCTIONNUCLEAR MAGNETIC-RESONANCELABILE HISTONE PHOSPHATESBETA-GAMMA DIMERSMASS-SPECTROMETRYRAT-LIVERPHOSPHOTRANSFERASE SYSTEM

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