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Lysyl Oxidase 3 Is a Dual-Specificity Enzyme Involved in STAT3 Deacetylation and Deacetylimination Modulation.
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- Author(s): Ma, Li1,2; Huang, Chao1,3 ; Wang, Xiong-Jun1; Xin, Dazhuan Eric1; Wang, Li-shun1; Zou, Quanli C.1; Zhang, Ya-nan S.1; Tan, Min-dian1; Wang, Yu-mei1; Zhao, Ting C.2; Chatterjee, Devasis2; Altura, Rachel A.2; Wang, Chuangui4; Xu, Yan S.5; Yang, Jing-hua5; Fan, Yong-sheng6; Han, Bao-hui3; Si, Jianmin7; Zhang, Xiaoren1; Cheng, Jinke8
- Source:
Molecular Cell. Jan2017, Vol. 65 Issue 2, p296-309. 14p.
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- Abstract:
Summary In mammalian cells, histone deacetylase (HDAC) and Sirtuin (SIRT) are two families responsible for removing acetyl groups from acetylated proteins. Here, we describe protein deacetylation coupled with deacetylimination as a function of lysyl oxidase (LOX) family members. LOX-like 3 (Loxl3) associates with Stat3 in the nucleus to deacetylate and deacetyliminate Stat3 on multiple acetyl-lysine sites. Surprisingly, Loxl3 N-terminal scavenger receptor cysteine-rich (SRCR) repeats, rather than the C-terminal oxidase catalytic domain, represent the major deacetylase/deacetyliminase activity. Loxl3-mediated deacetylation/deacetylimination disrupts Stat3 dimerization, abolishes Stat3 transcription activity, and restricts cell proliferation. In Loxl3 −/− mice, Stat3 is constitutively acetylated and naive CD4 + T cells are potentiated in Th17/Treg cell differentiation. When overexpressed, the SRCR repeats from other LOX family members can catalyze protein deacetylation/deacetylimination. Thus, our findings delineate a hitherto-unknown mechanism of protein deacetylation and deacetylimination catalyzed by lysyl oxidases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Abstract:
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