Abstract

A family of zDHHC protein acyltransferase (PAT) enzymes catalyze the S-palmitoylation of target proteins via a two-step mechanism. The first step involves transfer of palmitate from the palmitoyl-CoA donor to the active site cysteine of the zDHHC PAT enzyme, releasing reduced CoA (CoASH). In the second step, the palmitoyl-PAT intermediate thioester reacts with a cysteine side chain within the target substrate to produce the palmitoylated substrate product or, in the absence of a protein substrate, the palmitoyl-PAT intermediate thioester is hydrolyzed and releases palmitate. Formation and resolution of the palmitoyl-PAT intermediate complex (autopalmitoylation) is measured using a coupled enzyme system that monitors the production of CoASH via reduction of NAD+ by the α-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase complex. This assay can be used to isolate and characterize modulators of autopalmitoylation and is scalable to high-throughput screening (HTS). A second fluorescence-based assay is described that monitors the hydrolysis of the palmitoyl-PAT thioester linked intermediate by thin-layer chromatography using a palmitoyl-CoA analog, BODIPY®-C12:0-CoA, as a substrate. These two assays provide a methodology to quantify the first enzymatic step of the two-step zDHHC PAT reaction.

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