Azevedo, CristinaSingh, JyotiSteck, NicoleHofer, AlexandreRuiz, Felix ASingh, TanyaJessen, Henning JSaiardi, Adolfo2023-01-252023-01-252018-06-20Azevedo C, Singh J, Steck N, Hofer A, Ruiz FA, Singh T, et al. Screening a Protein Array with Synthetic Biotinylated Inorganic Polyphosphate To Define the Human PolyP-ome. ACS Chem Biol. 2018 Aug 17;13(8):1958-1963http://hdl.handle.net/10668/12621Phenotypes are established by tight regulation on protein functions. This regulation can be mediated allosterically, through protein binding, and covalently, through post-translational modification (PTM). The integration of an ever-increasing number of PTMs into regulatory networks enables and defines the proteome complexity. Protein PTMs can occur enzymatically and nonenzymatically. Polyphosphorylation, which is a recently discovered PTM that belongs to the latter category, is the covalent attachment of the linear ortho-phosphate polymer called inorganic polyphosphate (polyP) to lysine residues. PolyP, which is ubiquitously present in nature, is also known to allosterically control protein function. To date, lack of reagents has prevented the systematic analysis of proteins covalently and/or allosterically associated with polyP. Here, we report on the chemical synthesis of biotin-modified monodisperse short-chain polyP (bio-polyP8-bio) and its subsequent use to screen a human proteome array to identify proteins that associate with polyP, thereby starting to define the human polyP-ome.enProtein DomainsProtein Processing, Post-TranslationalProteomeProteomicsElectrophoretic Mobility Shift AssayHeLa CellsHumansPhosphoproteinsPolyphosphatesProtein Array AnalysisScreening a Protein Array with Synthetic Biotinylated Inorganic Polyphosphate To Define the Human PolyP-ome.research article29924597open accessAnálisis por matrices de proteínasCélulas HeLaEnsayo de cambio de movilidad ElectroforéticaFosfoproteínasPolifosfatos10.1021/acschembio.8b003571554-8937https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/acschembio.8b00357