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Lysine l-lactylation is the dominant lactylation isomer induced by glycolysis

103

Citations

27

References

2024

Year

Abstract

Lysine L-lactylation (K<sub>l-la</sub>) is a novel protein posttranslational modification (PTM) driven by L-lactate. This PTM has three isomers: K<sub>l-la</sub>, N-ε-(carboxyethyl)-lysine (K<sub>ce</sub>) and D-lactyl-lysine (K<sub>d-la</sub>), which are often confused in the context of the Warburg effect and nuclear presence. Here we introduce two methods to differentiate these isomers: a chemical derivatization and high-performance liquid chromatography analysis for efficient separation, and isomer-specific antibodies for high-selectivity identification. We demonstrated that K<sub>l-la</sub> is the primary lactylation isomer on histones and dynamically regulated by glycolysis, not K<sub>d-la</sub> or K<sub>ce</sub>, which are observed when the glyoxalase system was incomplete. The study also reveals that lactyl-coenzyme A, a precursor in L-lactylation, correlates positively with K<sub>l</sub><sub>-la</sub> levels. This work not only provides a methodology for distinguishing other PTM isomers, but also highlights K<sub>l-la</sub> as the primary responder to glycolysis and the Warburg effect.

References

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