Histidine phosphorylation in human cells; a needle or phantom in the haystack?

Publication date

2022-07

Authors

Leijten, Niels MISNI 0000000492906511
Heck, Albert J.R.ORCID 0000-0002-2405-4404ISNI 0000000393921118
Lemeer, SimoneISNI 0000000419422764

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Article
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taverne

Abstract

It has been suggested that in mammalian cells histidine residues in proteins may become as frequently phosphorylated as serine, threonine and tyrosine, and may play a key role in mammalian signaling. Here we applied a robust workflow that earlier allowed us to detect histidine phosphorylation in bacteria unambiguously, to probe for histidine phosphorylation in four human cell lines. Initially, seemingly hundreds of protein histidine phosphorylations were picked up in all studied human cell lines. However, careful examination of the data, and several control experiments, led us to the conclusion that >99% of these initially assigned pHis sites were not genuine, and should be site localized to neighboring Ser/Thr residues. Nevertheless, our methods are selective enough to detect just a handful of genuine pHis sites in mammalian cells, representing well-known enzymatic intermediates. Consequently, we do not find any evidence in our data supporting that protein histidine phosphorylation plays a role in mammalian signaling.

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Citation

Leijten, N M, Heck, A J R & Lemeer, S 2022, 'Histidine phosphorylation in human cells; a needle or phantom in the haystack?', Nature Methods, vol. 19, no. 7, pp. 827-828. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41592-022-01524-0