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Dive into the research topics where Sarah A. Slavoff is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah A. Slavoff.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2013

Peptidomic discovery of short open reading frame–encoded peptides in human cells

Sarah A. Slavoff; Andrew J. Mitchell; Adam G. Schwaid; Moran N. Cabili; Jiao Ma; Joshua Z. Levin; Amir D Karger; Bogdan Budnik; John L. Rinn; Alan Saghatelian

The amount of the transcriptome that is translated into polypeptides is of fundamental importance. We developed a peptidomic strategy to detect short ORF (sORF)-encoded polypeptides (SEPs) in human cells. We identified 90 SEPs, 86 of which are novel, the largest number of human SEPs ever reported. SEP abundances range from 10-1000 molecules per cell, identical to known proteins. SEPs arise from sORFs in non-coding RNAs as well as multi-cistronic mRNAs, and many SEPs initiate with non-AUG start codons, indicating that non-canonical translation may be more widespread in mammals than previously thought. In addition, coding sORFs are present in a small fraction (8/1866) of long intergenic non-coding RNAs (lincRNAs). Together, these results provide the strongest evidence to date that the human proteome is more complex than previously appreciated.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Expanding the substrate tolerance of biotin ligase through exploration of enzymes from diverse species

Sarah A. Slavoff; Irwin Chen; Yoon-Aa Choi; Alice Y. Ting

Technologies that enable the site-specific conjugation of chemical probes onto proteins are extremely useful for applications in cell biology and proteomics. We cloned, expressed, and purified biotin ligases from nine different species and screened them for the ability to ligate unnatural analogues of biotin onto the human p67 biotin acceptor domain. We discovered that the biotin ligases of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (yeast) and Pyrococcus horikoshii could accept alkyne and azide derivatives of biotin, respectively. HPLC, gel-shift, and mass spectrometry assays confirmed that these ligation reactions were ATP- and enzyme-dependent, as well as site-specific. We used the P. horikoshii-catalyzed azide ligation reaction to site-specifically introduce a phosphine probe onto p67 using the Staudinger ligation. These new ligation reactions demonstrate the differential substrate specificities of biotin ligases from different organisms and open the door to novel protein labeling applications.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

A Human Short Open Reading Frame (sORF)-encoded Polypeptide That Stimulates DNA End Joining

Sarah A. Slavoff; Jinho Heo; Bogdan Budnik; Leslyn A. Hanakahi; Alan Saghatelian

Background: Large numbers of peptides encoded in human short open reading frames have been recently identified but not yet functionally characterized. Results: A peptide interacts with the Ku heterodimer and stimulates nonhomologous end-joining DNA repair. Conclusion: Newly discovered cellular peptides can be functionally characterized by identifying their interaction partners. Significance: Short ORF-encoded polypeptides participate in essential cellular processes. The recent discovery of numerous human short open reading frame (sORF)-encoded polypeptides (SEPs) has raised important questions about the functional roles of these molecules in cells. Here, we show that a 69-amino acid SEP, MRI-2, physically interacts with the Ku heterodimer to stimulate DNA double-strand break ligation via nonhomologous end joining. The characterization of MRI-2 suggests that this SEP may participate in DNA repair and underscores the potential of SEPs to serve important biological functions in mammalian cells.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2017

A human microprotein that interacts with the mRNA decapping complex

Nadia G D'Lima; Jiao Ma; Lauren Winkler; Qian Chu; Ken H Loh; Elizabeth O. Corpuz; Bogdan Budnik; Jens Lykke-Andersen; Alan Saghatelian; Sarah A. Slavoff

Proteomic detection of non-annotated microproteins indicates the translation of hundreds of small open reading frames in human cells, but whether these microproteins are functional is unknown. Here, we report the discovery and characterization of a 7-kilodalton human microprotein we named non-annotated P-body dissociating polypeptide (NoBody). NoBody interacts with mRNA decapping proteins, which remove the 5’ cap from mRNAs to promote 5’-3’ decay. Decapping proteins participate in mRNA turnover and nonsense mediated decay (NMD). NoBody localizes to mRNA decay-associated RNA-protein granules called P-bodies. Modulation of NoBody levels reveals that its abundance is anti-correlated with cellular P-body numbers and alters the steady-state levels of a cellular NMD substrate. These results implicate NoBody as a novel component of the mRNA decapping complex and demonstrate potential functionality of a newly discovered microprotein.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Chemoproteomic Discovery of Cysteine-Containing Human Short Open Reading Frames

Adam G. Schwaid; D. Alexander Shannon; Jiao Ma; Sarah A. Slavoff; Joshua Z. Levin; Eranthie Weerapana; Alan Saghatelian

The application of ribosome profiling and mass spectrometry technologies has recently revealed that the human proteome is larger than previously appreciated. Short open reading frames (sORFs), which are difficult to identify using traditional gene-finding algorithms, constitute a significant fraction of unknown protein-coding genes. Thus, experimental approaches to identify sORFs provide invaluable insight into the protein-coding potential of genomes. Here, we report an affinity-based approach to enrich and identify cysteine-containing human sORF-encoded polypeptides (ccSEPs) from cells. This approach revealed 16 novel ccSEPs, each derived from an uncharacterized sORF, demonstrating its potential for discovering new genes. We validated expression of a SEP from its endogenous RNA, and demonstrated the specificity of our labeling approach using synthetic SEP. The discovery of additional human SEPs and their conservation indicate the potential importance of these molecules in biology.


Biochemistry | 2018

P-Bodies: Composition, Properties, and Functions

Yang Luo; Zhenkun Na; Sarah A. Slavoff

Processing bodies (P-bodies) are cytoplasmic ribonucleoprotein (RNP) granules primarily composed of translationally repressed mRNAs and proteins related to mRNA decay, suggesting roles in post-transcriptional regulation. P-bodies are conserved in eukaryotic cells and exhibit properties of liquid droplets. However, the function of P-bodies in translational repression and/or mRNA decay remains contentious. Here we review recent advances in our understanding of the molecular composition of P-bodies, the interactions and processes that regulate P-body liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS), and the cellular localization of mRNA decay machinery, in the context of how these discoveries refine models of P-body function.


Biochemistry | 2018

Comparative Membrane Proteomics Reveals a Nonannotated E. coli Heat Shock Protein

Peijia Yuan; Nadia G. D’Lima; Sarah A. Slavoff

Recent advances in proteomics and genomics have enabled discovery of thousands of previously nonannotated small open reading frames (smORFs) in genomes across evolutionary space. Furthermore, quantitative mass spectrometry has recently been applied to analysis of regulated smORF expression. However, bottom-up proteomics has remained relatively insensitive to membrane proteins, suggesting they may have been underdetected in previous studies. In this report, we add biochemical membrane protein enrichment to our previously developed label-free quantitative proteomics protocol, revealing a never-before-identified heat shock protein in Escherichia coli K12. This putative smORF-encoded heat shock protein, GndA, is likely to be ∼36–55 amino acids in length and contains a predicted transmembrane helix. We validate heat shock-regulated expression of the gndA smORF and demonstrate that a GndA-GFP fusion protein cofractionates with the cell membrane. Quantitative membrane proteomics therefore has the ability to reveal nonannotated small proteins that may play roles in bacterial stress responses.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2017

Comparative Proteomics Enables Identification of Nonannotated Cold Shock Proteins in E. coli

Nadia G. D’Lima; Alexandra Khitun; Aaron D. Rosenbloom; Peijia Yuan; Brandon M. Gassaway; Karl W. Barber; Jesse Rinehart; Sarah A. Slavoff

Recent advances in mass spectrometry-based proteomics have revealed translation of previously nonannotated microproteins from thousands of small open reading frames (smORFs) in prokaryotic and eukaryotic genomes. Facile methods to determine cellular functions of these newly discovered microproteins are now needed. Here, we couple semiquantitative comparative proteomics with whole-genome database searching to identify two nonannotated, homologous cold shock-regulated microproteins in Escherichia coli K12 substr. MG1655, as well as two additional constitutively expressed microproteins. We apply molecular genetic approaches to confirm expression of these cold shock proteins (YmcF and YnfQ) at reduced temperatures and identify the noncanonical ATT start codons that initiate their translation. These proteins are conserved in related Gram-negative bacteria and are predicted to be structured, which, in combination with their cold shock upregulation, suggests that they are likely to have biological roles in the cell. These results reveal that previously unknown factors are involved in the response of E. coli to lowered temperatures and suggest that further nonannotated, stress-regulated E. coli microproteins may remain to be found. More broadly, comparative proteomics may enable discovery of regulated, and therefore potentially functional, products of smORF translation across many different organisms and conditions.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2018

How many human proteoforms are there

Ruedi Aebersold; Jeffrey N. Agar; I. Jonathan Amster; Mark S. Baker; Carolyn R. Bertozzi; Emily S. Boja; Catherine E. Costello; Benjamin F. Cravatt; Catherine Fenselau; Benjamin A. Garcia; Ying Ge; Jeremy Gunawardena; Ronald C. Hendrickson; Paul J. Hergenrother; Christian G. Huber; Alexander R. Ivanov; Ole Nørregaard Jensen; Michael C. Jewett; Neil L. Kelleher; Laura L. Kiessling; Nevan J. Krogan; Martin R. Larsen; Joseph A. Loo; Rachel R. Ogorzalek Loo; Emma Lundberg; Michael J. MacCoss; Parag Mallick; Vamsi K. Mootha; Milan Mrksich; Tom W. Muir


Nature Biotechnology | 2012

Discovering ligand-receptor interactions

Sarah A. Slavoff; Alan Saghatelian

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Alan Saghatelian

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Jiao Ma

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Alice Y. Ting

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Irwin Jungreis

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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