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Dive into the research topics where Sebastian A. Wagner is active.

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Featured researches published by Sebastian A. Wagner.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2011

A Proteome-wide, Quantitative Survey of In Vivo Ubiquitylation Sites Reveals Widespread Regulatory Roles

Sebastian A. Wagner; Petra Beli; Brian T. Weinert; Michael L. Nielsen; Juergen Cox; Matthias Mann; Chunaram Choudhary

Post-translational modification of proteins by ubiquitin is a fundamentally important regulatory mechanism. However, proteome-wide analysis of endogenous ubiquitylation remains a challenging task, and almost always has relied on cells expressing affinity tagged ubiquitin. Here we combine single-step immunoenrichment of ubiquitylated peptides with peptide fractionation and high-resolution mass spectrometry to investigate endogenous ubiquitylation sites. We precisely map 11,054 endogenous putative ubiquitylation sites (diglycine-modified lysines) on 4,273 human proteins. The presented data set covers 67% of the known ubiquitylation sites and contains 10,254 novel sites on proteins with diverse cellular functions including cell signaling, receptor endocytosis, DNA replication, DNA damage repair, and cell cycle progression. Our method enables site-specific quantification of ubiquitylation in response to cellular perturbations and is applicable to any cell type or tissue. Global quantification of ubiquitylation in cells treated with the proteasome inhibitor MG-132 discovers sites that are involved in proteasomal degradation, and suggests a nonproteasomal function for almost half of all sites. Surprisingly, ubiquitylation of about 15% of sites decreased more than twofold within four hours of MG-132 treatment, showing that inhibition of proteasomal function can dramatically reduce ubiquitylation on many sites with non-proteasomal functions. Comparison of ubiquitylation sites with acetylation sites reveals an extensive overlap between the lysine residues targeted by these two modifications. However, the crosstalk between these two post-translational modifications is significantly less frequent on sites that show increased ubiquitylation upon proteasome inhibition. Taken together, we report the largest site-specific ubiquitylation dataset in human cells, and for the first time demonstrate proteome-wide, site-specific quantification of endogenous putative ubiquitylation sites.


Nature Cell Biology | 2006

Regulation of ubiquitin-binding proteins by monoubiquitination

Daniela Hoeller; Nicola Crosetto; Blagoy Blagoev; Camilla Raiborg; Ritva Tikkanen; Sebastian A. Wagner; Katarzyna Kowanetz; Rainer Breitling; Matthias Mann; Harald Stenmark; Ivan Dikic

Proteins containing ubiquitin-binding domains (UBDs) interact with ubiquitinated targets and regulate diverse biological processes, including endocytosis, signal transduction, transcription and DNA repair. Many of the UBD-containing proteins are also themselves monoubiquitinated, but the functional role and the mechanisms that underlie this modification are less well understood. Here, we demonstrate that monoubiquitination of the endocytic proteins Sts1, Sts2, Eps15 and Hrs results in intramolecular interactions between ubiquitin and their UBDs, thereby preventing them from binding in trans to ubiquitinated targets. Permanent monoubiquitination of these proteins, mimicked by the fusion of ubiquitin to their carboxyl termini, impairs their ability to regulate trafficking of ubiquitinated receptors. Moreover, we mapped the in vivo monoubiquitination site in Sts2 and demonstrated that its mutation enhances the Sts2-mediated effects of epidermal-growth-factor-receptor downregulation. We propose that monoubiquitination of ubiquitin-binding proteins inhibits their capacity to bind to and control the functions of ubiquitinated targets in vivo.


Molecular Cell | 2013

Acetyl-phosphate is a critical determinant of lysine acetylation in E. coli.

Brian T. Weinert; Vytautas Iesmantavicius; Sebastian A. Wagner; Christian Schölz; Bertil Gummesson; Petra Beli; Thomas Nyström; Chunaram Choudhary

Lysine acetylation is a frequently occurring posttranslational modification in bacteria; however, little is known about its origin and regulation. Using the model bacterium Escherichia coli (E. coli), we found that most acetylation occurred at a low level and accumulated in growth-arrested cells in a manner that depended on the formation of acetyl-phosphate (AcP) through glycolysis. Mutant cells unable to produce AcP had significantly reduced acetylation levels, while mutant cells unable to convert AcP to acetate had significantly elevated acetylation levels. We showed that AcP can chemically acetylate lysine residues in vitro and that AcP levels are correlated with acetylation levels in vivo, suggesting that AcP may acetylate proteins nonenzymatically in cells. These results uncover a critical role for AcP in bacterial acetylation and indicate that most acetylation in E. coli occurs at a low level and is dynamically affected by metabolism and cell proliferation in a global, uniform manner.


Science Signaling | 2011

Proteome-Wide Mapping of the Drosophila Acetylome Demonstrates a High Degree of Conservation of Lysine Acetylation

Brian T. Weinert; Sebastian A. Wagner; Heiko Horn; Peter Henriksen; Wenshe R. Liu; J. Olsen; Lars Juhl Jensen; Chunaram Choudhary

Comparing the acetylomes with the phosphoproteomes of flies and humans suggests that phosphorylation sites may have evolved faster than did acetylation sites. Age of the Acetylome Acetylation and phosphorylation are regulatory posttranslational modifications that occur on proteins. With proteome-wide data in divergent species, insights regarding the evolution of these two regulatory processes can be revealed. Weinert et al. report the proteome-wide analysis of acetylated proteins in the fruit fly. Comparing the data on acetylated proteins in humans and flies with proteome sequences of nematodes and zebrafish indicated that acetylated sites were more conserved than were nonacetylated sites, and comparison of the human and fly acetylomes with their phosphoproteomes indicated that acetylation sites were more conserved than were phosphorylation sites. Acetylation intersected with another posttranslational modification, ubiquitylation: Acetylation occurred on one-third of human ubiquitin-conjugating E2 enzymes and influenced the activity of these enzymes, suggesting that acetylation provides another regulatory layer for this other type of posttranslational modification. Posttranslational modification of proteins by acetylation and phosphorylation regulates most cellular processes in living organisms. Surprisingly, the evolutionary conservation of phosphorylated serine and threonine residues is only marginally higher than that of unmodified serines and threonines. With high-resolution mass spectrometry, we identified 1981 lysine acetylation sites in the proteome of Drosophila melanogaster. We used data sets of experimentally identified acetylation and phosphorylation sites in Drosophila and humans to analyze the evolutionary conservation of these modification sites between flies and humans. Site-level conservation analysis revealed that acetylation sites are highly conserved, significantly more so than phosphorylation sites. Furthermore, comparison of lysine conservation in Drosophila and humans with that in nematodes and zebrafish revealed that acetylated lysines were significantly more conserved than were nonacetylated lysines. Bioinformatics analysis using Gene Ontology terms suggested that the proteins with conserved acetylation control cellular processes such as protein translation, protein folding, DNA packaging, and mitochondrial metabolism. We found that acetylation of ubiquitin-conjugating E2 enzymes was evolutionarily conserved, and mutation of a conserved acetylation site impaired the function of the human E2 enzyme UBE2D3. This systems-level analysis of comparative posttranslational modification showed that acetylation is an anciently conserved modification and suggests that phosphorylation sites may have evolved faster than acetylation sites.


Molecular Cell | 2012

Proteomic investigations reveal a role for RNA processing factor THRAP3 in the DNA damage response

Petra Beli; Natalia Lukashchuk; Sebastian A. Wagner; Brian T. Weinert; J. Olsen; Linda Baskcomb; Matthias Mann; Chunaram Choudhary

The regulatory networks of the DNA damage response (DDR) encompass many proteins and posttranslational modifications. Here, we use mass spectrometry-based proteomics to analyze the systems-wide response to DNA damage by parallel quantification of the DDR-regulated phosphoproteome, acetylome, and proteome. We show that phosphorylation-dependent signaling networks are regulated more strongly compared to acetylation. Among the phosphorylated proteins identified are many putative substrates of DNA-PK, ATM, and ATR kinases, but a majority of phosphorylated proteins do not share the ATM/ATR/DNA-PK target consensus motif, suggesting an important role of downstream kinases in amplifying DDR signals. We show that the splicing-regulator phosphatase PPM1G is recruited to sites of DNA damage, while the splicing-associated protein THRAP3 is excluded from these regions. Moreover, THRAP3 depletion causes cellular hypersensitivity to DNA-damaging agents. Collectively, these data broaden our knowledge of DNA damage signaling networks and highlight an important link between RNA metabolism and DNA repair.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2012

Proteome-wide Analysis of Lysine Acetylation Suggests its Broad Regulatory Scope in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Peter Henriksen; Sebastian A. Wagner; Brian T. Weinert; Satyan Sharma; Giedrė Bačinskaja; Michael Rehman; André H. Juffer; Tobias C. Walther; Michael Lisby; Chunaram Choudhary

Post-translational modification of proteins by lysine acetylation plays important regulatory roles in living cells. The budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a widely used unicellular eukaryotic model organism in biomedical research. S. cerevisiae contains several evolutionary conserved lysine acetyltransferases and deacetylases. However, only a few dozen acetylation sites in S. cerevisiae are known, presenting a major obstacle for further understanding the regulatory roles of acetylation in this organism. Here we use high resolution mass spectrometry to identify about 4000 lysine acetylation sites in S. cerevisiae. Acetylated proteins are implicated in the regulation of diverse cytoplasmic and nuclear processes including chromatin organization, mitochondrial metabolism, and protein synthesis. Bioinformatic analysis of yeast acetylation sites shows that acetylated lysines are significantly more conserved compared with nonacetylated lysines. A large fraction of the conserved acetylation sites are present on proteins involved in cellular metabolism, protein synthesis, and protein folding. Furthermore, quantification of the Rpd3-regulated acetylation sites identified several previously known, as well as new putative substrates of this deacetylase. Rpd3 deficiency increased acetylation of the SAGA (Spt-Ada-Gcn5-Acetyltransferase) complex subunit Sgf73 on K33. This acetylation site is located within a critical regulatory domain in Sgf73 that interacts with Ubp8 and is involved in the activation of the Ubp8-containing histone H2B deubiquitylase complex. Our data provides the first global survey of acetylation in budding yeast, and suggests a wide-ranging regulatory scope of this modification. The provided dataset may serve as an important resource for the functional analysis of lysine acetylation in eukaryotes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Phosphorylation of OPTN by TBK1 enhances its binding to Ub chains and promotes selective autophagy of damaged mitochondria

Benjamin Richter; Danielle A. Sliter; Lina Herhaus; Alexandra Stolz; Chunxin Wang; Petra Beli; Gabriele Zaffagnini; Philipp Wild; Sascha Martens; Sebastian A. Wagner; Richard J. Youle; Ivan Dikic

Significance Selective autophagy of damaged mitochondria (mitophagy) requires protein kinases PINK1 and TBK1, ubiquitin ligase Parkin, and autophagy receptors such as OPTN, driving ubiquitin-labeled mitochondria into autophagosomes. Because all proteins have been genetically linked to either Parkinson’s disease (PINK1 and Parkin) or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal lobar degeneration (TBK1 and OPTN), it is of great interest to understand their physiological functions. By utilizing quantitative proteomics we show that TBK1 phosphorylates four receptors on several autophagy-relevant sites. Constitutive interaction of TBK1 with OPTN and the ability of OPTN to bind to ubiquitin chains are essential for TBK1 recruitment and activation on mitochondria. TBK1-mediated phosphorylation of OPTN creates a signal amplification loop through combining recruitment and retention of OPTN/TBK1 on ubiquitinated mitochondria. Selective autophagy of damaged mitochondria requires autophagy receptors optineurin (OPTN), NDP52 (CALCOCO2), TAX1BP1, and p62 (SQSTM1) linking ubiquitinated cargo to autophagic membranes. By using quantitative proteomics, we show that Tank-binding kinase 1 (TBK1) phosphorylates all four receptors on several autophagy-relevant sites, including the ubiquitin- and LC3-binding domains of OPTN and p62/SQSTM1 as well as the SKICH domains of NDP52 and TAX1BP1. Constitutive interaction of TBK1 with OPTN and the ability of OPTN to bind to ubiquitin chains are essential for TBK1 recruitment and kinase activation on mitochondria. TBK1 in turn phosphorylates OPTN’s UBAN domain at S473, thereby expanding the binding capacity of OPTN to diverse Ub chains. In combination with phosphorylation of S177 and S513, this posttranslational modification promotes recruitment and retention of OPTN/TBK1 on ubiquitinated, damaged mitochondria. Moreover, phosphorylation of OPTN on S473 enables binding to pS65 Ub chains and is also implicated in PINK1-driven and Parkin-independent mitophagy. Thus, TBK1-mediated phosphorylation of autophagy receptors creates a signal amplification loop operating in selective autophagy of damaged mitochondria.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2012

Proteomic Analyses Reveal Divergent Ubiquitylation Site Patterns in Murine Tissues

Sebastian A. Wagner; Petra Beli; Brian T. Weinert; Christian Schölz; Christian D. Kelstrup; Clifford Young; Michael L. Nielsen; J. Olsen; Cord Brakebusch; Chunaram Choudhary

Posttranslational modifications of proteins increase the complexity of the cellular proteome and enable rapid regulation of protein functions in response to environmental changes. Protein ubiquitylation is a central regulatory posttranslational modification that controls numerous biological processes including proteasomal degradation of proteins, DNA damage repair and innate immune responses. Here we combine high-resolution mass spectrometry with single-step immunoenrichment of di-glycine modified peptides for mapping of endogenous putative ubiquitylation sites in murine tissues. We identify more than 20,000 unique ubiquitylation sites on proteins involved in diverse biological processes. Our data reveals that ubiquitylation regulates core signaling pathways common for each of the studied tissues. In addition, we discover that ubiquitylation regulates tissue-specific signaling networks. Many tissue-specific ubiquitylation sites were obtained from brain highlighting the complexity and unique physiology of this organ. We further demonstrate that different di-glycine-lysine-specific monoclonal antibodies exhibit sequence preferences, and that their complementary use increases the depth of ubiquitylation site analysis, thereby providing a more unbiased view of protein ubiquitylation.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2014

Acetylation dynamics and stoichiometry in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Brian T. Weinert; Vytautas Iesmantavicius; Tarek Moustafa; Christian Schölz; Sebastian A. Wagner; Christoph Magnes; Rudolf Zechner; Chunaram Choudhary

Lysine acetylation is a frequently occurring posttranslational modification; however, little is known about the origin and regulation of most sites. Here we used quantitative mass spectrometry to analyze acetylation dynamics and stoichiometry in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We found that acetylation accumulated in growth‐arrested cells in a manner that depended on acetyl‐CoA generation in distinct subcellular compartments. Mitochondrial acetylation levels correlated with acetyl‐CoA concentration in vivo and acetyl‐CoA acetylated lysine residues nonenzymatically in vitro. We developed a method to estimate acetylation stoichiometry and found that the vast majority of mitochondrial and cytoplasmic acetylation had a very low stoichiometry. However, mitochondrial acetylation occurred at a significantly higher basal level than cytoplasmic acetylation, consistent with the distinct acetylation dynamics and higher acetyl‐CoA concentration in mitochondria. High stoichiometry acetylation occurred mostly on histones, proteins present in histone acetyltransferase and deacetylase complexes, and on transcription factors. These data show that a majority of acetylation occurs at very low levels in exponentially growing yeast and is uniformly affected by exposure to acetyl‐CoA.


Nature Biotechnology | 2015

Acetylation site specificities of lysine deacetylase inhibitors in human cells

Christian Schölz; Brian T. Weinert; Sebastian A. Wagner; Petra Beli; Yasuyuki Miyake; Jun Qi; Lars Juhl Jensen; Werner Streicher; Anna R. McCarthy; Nicholas J. Westwood; Sonia Lain; Jürgen Cox; Patrick Matthias; Matthias Mann; James E. Bradner; Chunaram Choudhary

Lysine deacetylases inhibitors (KDACIs) are used in basic research, and many are being investigated in clinical trials for treatment of cancer and other diseases. However, their specificities in cells are incompletely characterized. Here we used quantitative mass spectrometry (MS) to obtain acetylation signatures for 19 different KDACIs, covering all 18 human lysine deacetylases. Most KDACIs increased acetylation of a small, specific subset of the acetylome, including sites on histones and other chromatin-associated proteins. Inhibitor treatment combined with genetic deletion showed that the effects of the pan-sirtuin inhibitor nicotinamide are primarily mediated by SIRT1 inhibition. Furthermore, we confirmed that the effects of tubacin and bufexamac on cytoplasmic proteins result from inhibition of HDAC6. Bufexamac also triggered an HDAC6-independent, hypoxia-like response by stabilizing HIF1-α, providing a possible mechanistic explanation of its adverse, pro-inflammatory effects. Our results offer a systems view of KDACI specificities, providing a framework for studying function of acetylation and deacetylases.

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Petra Beli

University of Copenhagen

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Niels Mailand

University of Copenhagen

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Ivan Dikic

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Daniela Hoeller

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Hubert Serve

Goethe University Frankfurt

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