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Browse result for Up-regulation in Succinylation

※ introduction

    In biochemistry, succinylation is a posttranslational modification where a succinyl group (?CO?CH2?CH2?CO2H) is added to a lysine residue of a protein molecule. This modification is found in many proteins, including histones. The potential role of succinylation is under investigation, but as addition of succinyl group changes lysine's charge from +1 to ?1 (at physiological pH) and introduces a relatively large structural moiety (100 Da), bigger than acetylation (42 Da) or methylation (14 Da), it is expected to lead to more significant changes in protein structure and function. By analogy to acetylation, it has been suggested that succinyl-CoA is the cofactor of enzyme-mediated lysine succinylation.

Reference
Wiki: Succinylation



PTMD IDUniProt AccessionEntrez IDGene NameProtein NameOrganism
PTMD00126P005585230
PGK1
Phosphoglycerate kinase 1
Homo sapiens
PTMD00636P6843331915
H3c1
Histone H3.1
Mus musculus
PTMD00796Q9DBJ118648
Pgam1
Phosphoglycerate mutase 1
Mus musculus