Dipartimento di Biologia Cellulare, Computazionale e Integrata - CIBIO

Seminar / Workshop

Image
Epitelium image
Mapping Cryptic Phosphorylation Sites in the Human Proteome
18 June 2025, start time 16:30 - 18:30
Room B109
Free
Organizer: Department of Cellular, Computational and Integrative Biology
Target audience: University community
Referent: comunicazione.cibio@unitn.it
Contacts: 
Staff of the Department of Cellular, Computational and Integrative Biology - CIBIO
Image
Epitelium image
  • medicina
  • research
Speaker: Dino Gasparotto

Dulbecco Telethon Laboratory of Prions and Amyloids
 

Advances in computational and experimental methods have revealed the existence of transient, non-native protein folding intermediates that could play roles in disparate biological processes, from regulation of protein expression to disease-relevant misfolding mechanisms. Here, we tested the possibility that specific post-translational modifications may involve residues exposed during the folding process by assessing the solvent accessibility of 87,138 post-translationally modified amino acids in the human proteome. Unexpectedly, we found that one-third of phosphorylated proteins present at least one phosphosite completely buried within the protein’s inner core. Computational and experimental analyses suggest that these cryptic phosphosites may become exposed during the folding process, where their modification could destabilize native structures and trigger protein degradation. Phylogenetic investigation also reveals that cryptic phosphosites are more conserved than surface-exposed phosphorylated residues. Finally, cross-referencing with cancer mutation databases suggests that phosphomimetic mutations in cryptic phosphosites can increase tumor fitness by inactivating specific onco-suppressors. These findings define a novel role for co-translational phosphorylation in shaping protein folding and expression, laying the groundwork for exploring the implications of cryptic phosphorylation in health and disease.