Notum deacylates Wnt proteins to suppress signalling activity
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Satoshi Kakugawa Paul F Langton Matthias Zebisch Steven A Howell Tao-Hsin Chang Yan Liu Ten Feizi Ganka Bineva Nicola O'Reilly Bram Snijders E Yvonne Jones Jean-Paul VincentAbstract
Signalling by Wnt proteins is finely balanced to ensure normal development and tissue homeostasis while avoiding diseases such as cancer. This is achieved in part by Notum, a highly conserved secreted feedback antagonist. Notum has been thought to act as a phospholipase, shedding glypicans and associated Wnt proteins from the cell surface. However, this view fails to explain specificity, as glypicans bind many extracellular ligands. Here we provide genetic evidence in Drosophila that Notum requires glypicans to suppress Wnt signalling, but does not cleave their glycophosphatidylinositol anchor. Structural analyses reveal glycosaminoglycan binding sites on Notum, which probably help Notum to co-localize with Wnt proteins. They also identify, at the active site of human and Drosophila Notum, a large hydrophobic pocket that accommodates palmitoleate. Kinetic and mass spectrometric analyses of human proteins show that Notum is a carboxylesterase that removes an essential palmitoleate moiety from Wnt proteins and thus constitutes the first known extracellular protein deacylase.
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Journal Nature
Volume 519
Issue number 7542
Pages 187-192
Available online
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Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/nature14259
Europe PubMed Central 25731175
Pubmed 25731175
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