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The carboxylation of lysine residues is a post-translational modification (PTM) that plays a critical role in the catalytic mechanisms of several important enzymes. It occurs spontaneously under certain physicochemical conditions, but is difficult to detect experimentally. Its full impact is unknown. In this work, the signature microenvironment of lysine-carboxylation sites has been characterized. In addition, a computational method called Predictor of Lysine Carboxyl­ation (PreLysCar) for the detection of lysine carboxylation in proteins with available three-dimensional structures has been developed. The likely prevalence of lysine carboxylation in the proteome was assessed through large-scale computations. The results suggest that about 1.3% of large proteins may contain a carboxylated lysine residue. This unexpected prevalence of lysine carboxylation implies an enrichment of reactions in which it may play functional roles. The results also suggest that by switching enzymes on and off under appropriate physicochemical conditions spontaneous PTMs may serve as an important and widely used efficient biological machinery for regulation.

Supporting information

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Portable Document Format (PDF) file https://doi.org/10.1107/S139900471302364X/lv5045sup1.pdf
Supplementary Figure 1, Supplementary Tables S1-S5 and Supplementary Notes S1-S5.

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Microsoft Excel (XLSX) file https://doi.org/10.1107/S139900471302364X/lv5045sup2.xlsx
Supplementary Lists S1-S7.


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