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    1. Biochemistry and Chemical Biology
    2. Cell Biology

    Quantitative proteomics reveals the selectivity of ubiquitin-binding autophagy receptors in the turnover of damaged lysosomes by lysophagy

    Vinay V Eapen, Sharan Swarup ... J Wade Harper
    A combination of spatial proteomic and autophagic flux approaches was used to reveal the landscape of turnover of damaged lysosomes, demonstrating a key role for the autophagy receptor TAX1BP1 and its associated kinase TBK1 in both HeLa cells and iNeurons.
    1. Biochemistry and Chemical Biology

    Quantitative mapping of proteasome interactomes and substrates using ProteasomeID

    Aleksandar Bartolome, Julia C Heiby ... Alessandro Ori
    Proximity labeling combined with mass spectrometry enables to map the proteasome proximal proteome in cells and mouse tissues.
    1. Cell Biology

    Detection of TurboID fusion proteins by fluorescent streptavidin outcompetes antibody signals and visualises targets not accessible to antibodies

    Johanna Odenwald, Bernardo Gabiatti ... Susanne Kramer
    Proteins that are low abundant and/or poorly accessible to antibodies can be readily localised with fluorescent streptavidin, when expressed fused to a biotin ligase.
    1. Plant Biology

    Proximity labeling of protein complexes and cell-type-specific organellar proteomes in Arabidopsis enabled by TurboID

    Andrea Mair, Shou-Ling Xu ... Dominique C Bergmann
    Proximity-labeling using engineered biotin ligases TurboID and miniTurbo enables detection of cell-type-specific and low abundance protein complexes and subcellular proteomes in Arabidopsis and other plants.
    1. Cell Biology

    In vivo proteomic mapping through GFP-directed proximity-dependent biotin labelling in zebrafish

    Zherui Xiong, Harriet P Lo ... Thomas E Hall
    BLITZ system enables proximity-dependent biotin labelling in live zebrafish embryos with cell and tissue specificity, providing a versatile and valuable tool for proteomic discovery using the zebrafish model.
    1. Microbiology and Infectious Disease

    The Toxoplasma monocarboxylate transporters are involved in the metabolism within the apicoplast and are linked to parasite survival

    Hui Dong, Jiong Yang ... Shaojun Long
    Combined cutting-edge technologies discovered a pair of carboxylate transporters that appears evolutionarily different among novel transporters and that is essential for parasite physiology.
    1. Neuroscience

    Subcellular proteomics of dopamine neurons in the mouse brain

    Benjamin D Hobson, Se Joon Choi ... Peter A Sims
    APEX2 proximity labeling of genetically targeted neurons enables subcellular and cell type-specific proteomics in the mouse brain, revealing the axonal and somatodendritic proteomes of midbrain dopaminergic neurons.
    1. Cell Biology

    α-/γ-Taxilin are required for centriolar subdistal appendage assembly and microtubule organization

    Dandan Ma, Fulin Wang ... Jianguo Chen
    Super-resolution microscopy, biochemical and functional analyses reveal how α-taxilin and γ-taxilin are assembled at the subdistal appendages and their roles in microtubule organization.
    1. Cancer Biology
    2. Cell Biology

    mTORC1/S6K1 signaling promotes sustained oncogenic translation through modulating CRL3IBTK-mediated ubiquitination of eIF4A1 in cancer cells

    Dongyue Jiao, Huiru Sun ... Kun Gao
    Overexpression of inhibitor of Bruton's tyrosine kinase contributes to the process of tumorigenesis by amplifying translation, represents a promising target for anti-cancer therapies.