Could large-scale screens help us identify and characterize functional microproteins (i.e. proteins derived from short open reading frames of less than 100 codons)? At the Elsässer lab, we aimed to find out.
In our study, we used pooled overexpression screens using a curated library of over 11,000 sORFs and then performed phenotypic screens to discover microproteins that confer resistance to cancer cells undergoing selective pressure (in this case, treatment with nucleotide analogue 6-thioguanine). Did we find anything of note? Yes we did! Here, we describe PIPPI, a microprotein from the Morpheus gene cluster (criminally underrated, I mean, under-investigated locus despite evolutionary conservation) that localizes to and interacts with proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum to regulate ER stress response in cancer cells. Read more
here!