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1.
Arginine methylation in RNA-binding proteins containing arginine- and glycine-rich RGG motifs is catalyzed by specific protein arginine N-methyltransferase in cells. We previously showed that lymphoblastoid cells grown in the presence of an indirect methyltransferase inhibitor, adenosine dialdehyde (AdOx), accumulated high level of hypomethylated protein substrates for the endogenous protein methyltransferases or recombinant yeast arginine methyltransferase [Li, C. et al. (1998) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 351, 53-59]. In this study we fractionated the lymphoblastoid cells to locate the methyltransferases and the substrates in cells. Different sets of hypomethylated methyl-accepting polypeptides with wide range of molecular masses were present in cytosolic, ribosomal, and nucleus fractions. The methylated amino acid residues of the methyl-accepting proteins in these fractions were determined. In all three fractions, dimethylarginine was the most abundant methylated amino acid. The protein-arginine methyltransferase activities in the three fractions were analyzed using recombinant fibrillarin (a nucleolar RGG protein) as the methyl-accepting substrate. Fibrillarin methylation was strongest in the presence of the cytosolic fraction, followed by the ribosomal and then the nucleus fractions. The results demonstrated that protein-arginine methyltransferases as well as their methyl-accepting substrates were widely distributed in different subcellular fractions of lymphoblastoid cells.  相似文献   

2.
Methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins are central to both the excitation and adaptation phases of chemotactic behavior. Using null mutations in the genes coding for the two major methyl-accepting proteins (tsr and tar), we identified the gene products among the membrane proteins of Escherichia coli visualized on one- and two-dimensional gels. On two-dimensional gels, both the tsr and the tar proteins appeared as a group of multiple spots arranged in two to four diagonal arrays. The multiplicity of forms could not be completely explained by the previously documented heterogeneity of the methylated proteins resulting from different numbers of methylated glutamyl residues per polypeptide chain. We suggest that there is at least one other way besides extent of methylation in which the polypeptides of a methylated protein can differ.  相似文献   

3.
A cytosolic protein carboxyl methyltransferase (S-adenosyl-L-methionine:protein O-methyltransferase, E.C. 2.1.1.24) purified from human erythrocytes catalyzes the methylation of erythrocyte membrane proteins in vitro using S-adenosyl-L-[methyl-3H]methionine as the methyl group donor. The principal methyl-accepting proteins have been identified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis at pH 2.4 and fluorography as the anion transport protein (band 3), ankyrin (band 2.1), and integral membrane proteins with molecular weights of 45,000, 28,000, and 21,000. Many of the methylation sites associated with intrinsic membrane proteins may reside in their extracellular portions, since these same proteins are methylated when intact cells are used as the substrate. The maximal number of methyl groups transferred in these experiments is approximately 30 pmol/mg of membrane protein, a value which represents less than one methyl group/50 polypeptide chains of any methyl-accepting species. The number of methylation sites associated with the membranes is increased, but not to stoichiometric levels, by prior demethylation of the membranes. The additional sites are associated primarily with bands 2.1 and 4.1, the principal methyl acceptors in vivo, suggesting that most methylation sites are fully modified in vivo. Extracellular methylation sites are not increased by demethylation of membranes. The aspartic acid beta-methyl ester which can be isolated from carboxypeptidase Y digests of [3H]methylated membranes is in the unusual D-stereoconfiguration. Similar results have been obtained with [3H]methylated membranes isolated from intact cells (McFadden, P.N., and Clarke, S. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 2460-2464). It is proposed that the methyltransferase recognizes D-aspartyl residues in proteins and is involved with the metabolism of damaged proteins in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
In vivo and in vitro chemotactic methylation in Bacillus subtilis   总被引:31,自引:28,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Two doublets of Bacillus subtilis membrane proteins with molecular weights of 69,000 and 71,000 and of 30,000 and 30,800, were labeled by C3H3 transfer in the absence of protein synthesis. In addition, there was intense methylation of several low-molecular-weight substances. Both doublets were missing in a chemotaxis mutant. The equivalent proteins in Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium are believed to be the methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins. The higher-molecular-weight doublet bands were increased in degree of methylation upon addition of attractant to the bacteria. A methyltransferase from B. subtilis that methylates the wild-type membrane significantly better than the mutant membrane, using S-adenosylmethionine, has been partly purified. The methylated product was alkali labile and is probably a gamma-glutamyl methyl ester, as in E. coli and S. typhimurium. Ca2+ ion inhibited the methyltransferase, with a Ki of about 80 nM. Analysis of the in vitro methylation product showed labeling of the 69,000-dalton methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein and a low-molecular-weight protein, using wild-type membrane. Labeling of the low-molecular-weight protein but not of the 69,000 dalton protein was observed when the mutant membrane was used. The chemotaxis mutant tumbled much longer than the wild type when diluted away from attractant.  相似文献   

5.
The current study was undertaken to correlate post‐translational protein modification by methylation with the functionality of enzymes involved in trehalose metabolism in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Trehalose is an economically important disaccharide providing protection against various kinds of stresses. It also acts as a source of cellular energy by storing glucose. Methyl group donor S‐adenosyl L ‐methionine (AdoMet) and methylation inhibitor‐oxidized adenosine (AdOx) were used for the methylation study. AdoMet delayed initial growth of the cells but the overall growth rate remained same suggesting its interference in G1 phase of the cell cycle. Metabolic‐altered enzyme activities of acid trehalase (AT), neutral trehalase (NT), and trehalose‐6‐phosphate synthase (TPS) were observed when treated with AdOx and AdoMet separately. A positive effect of methylation was observed in TPS, hence, it was purified in three different conditions, using AdoMet, AdOx, and control. Differences in mobility of methylated, methylation‐inhibited, and control TPS during acidic native gel electrophoresis confirmed the occurrence of induced methylation. Hydrolysis under alkaline pH conditions revealed that methylation of TPS was different than O‐methylation. MALDI‐TOF analysis of trypsin‐digested samples of purified methylated, methylation‐inhibited, and control TPS revealed that an increase of 18 Da mass in methylated peptides suggesting the introduction of methyl ester in TPS. Results of amino acid analysis corroborated the presence of methyl cysteine. The data presented here strongly suggests that trehalose production was enhanced due to methylation of TPS arising from carboxymethylation of cysteine residues. J. Cell. Physiol. 226: 158–164, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The endogenous substrate for protein carboxymethyltransferase in brain was examined. Several polypeptides were methylated when brain slices were incubated with L-methionine or when subcellular fractions of brain, such as the cytosolic fraction, were incubated with S-adenosyl L-methionine. Two methyl-accepting proteins in the cytoplasm were identified as tubulin and high molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins (300 kDa), which are components of microtubules. Tubulin behaved as a 43 kDa protein in acidic polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, but as a 55 kDa protein in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The methyl moiety transferred to these proteins from L-methionine was labile at alkaline pH. The high molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins showed higher methyl-accepting activity than tubulin or ovalbumin, which was used as a standard substrate: about 20 mmol of high molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins, 2 mmol of tubulin and 10 mmol of ovalbumin were methylated per mol of each protein in 30 min under the experimental conditions used.  相似文献   

8.
The enzymatic carboxyl methyl esterification of erythrocyte membrane proteins has been investigated in three different age-related fractions of human erythrocytes. When erythrocytes of different mean age, separated by density gradient centrifugation, were incubated under physiological conditions (pH 7.4, 37 degrees C) in the presence of L-[methyl-3H]methionine, the precursor in vivo of the methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine, a fourfold increase in membrane-protein carboxyl methylation was observed in the oldest cells compared with the youngest ones. The identification of methylated species, based on comigration of radioactivity with proteins stained with Coomassie blue, analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, shows, in all cell fractions, a pattern similar to that reported for unfractionated erythrocytes. However in the membrane of the oldest erythrocytes the increase in methylation of the cytoskeletal proteins, bands 2.1 and 4.1, appears to be significantly more marked compared with that observed in the other methylated polypeptides. Furthermore the turnover rate of incorporated [3H]methyl groups in the membrane proteins of the oldest cells markedly increases during cell ageing. Particularly in band 4.1 the age-related increase in methyl esterification is accompanied by a significant reduction of the half-life of methyl esters. The activity of cytoplasmic protein methylase II does not change during cell ageing, while the isolated ghosts from erythrocytes of different age show an age-related increased ability to act as methyl-accepting substrates, when incubated in presence of purified protein methylase II and methyl-labelled S-adenosylmethionine, therefore the relevance of membrane structure in determining membrane protein methylation levels can be postulated. Finally the possible correlation of this posttranslational protein modification with erythrocyte ageing is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) are integral membrane proteins that undergo reversible methylation during adaptation of bacterial cells to environmental attractants and repellents. The numerous methylated forms of each MCP are seen as a pattern of multiple bands on polyacrylamide gels. We have characterized the methylation sites in MCPI by analyzing methyl-accepting tryptic peptides. At least two different tryptic peptides accept methyl esters; one methyl-accepting peptide contains methionine and lysine and may be methylated a maximum of four times. The second methyl-accepting tryptic peptide contains arginine and may be methylated twice. Base-catalyzed demethylations of tryptic peptides and analysis of the charge differences between the different methylated forms of MCPI show that MCPI molecules may be methylated a total of six times. The two methyl esters on the methyl-accepting arginine peptide appear to be preferentially methylated in most of the forms of MCPI in attractant-stimulated cells. The ability to acquire six methylations on MCPI allows the bacterial cells to adapt to a broad range of attractant and repellent concentrations.  相似文献   

10.
Protein arginine methylation regulates a broad array of cellular processes. SERBP1 implicated in tumor progression through its putative involvement in the plaminogen activator protease cascade, is an RNA-binding protein containing an RG-rich domain and an RGG box domain that might be methylated by protein arginine N-methyltransferases (PRMTs). Asymmetric dimethylarginine (aDMA) was detected in SERBP1 and an indirect methyltransferase inhibitor adenosine dialdehyde (AdOx) significantly reduced the methylation signals. Arginines in the middle RG and C-terminal RGG region of SERBP1 are methylated based on the analyses of different deletion constructs. The predominant type I protein arginine methyltransferase PRMT1 co-immunoprecipitated with SERBP1 and the level of bound PRMT1 decreased upon the addition of AdOx. Recombinant PRMT1 methylated SERBP1 and knockdown of PRMT1 significantly reduced the aDMA level of SERBP1, indicating that SERBP1 is specifically methylated by PRMT1. Immunofluorescent analyses of endogenous SERBP1 showed predominant cytoplasmic localization of SERBP1. Treatment of AdOx or PRMT1 siRNA increased the nuclear localization of SERBP1. Analyses of different deletions indicated that the middle RG region is important for the nuclear localization while both N- and C- terminus are required for nuclear export. Low methylation of the C-terminal RGG region also favors nuclear localization. In conclusion, the RG-rich and RGG box of SERBP1 is asymmetrically dimethylated by PRMT1 and the modification affects protein interaction and intracellular localization of the protein. These findings provide the basis for dissecting the roles of SERBP1.  相似文献   

11.
Protein methylation in pea chloroplasts   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Niemi KJ  Adler J  Selman BR 《Plant physiology》1990,93(3):1235-1240
The methylation of chloroplast proteins has been investigated by incubating intact pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplasts with [3H-methyl]-S-adenosylmethionine. Incubation in the light increases the amount of methylation in both the thylakoid and stromal fractions. Numerous thylakoid proteins serve as substrates for the methyltransfer reactions. Three of these thylakoid proteins are methylated to a significantly greater extent in the light than in the dark. One is a polypeptide with a molecular mass of 64 kD, a second has an Mr of 48 kD, and the third has a molecular mass of less than 10 kD. The primary stromal polypeptide methylated is the large subunit of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. One other stromal polypeptide, having a molecular mass of 24 kD, is also methylated much more in the light than in the dark. Two distinct types of protein methylation occur. One methyl-linkage is stable to basic conditions whereas a second type is base labile. The base-stable linkage is indicative of N-methylation of amino acid residues while base-lability is suggestive of carboxymethylation of amino acid residues. Labeling in the light increases the percentage of methylation that is base labile in the thylakoid fraction while no difference is observed in the amount of base-labile methylations in light-labeled and dark-labeled stromal proteins. Also suggestive of carboxymethylation is the detection of volatile [3H]methyl radioactivity which increases during the labeling period and is greater in chloroplasts labeled in the light as opposed to being labeled in the dark; this implies in vivo turnover of the [3H]methyl group.  相似文献   

12.
The amino acid residue modified in the reversible methylation of Bacillus subtilis methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins was identified as glutamic acid; methylation results in the formation of glutamate 5-methyl ester. Identification was made by comparing the behaviour of a 3H-labelled compound isolated from proteolytically hydrolysed methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins labelled in vivo with that of authentic methylated amino acids by chromatographic and electrophoretic techniques. Also, the isolated compound on mild alkaline hydrolysis shows behaviour identical with that of authentic glutamate 5-methyl ester. [3H]Methanol released by mild alkaline hydrolysis was made to react with 3,5-dinitrobenzyl chloride to form [3H]methyl 3,5-dinitrobenzoate, which was identified by reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography.  相似文献   

13.
Protein methylation plays an integral role in cellular signaling, most notably by modulating proteins bound at chromatin and increasingly through regulation of non-histone proteins. One central challenge in understanding how methylation acts in signaling is identifying and measuring protein methylation. This includes locus-specific modification of histones, on individual non-histone proteins, and globally across the proteome. Protein methylation has been studied traditionally using candidate approaches such as methylation-specific antibodies, mapping of post-translational modifications by mass spectrometry, and radioactive labeling to characterize methylation on target proteins. Recent developments have provided new approaches to identify methylated proteins, measure methylation levels, identify substrates of methyltransferase enzymes, and match methylated proteins to methyl-specific reader domains. Methyl-binding protein domains and improved antibodies with broad specificity for methylated proteins are being used to characterize the “protein methylome”. They also have the potential to be used in high-throughput assays for inhibitor screens and drug development. These tools are often coupled to improvements in mass spectrometry to quickly identify methylated residues, as well as to protein microarrays, where they can be used to screen for methylated proteins. Finally, new chemical biology strategies are being used to probe the function of methyltransferases, demethylases, and methyl-binding “reader” domains. These tools create a “system-level” understanding of protein methylation and integrate protein methylation into broader signaling processes.  相似文献   

14.

FUS/TLS (fused in sarcoma/translocated in liposarcoma) encodes a multifunctional DNA/RNA binding protein with non-classical carboxy (C)-terminal nuclear localization signal (NLS). A variety of ALS-linked mutations are clustered in the C-terminal NLS, resulting in the cytoplasmic mislocalization and aggregation. Since the arginine methylations are implicated in the nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling of FUS, a methylation inhibitor could be one of therapeutic targets for FUS-linked ALS. We here examined effects of methylation inhibitors on the cytoplasmic mislocalization and aggregates of ALS-linked C-terminal FUS mutant in a cell culture system. Treatment with adenosine dialdehyde (AdOx), a representative global methyltransferase inhibitor, remarkably mitigated the cytoplasmic mislocalization and aggregation of FUS mutant, which is consistent with previous reports. However, AdOx treatment of higher concentration and longer time period evoked the intranuclear aggregation of the ectopic expressed FUS protein. The pull down assay and the morphological analysis indicated the binding between FUS and Transportin could be potentiated by AdOx treatment through modulating methylation status in RGG domains of FUS. These findings indicated the treatment with a methylation inhibitor at the appropriate levels could alleviate the cytoplasmic mislocalization but in excess this could cause the intranuclear aggregation of FUS C-terminal mutant.

  相似文献   

15.
Tethered-cell and capillary assays indicated that L-methionine is required by Cellulomonas gelida for its normal cell motility pattern and chemotaxis and that S-adenosylmethionine is involved in sugar chemotaxis by this cellulolytic bacterium. In addition, in vivo methylation assays showed that several proteins were methylated in the absence of protein synthesis. The incorporated methyl groups were alkali sensitive. Of special interest was the observation that the methylation level of a 51,000-Mr protein increased two- to fivefold upon addition of various sugar attractants and decreased after the removal of the attractants. The increase was less pronounced in mutants defective in sugar chemotaxis and appeared to be specifically involved with sugar chemotaxis. Furthermore, cell fractionation and in vitro methylation assays demonstrated that the 51,000-Mr protein is located in the cytoplasmic membrane. These results suggest that a specific methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein is involved in multiple-sugar chemotaxis by C gelida. During chemotaxis, the changes of methylesterase activity in C gelida cells were similar to those in Escherichia coli RP437 cells, as determined by a continuous-flow assay for methanol evolution. Thus, the mechanism of methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein-mediated chemotaxis of the gram-positive C. gelida appears to be similar to that of the gram-negative E. coli rather than to that of other gram-positive bacteria, such as Bacillus subtilis.  相似文献   

16.
A strategy that facilitates the identification of substrates for protein carboxyl methyltransferases that form "stable" methyl esters, i.e., those that remain largely intact during conventional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is described. Rat PC12 cells were cultured in the presence of adenosine dialdehyde (a methylation inhibitor) to promote the accumulation of hypomethylated proteins. Nonidet P-40 cell extracts were then incubated in the presence of S-[methyl-3H]adenosyl-L-methionine to label methyl-accepting sites via endogenous methyltransferases. After labeled proteins were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, gel slices were incubated in 4 N methanesulfonic acid or 6 N HCl to hydrolyze methyl esters. The resulting [3H]methanol was detected by trapping in liquid scintillation fluid. Seven carboxyl methylated proteins were observed with masses ranging from 18 to 96 kDa. Detection of five of these proteins required prior treatment of cells with adenosine dialdehyde, while methyl incorporation into one protein at 18 kDa was substantially enhanced by the treatment. The use of acidic conditions for methyl ester hydrolysis has an important advantage over assays that utilize alkaline hydrolysis conditions. In PC12 cells, and possibly other cell types where there are significant levels of arginine methylation, the methanol signal becomes obscured by high levels of volatile methylamines generated under the alkaline conditions. Carrying out diffusion assays under acidic conditions eliminates this interference. Adenosine dialdehyde, by virtue of increasing the methyl-accepting capacity of substrates for protein carboxyl methyltransferases, in combination with a more selective assay for carboxyl methylation, should prove useful in the isolation and characterization of new protein carboxyl methyltransferases and their substrates.  相似文献   

17.
Type I protein arginine N-methyltransferases catalyze the formation of omega-NG-monomethylarginine and asymmetric omega-NG, NG-dimethylarginine residues using S-adenosyl-l-methionine as the methyl donor. In vitro these enzymes can modify a number of soluble methyl-accepting substrates in yeast and mammalian cell extracts including several species that interact with RNA. We treated normal and hypomethylated Saccharomyces cerevisiae and RAT1 cell extracts with RNase prior to in vitro methylation by recombinant protein N-arginine methyltransferases and found that the methylation of certain polypeptides is enhanced up to 12-fold whereas that of others is diminished. 2-D gel electrophoresis of RNase-treated yeast extracts allowed us to tentatively identify the glycine- and arginine-rich (GAR) domain-containing proteins Gar1, Nop1, Sbp1, and Npl3 as major methyl-acceptors based on their known isoelectric points and apparent molecular weights. These results suggest that the methylation and RNA-binding of GAR domain-containing proteins in vivo may regulate protein-nucleic acid or protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

18.
The Trg protein is one of a family of transducer proteins that mediate chemotactic response in Escherichia coli. Transducers are methyl-accepting proteins that gain or lose methyl esters on specific glutamyl residues during sensory adaptation. In this study, the significance of multiple sites of methylation on transducer proteins was addressed by using oligonucleotide-directed, site-specific mutagenesis to substitute an alanyl residue at each of the five methyl-accepting sites in Trg. The resulting collection of five mutations, each inactivating a single site, was analyzed for effects on covalent modification at the remaining sites on Trg and for the ability of the altered proteins to mediate sensory adaptation. Most of the alanyl substitutions had substantial biochemical effects, enhancing or reducing methyl-accepting activity of other sites, including one case of activation of a site not methylated in wild-type protein. Analysis of the altered proteins provided explanations for many features of the complex pattern of electrophoretic forms exhibited by Trg. The mutant proteins were less efficient than normal Trg in mediating adaptation. Correlation of biochemical and behavioral data indicated that reduction in the number of methyl-accepting sites on the transducer lengthened the time required to reach an adapted state.  相似文献   

19.
The tsr and tar genetic loci of Escherichia coli determine the presence in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) I and II, respectively, each of which consists of a distinct group of multiple bands. Synthesis of the tsr and tar products was directed in ultraviolet-irradiated bacteria by lambda transducing phages. The addition of appropriate chemotactic stimuli to these cells resulted in the appearance of additional, faster migrating electrophoretic forms of the Tsr and Tar polypeptides which disappeared upon removal of the stimulus. The stimulus-elicited forms comigrated with component bands of the corresponding MCPs. These results indicate that methylation itself caused shifts in electrophoretic mobility and hence led to the observed MCP band patterns. The number of Tsr species suggested that there were at least three methylated sites on the Tsr polypeptide. The conclusion that methylation generates multiplicity was supported by the results of experiments in which the tsr product was synthesized in mutant bacteria defective in specific chemotaxis functions concerned with methylation or demethylation of MCPs. Thus, the presence of a cheX defect blocked the stimulus-elicited appearance of faster migrating forms of the tsr product; conversely, the presence of a cheB defect resulted in a pronounced shift toward these forms in the absence of a chemotactic stimulus.  相似文献   

20.
The carboxyl methylation of secretory proteins in vivo was investigated in bovine adrenal medullary cells in culture. Chromogranin A, the major intragranular secretory protein in adrenal medullary cells, and other secretory proteins were found to be carboxyl-methylated within secretory vesicles. The in vivo labeling pattern using [methyl-3H]methionine and the in vitro labeling pattern using S-adenosyl-[methyl-14C]methionine of intravesicular secretory proteins were similar. The detection of methylated chromogranin A in mature secretory vesicles required 3-6 h, a time consistent with the synthesis and storage of secretory proteins in this tissue. Carboxyl-methylated chromogranin A was secreted from medullary cells by exocytosis via activation of nicotinic cholinergic receptor and recovered still under the methylated form in the incubation medium. Since protein-carboxyl-methylase is cytosolic, these results suggest that methylation of secretory proteins is a cotranslational phenomenon.  相似文献   

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