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NRMT is an α-N-methyltransferase that methylates RCC1 and Retinoblastoma Protein

The post-translational methylation of α-amino groups was first discovered over 30 years ago on the bacterial ribosomal proteins L16 and L331–2, but almost nothing is known about the function or enzymology of this modification. Several other bacterial and eukaryotic proteins have since been shown to...

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Autores principales: Tooley, Christine E. Schaner, Petkowski, Janusz J., Muratore-Schroeder, Tara L., Balsbaugh, Jeremy L., Shabanowitz, Jeffrey, Sabat, Michal, Minor, Wladek, Hunt, Donald F., Macara, Ian G.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2939154/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20668449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09343
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author Tooley, Christine E. Schaner
Petkowski, Janusz J.
Muratore-Schroeder, Tara L.
Balsbaugh, Jeremy L.
Shabanowitz, Jeffrey
Sabat, Michal
Minor, Wladek
Hunt, Donald F.
Macara, Ian G.
author_facet Tooley, Christine E. Schaner
Petkowski, Janusz J.
Muratore-Schroeder, Tara L.
Balsbaugh, Jeremy L.
Shabanowitz, Jeffrey
Sabat, Michal
Minor, Wladek
Hunt, Donald F.
Macara, Ian G.
author_sort Tooley, Christine E. Schaner
collection PubMed
description The post-translational methylation of α-amino groups was first discovered over 30 years ago on the bacterial ribosomal proteins L16 and L331–2, but almost nothing is known about the function or enzymology of this modification. Several other bacterial and eukaryotic proteins have since been shown to be α-N-methylated3–10. However, the Ran guanine nucleotide-exchange factor, RCC1, is the only protein for which any biological function of α-N-methylation has been identified3, 11. Methylation-defective mutants of RCC1 have reduced affinity for DNA and cause mitotic defects3, 11, but further characterization of this modification has been hindered by ignorance of the responsible methyltransferase. All fungal and animal N-terminally methylated proteins contain a unique N-terminal motif, Met-(Ala/Pro/Ser)-Pro-Lys, indicating they may be targets of the same, unknown enzyme3,12. The initiating Met is cleaved, and the exposed α-amino group is mono-, di-, or trimethylated. Here we report the discovery of the first α-N-methyltransferase, which we named N-terminal RCC1 methyltransferase (NRMT). Substrate docking and mutational analysis of RCC1 defined the NRMT recognition sequence and enabled the identification of numerous new methylation targets, including SET/TAF-I/PHAPII and the retinoblastoma protein, RB. Knockdown of NRMT recapitulates the multi-spindle phenotype seen with methylation-defective RCC1 mutants3, demonstrating the importance of alpha-N-methylation for normal bipolar spindle formation and chromosome segregation.
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spelling pubmed-29391542011-02-01 NRMT is an α-N-methyltransferase that methylates RCC1 and Retinoblastoma Protein Tooley, Christine E. Schaner Petkowski, Janusz J. Muratore-Schroeder, Tara L. Balsbaugh, Jeremy L. Shabanowitz, Jeffrey Sabat, Michal Minor, Wladek Hunt, Donald F. Macara, Ian G. Nature Article The post-translational methylation of α-amino groups was first discovered over 30 years ago on the bacterial ribosomal proteins L16 and L331–2, but almost nothing is known about the function or enzymology of this modification. Several other bacterial and eukaryotic proteins have since been shown to be α-N-methylated3–10. However, the Ran guanine nucleotide-exchange factor, RCC1, is the only protein for which any biological function of α-N-methylation has been identified3, 11. Methylation-defective mutants of RCC1 have reduced affinity for DNA and cause mitotic defects3, 11, but further characterization of this modification has been hindered by ignorance of the responsible methyltransferase. All fungal and animal N-terminally methylated proteins contain a unique N-terminal motif, Met-(Ala/Pro/Ser)-Pro-Lys, indicating they may be targets of the same, unknown enzyme3,12. The initiating Met is cleaved, and the exposed α-amino group is mono-, di-, or trimethylated. Here we report the discovery of the first α-N-methyltransferase, which we named N-terminal RCC1 methyltransferase (NRMT). Substrate docking and mutational analysis of RCC1 defined the NRMT recognition sequence and enabled the identification of numerous new methylation targets, including SET/TAF-I/PHAPII and the retinoblastoma protein, RB. Knockdown of NRMT recapitulates the multi-spindle phenotype seen with methylation-defective RCC1 mutants3, demonstrating the importance of alpha-N-methylation for normal bipolar spindle formation and chromosome segregation. 2010-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2939154/ /pubmed/20668449 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09343 Text en Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Tooley, Christine E. Schaner
Petkowski, Janusz J.
Muratore-Schroeder, Tara L.
Balsbaugh, Jeremy L.
Shabanowitz, Jeffrey
Sabat, Michal
Minor, Wladek
Hunt, Donald F.
Macara, Ian G.
NRMT is an α-N-methyltransferase that methylates RCC1 and Retinoblastoma Protein
title NRMT is an α-N-methyltransferase that methylates RCC1 and Retinoblastoma Protein
title_full NRMT is an α-N-methyltransferase that methylates RCC1 and Retinoblastoma Protein
title_fullStr NRMT is an α-N-methyltransferase that methylates RCC1 and Retinoblastoma Protein
title_full_unstemmed NRMT is an α-N-methyltransferase that methylates RCC1 and Retinoblastoma Protein
title_short NRMT is an α-N-methyltransferase that methylates RCC1 and Retinoblastoma Protein
title_sort nrmt is an α-n-methyltransferase that methylates rcc1 and retinoblastoma protein
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2939154/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20668449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature09343
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