4.7 Article

The Structural Effects of Phosphorylation of Protein Arginine Methyltransferase 5 on Its Binding to Histone H4

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231911316

Keywords

ligand; epigenetics; post-translational modification; signal transduction

Funding

  1. Hungarian National Research, Development, and Innovation Office [K123836, TKP2021-EGA-16]
  2. National Research, Development, and Innovation Fund of Hungary [EGA-13]
  3. Lorand Eotvos Research Network [RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00015]
  4. European Union
  5. Janos Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences [UNKP-21-5, UNKP-21-3-II]
  6. New National Excellence Program of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology [PTE AOK-KA 2021/KA-2021-39]
  7. European Union - European Social Fund [EFOP-3.6.116-2016-00004]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

PRMT5 is an important enzyme responsible for arginine methylation on various proteins. This study reveals that the phosphorylation of PRMT5 on T80 residue increases its methyltransferase activity and elevated levels of the enzyme were measured in certain types of cancer. The atomic level complex structure provides insights for the design of new inhibitors and further understanding of PRMT enzymes.
The protein arginine methyltransferase 5 (PRMT5) enzyme is responsible for arginine methylation on various proteins, including histone H4. PRMT5 is a promising drug target, playing a role in the pathomechanism of several diseases, especially in the progression of certain types of cancer. It was recently proved that the phosphorylation of PRMT5 on T80 residue increases its methyltransferase activity; furthermore, elevated levels of the enzyme were measured in the case of human hepatocellular carcinoma and other types of tumours. In this study, we constructed the complexes of the unmodified human PRMT5-methylosome protein 50 (MEP50) structure and its T80-phosphorylated variant in complex with the full-length histone H4 peptide. The full-length histone H4 was built in situ into the human PRMT5-MEP50 enzyme using experimental H4 fragments. Extensive molecular dynamic simulations and structure and energy analyses were performed for the complexed and apo protein partners, as well. Our results provided an atomic level explanation for two important experimental findings: (1) the increased methyltransferase activity of the phosphorylated PRMT5 when compared to the unmodified type; (2) the PRMT5 methylates only the free form of histone H4 not bound in the nucleosome. The atomic level complex structure H4-PRMT5-MEP50 will help the design of new inhibitors and in uncovering further structure-function relationships of PRMT enzymes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available