Arginine Methylation of the PGC-1α C-Terminus Is Temperature-Dependent

Meryl Mendoza(California State University Los Angeles), Mariel Mendoza(California State University Los Angeles), Tiffany Lubrino(Chapman University), Sidney Briski(Chapman University), Immaculeta Osuji(California State University Los Angeles), Janielle Cuala(California State University Los Angeles), Brendan Ly(California State University Los Angeles), Ivan Ocegueda(California State University Los Angeles), Harvey Peralta(California State University Los Angeles), Benjamin A. García(Washington University in St. Louis), Cecilia I. Zurita‐Lopez(Chapman University)
Biochemistry
December 19, 2022
Cited by 5Open Access
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Abstract

methylation reactions using recombinant mammalian PRMT7 and PRMT1 at 37, 30, 21, 18, and 4 °C. Various fragments of PGC-1α corresponding to the C-terminus were used as substrates, and the methylation reactions were analyzed by fluorography and mass spectrometry to determine the extent of methylation throughout the substrates, the location of the methylated PGC-1α arginine residues, and finally, whether temperature affects the deposition of methyl groups. We also employed two prediction programs, PRmePRed and MePred-RF, to search for putative methyltransferase sites. Methylation reactions show that arginine residues R548 and R753 in PGC-1α are methylated at or below 30 °C by PRMT7, while methylation by PRMT1 was detected at these same residues at 30 °C. Computational approaches yielded additional putative methylarginine sites, indicating that since PGC-1α is an intrinsically disordered protein, additional methylated arginine residues have yet to be experimentally verified. We conclude that temperature affects the extent of arginine methylation, with more methylation by PRMT7 occurring below physiological temperature, uncovering an additional control point for PGC-1α.


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