Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1391912 Chemistry & Biology 2011 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryProtein arginylation and arginine methylation are two posttranslational modifications of emerging importance that involve Arg residues and their modifications. To test a hypothesis that posttranslationally added arginines can be methylated, we used high-precision mass spectrometry and metabolic labeling to find whether posttranslationally added arginines can serve as methylation sites. We identified a number of proteins in vivo, on which posttranslationally added Arg have undergone mono- and dimethylation. This double modification predominantly affects the chromatin-containing nuclear fraction and likely plays an important regulatory role in chromatin-associated proteins. Moreover, inhibition of arginylation and Arg methylation results in a significant reduction of the nucleus size in cultured cells, suggesting changes in chromatin compaction and nuclear architecture. Our findings suggest a functional link between protein regulation by arginylation and methylation that affects nuclear structure in vivo.

► Methylation of posttranslationally added arginine (arginylation/methylation) ► Arginylation/methylation of nuclear proteins ► Arginylation/methylation regulate nuclear size

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Organic Chemistry
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