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Clipping of arginine-methylated histone tails by JMJD5 and JMJD7.

Haolin LiuChao WangSchuyler LeeYu DengMatthew WitherSangphil OhFangkun NingCarissa DegeQianqian ZhangXinjian LiuAaron M JohnsonJianye ZangZhongzhou ChenRalf JanknechtKirk HansenPhilippa MarrackChuan-Yuan LiJohn W KapplerJames HagmanGongyi Zhang
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2017)
Two of the unsolved, important questions about epigenetics are: do histone arginine demethylases exist, and is the removal of histone tails by proteolysis a major epigenetic modification process? Here, we report that two orphan Jumonji C domain (JmjC)-containing proteins, JMJD5 and JMJD7, have divalent cation-dependent protease activities that preferentially cleave the tails of histones 2, 3, or 4 containing methylated arginines. After the initial specific cleavage, JMJD5 and JMJD7, acting as aminopeptidases, progressively digest the C-terminal products. JMJD5-deficient fibroblasts exhibit dramatically increased levels of methylated arginines and histones. Furthermore, depletion of JMJD7 in breast cancer cells greatly decreases cell proliferation. The protease activities of JMJD5 and JMJD7 represent a mechanism for removal of histone tails bearing methylated arginine residues and define a potential mechanism of transcription regulation.
Keyphrases
  • dna methylation
  • cell proliferation
  • nitric oxide
  • cell cycle
  • risk assessment