Elucidating the Kinetic Mechanism of Human METTL16.
Kurtis BregerJessica A BrownPublished in: Biochemistry (2022)
Methyltransferase-like protein 16 (METTL16) is one of four catalytically active, S- adenosylmethionine (SAM)-dependent m 6 A RNA methyltransferases in humans. Well-known methylation targets of METTL16 are U6 small nuclear RNA (U6 snRNA) and the MAT2A mRNA hairpins; however, METTL16 binds to other RNAs, including the 3' triple helix of the metastasis-associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1 (MALAT1). Herein, we investigated the kinetic mechanism and biochemical properties of METTL16. METTL16 is a monomer in complex with either the MALAT1 triple helix or U6 snRNA and binds to these RNAs with respective dissociation constants of 31 nM and 18 nM, whereas binding to the methylated U6 snRNA product is 1.1 μM. The MALAT1 triple helix, on the other hand, is not methylated by METTL16 under in vitro conditions. Using the U6 snRNA to study methylation steps, preincubation and isotope partitioning assays indicated an ordered-sequential mechanism, whereby METTL16 binds U6 snRNA before SAM. The apparent dissociation constant for the METTL16·U6 snRNA·SAM ternary complex is 126 μM. Steady-state kinetic assays established a k cat of 0.07 min -1 , and single-turnover assays established a k chem of 0.56 min -1 . Furthermore, the methyltransferase domain of METTL16 methylated U6 snRNA with an apparent dissociation constant of 736 μM and a k chem of 0.42 min -1 , suggesting that the missing vertebrate conserved regions weaken the ternary complex but do not induce any rate-limiting conformational rearrangements of the U6 snRNA. This study helps us to better understand the catalytic activity of METTL16 in the context of its biological functions.