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The methyltransferase METTL9 mediates pervasive 1-methylhistidine modification in mammalian proteomes.

Erna DavydovaTadahiro ShimazuMaren Kirstin SchuhmacherMagnus E JakobssonHanneke L D M WillemenTongri LiuAnders MoenAngela Y Y HoJędrzej M MałeckiLisa SchroerRita PintoTakehiro SuzukiIda A GrønsbergYoshihiro SohtomeMai AkakabeSara WeirichMasaki KikuchiJesper Velgaard OlsenNaoshi DohmaeTakashi UmeharaMikiko SodeokaValentina SiinoMichael A McDonoughNiels EijkelkampChristopher J SchofieldAlbert JeltschYoichi ShinkaiPål Ø Falnes
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
Post-translational methylation plays a crucial role in regulating and optimizing protein function. Protein histidine methylation, occurring as the two isomers 1- and 3-methylhistidine (1MH and 3MH), was first reported five decades ago, but remains largely unexplored. Here we report that METTL9 is a broad-specificity methyltransferase that mediates the formation of the majority of 1MH present in mouse and human proteomes. METTL9-catalyzed methylation requires a His-x-His (HxH) motif, where "x" is preferably a small amino acid, allowing METTL9 to methylate a number of HxH-containing proteins, including the immunomodulatory protein S100A9 and the NDUFB3 subunit of mitochondrial respiratory Complex I. Notably, METTL9-mediated methylation enhances respiration via Complex I, and the presence of 1MH in an HxH-containing peptide reduced its zinc binding affinity. Our results establish METTL9-mediated 1MH as a pervasive protein modification, thus setting the stage for further functional studies on protein histidine methylation.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • oxidative stress
  • gene expression
  • small molecule
  • ionic liquid