| Literature DB >> 28757206 |
Jiliang Hu1, Huanjie Yang2, Jinye Mu3, Tiancong Lu1, Juli Peng3, Xian Deng3, Zhaosheng Kong4, Shilai Bao5, Xiaofeng Cao3, Jianru Zuo6.
Abstract
Methylation and nitric oxide (NO)-based S-nitrosylation are highly conserved protein posttranslational modifications that regulate diverse biological processes. In higher eukaryotes, PRMT5 catalyzes Arg symmetric dimethylation, including key components of the spliceosome. The Arabidopsis prmt5 mutant shows severe developmental defects and impaired stress responses. However, little is known about the mechanisms regulating the PRMT5 activity. Here, we report that NO positively regulates the PRMT5 activity through S-nitrosylation at Cys-125 during stress responses. In prmt5-1 plants, a PRMT5C125S transgene, carrying a non-nitrosylatable mutation at Cys-125, fully rescues the developmental defects, but not the stress hypersensitive phenotype and the responsiveness to NO during stress responses. Moreover, the salt-induced Arg symmetric dimethylation is abolished in PRMT5C125S/prmt5-1 plants, correlated to aberrant splicing of pre-mRNA derived from a stress-related gene. These findings define a mechanism by which plants transduce stress-triggered NO signal to protein methylation machinery through S-nitrosylation of PRMT5 in response to environmental alterations.Entities:
Keywords: Arabidopsis; GSNOR1; Nitric oxide; PRMT5; S-nitrosylation; protein methylation; stress responses
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28757206 DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2017.06.031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell ISSN: 1097-2765 Impact factor: 17.970