[HTML][HTML] Protein arginine methylation in mammals: who, what, and why

MT Bedford, SG Clarke - Molecular cell, 2009 - cell.com
Molecular cell, 2009cell.com
The covalent marking of proteins by methyl group addition to arginine residues can promote
their recognition by binding partners or can modulate their biological activity. A small family
of gene products that catalyze such methylation reactions in eukaryotes (PRMTs) works in
conjunction with a changing cast of associated subunits to recognize distinct cellular
substrates. These reactions display many of the attributes of reversible covalent
modifications such as protein phosphorylation or protein lysine methylation; however, it is …
The covalent marking of proteins by methyl group addition to arginine residues can promote their recognition by binding partners or can modulate their biological activity. A small family of gene products that catalyze such methylation reactions in eukaryotes (PRMTs) works in conjunction with a changing cast of associated subunits to recognize distinct cellular substrates. These reactions display many of the attributes of reversible covalent modifications such as protein phosphorylation or protein lysine methylation; however, it is unclear to what extent protein arginine demethylation occurs. Physiological roles for protein arginine methylation have been established in signal transduction, mRNA splicing, transcriptional control, DNA repair, and protein translocation.
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