Abstract
Trans-methylation reactions are intrinsic to cellular metabolism in all living organisms. In land plants, a range of substrate-specific methyltransferases catalyze the methylation of DNA, RNA, proteins, cell wall components and numerous species-specific metabolites, thereby providing means for growth and acclimation in various terrestrial habitats. Trans-methylation reactions consume vast amounts of S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) as a methyl donor in several cellular compartments. The inhibitory reaction by-product, S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (SAH), is continuously removed by SAH hydrolase (SAHH), which essentially maintains trans-methylation reactions in all living cells. Here we report on the evolutionary conservation and post-translational control of SAHH in land plants. We provide evidence suggesting that SAHH forms oligomeric protein complexes in phylogenetically divergent land plants and that the predominant protein complex is composed by a tetramer of the enzyme. Analysis of light-stress-induced adjustments of SAHH in Arabidopsis thaliana and Physcomitrella patens further suggests that regulatory actions may take place on the levels of protein complex formation and phosphorylation of this metabolically central enzyme. Collectively, these data suggest that plant adaptation to terrestrial environments involved evolution of regulatory mechanisms that adjust the trans-methylation machinery in response to environmental cues.
Highlights
Land plants have evolved sophisticated biochemical machineries that support cell metabolism, growth and acclimation in various terrestrial habitats
We focused on Activated Methyl Cycle (AMC) enzymes and the O-methyl transferases (MTs), which are well known for their functions in the methylation of small metabolites that accumulate upon environmental perturbations
Reviewed O-MTs from A. thaliana gene list were obtained from UniProt and this list was supplemented with enzymes of the AMC (S1 Table)
Summary
Land plants have evolved sophisticated biochemical machineries that support cell metabolism, growth and acclimation in various terrestrial habitats. One of the most common biochemical modifications occurring on biological molecules is methylation, which is typical for DNA, RNA, proteins, and a vast range of metabolites. Trans-methylation reactions are important in a relevant number of metabolic and regulatory interactions, which determine. Evolution and post-translational control of S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine hydrolase in land plants
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