Abstract

BackgroundNatural proteins undergo in vivo spontaneous post-biosynthetic deamidation of specific asparagine residues with isoaspartyl formation. Deamidated-isomerized molecules are both structurally and functionally altered. The enzyme isoaspartyl protein carboxyl-O-methyltransferase (PCMT; EC 2.1.1.77) has peculiar substrate specificity towards these deamidated proteins. It catalyzes methyl esterification of the free α-carboxyl group at the isoaspartyl site, thus initiating the repair of these abnormal proteins through the conversion of the isopeptide bond into a normal α-peptide bond. Deamidation occurs slowly during cellular and molecular aging, being accelerated by physical-chemical stresses brought to the living cells. Previous evidence supports a role of protein deamidation in the acquisition of susceptibility to apoptosis. Aim of this work was to shed a light on the role of PCMT in apoptosis clarifying the relevant mechanism(s).Methodology/Principal FindingsEndothelial cells transiently transfected with various constructs of PCMT, i.e. overexpressing wild type PCMT or negative dominants, were used to investigate the role of protein methylation during apoptosis induced by oxidative stress (H2O2; 0.1–0.5 mM range). Results show that A) Cells overexpressing “wild type” human PCMT were resistant to apoptosis, whereas overexpression of antisense PCMT induces high sensitivity to apoptosis even at low H2O2 concentrations. B) PCMT protective effect is specifically due to its methyltransferase activity rather than to any other non-enzymatic interactions. In fact negative dominants, overexpressing PCMT mutants devoid of catalytic activity do not prevent apoptosis. C) Cells transfected with antisense PCMT, or overexpressing a PCMT mutant, accumulate isoaspartyl-containing damaged proteins upon H2O2 treatment. Proteomics allowed the identification of proteins, which are both PCMT substrates and apoptosis effectors, whose deamidation occurs under oxidative stress conditions leading to programmed cell death. These proteins, including Hsp70, Hsp90, actin, and Bcl-xL, are recognized and methylated by PCMT, according to the general repair mechanism of this methyltransferase.Conclusion/SignificanceApoptosis can be modulated by “on/off” switch partitioning the amount of specific protein effectors, which are either in their active (native) or inactive (deamidated) molecular forms. Deamidated proteins can also be functionally restored through methylation. Bcl-xL provides a case for the role of PCMT in the maintenance of functional stability of this antiapoptotic protein.

Highlights

  • Protein deamidation occurs spontaneously in proteins at level of unstable Asn residues, which are flanked, on the a-carboxyl side, by small non-bulky residues, such as Gly, Ala, Ser or Thr [1,2]

  • These results demonstrated that Porcine aortic endothelial cells (PAEC), transfected with either protein carboxyl-O-methyltransferase (PCMT) Asp83RPhe or Asp83RVal plasmids effectively overexpress the relevant mutant proteins, where the conserved Asp83 residue in the consensus region I is substituted by a residue with a non polar side chain

  • PAEC transiently transfected with plasmids carrying various PCMT constructs, can be used as a model system to study the role of PCMT on apoptosis induced by an oxidative stress

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Summary

Introduction

Protein deamidation occurs spontaneously in proteins at level of unstable Asn residues, which are flanked, on the a-carboxyl side, by small non-bulky residues, such as Gly, Ala, Ser or Thr [1,2]. Protein isoaspartyl carboxyl O-methyltransferase (PCMT; 2.1.1.77) is a S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet)–dependent methyltransferase, which recognizes and methyl esterifies the free a-carboxyl groups of the isoaspartyl residues, raising from asparaginyl deamidation This enzyme, promotes the conversion of the abnormal L-isoAsp residue into L-aspartyl, eliminating the isopeptide bond which alters protein conformation, preventing the accumulation of dysfunctional proteins. The enzyme isoaspartyl protein carboxyl-O-methyltransferase (PCMT; EC 2.1.1.77) has peculiar substrate specificity towards these deamidated proteins It catalyzes methyl esterification of the free a-carboxyl group at the isoaspartyl site, initiating the repair of these abnormal proteins through the conversion of the isopeptide bond into a normal a-peptide bond. Aim of this work was to shed a light on the role of PCMT in apoptosis clarifying the relevant mechanism(s)

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