Abstract

An accelerating effect of methyl-deficient diet (MDD) on hepatocarcinogenesis and methylation pattern of nuclear protein(s) by S-adenosylmethionine: protein arginine N-methyltransferase (protein methylase I, PM-I) have been studied with 3'-methyl-4-dimethyl- aminoazobenzene(MeDAB)-treated rats. The MDD+MeDAB-fed group produced typical cancer cells in the liver almost two weeks earlier than the control synthetic diet (CSD)+MeDAB-fed group. Protein methylase I (PM-I) activity in the livers of MDD alone fed rats began to increase at around 2 weeks after MDD-feeding, reaching a peak at 4 weeks and declining thereafter. When nuclei isolated either from normal livers or from cholangiocarcinoma cells were incubated with PM-I preparation from normal liver, 16 and 23-kDa nuclear proteins were the major methylated proteins, regardless of the source of the nuclei. However, when the above mentioned nuclei were incubated with PM-I preparations either from MDD alone fed livers or MDD+ MeDAB-induced cholangiocarcinoma cells, the methylation of 23-kDa protein was not detected. The result suggests that there is a hitherto-unknown PM-I specific to 23 kDa nuclear protein which was lost during methyl deficient diet feeding and hepatocarcinogenesis. The N-terminal 20 amino acids sequence of the 23-kDa protein was found to be ¹Gly-Val-Pro-Leu-?X-Arg-Leu-Phe-Asp-¹?His-Ala-Met-Leu-Gln-¹?Ala-His-Arg-Ala-His-²?Glu, having 94.7% sequence homology with human chorionic somatomammotropin precursor A and B.

Highlights

  • Protein methylation is one of the posttranslational modification reactions which modulate the function of proteins

  • The enzyme S-adenosylmethionine: protein-arginine N-methyltransferase which is responsible for the methylation increased significantly in fast growing tissues (Tidwell et al, 1968; Lee and Paik, 1972; Paik and Kim, 1980; Wainfan et al, 1988)

  • In order to study the effect of methyl deficient state on carcinogenesis, animals were fed control synthetic diet (CSD) plus MeDAB and methyl-deficient diet (MDD) plus MeDAB diets

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Summary

Introduction

Protein methylation is one of the posttranslational modification reactions which modulate the function of proteins. Among many protein-specific methylation reactions, enzymatic methylation of protein-arginine residues has been suggested to be involved closely in cellular growth and differentiation. These contentions are based on the following evidences. The enzyme S-adenosylmethionine: protein-arginine N-methyltransferase (protein methylase I; PM-I; EC 2.1.1.23) which is responsible for the methylation increased significantly in fast growing tissues (Tidwell et al, 1968; Lee and Paik, 1972; Paik and Kim, 1980; Wainfan et al, 1988). An evidence indicated that protein-arginine N-methylation might play a role in carcinogenesis (Yoon, 1994; Duerre et al, 1994)

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