2014
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.m113.535567
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Multimethylation of Rickettsia OmpB Catalyzed by Lysine Methyltransferases

Abstract: Background: Methylation of OmpB has been implicated in rickettsial virulence. Results: Native OmpBs purified from Rickettsia contain mono-and trimethyllysine at specific locations that coincide with those catalyzed by methyltransferases in vitro. Conclusion: The number of trimethyllysine clusters in OmpBs correlates with degree of virulence. Significance: This study provides new insight into methylation of OmpB and its correlation with virulence.

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Cited by 25 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…rickettsii is an obligate intracellular pathogen which mainly parasites vascular endothelial cells. OmpB is the most abundant and high-molecular-mass surface protein [27] and an important virulence factor [28] of rickettsiae [29]. Adr2, a rickettsial adhesion, is also abundant on the surface of rickettsiae [30].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…rickettsii is an obligate intracellular pathogen which mainly parasites vascular endothelial cells. OmpB is the most abundant and high-molecular-mass surface protein [27] and an important virulence factor [28] of rickettsiae [29]. Adr2, a rickettsial adhesion, is also abundant on the surface of rickettsiae [30].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…the bacterial PrmA and PKMT1/PKMT2 as well as human METTL20, have been shown to methylate several Lys residues within the same substrate (13,14,23,43). However, AtMETTL20 is the first 7BS KMT shown to methylate two different substrates, and thus it possesses unprecedented dual substrate specificity.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of these, PrmA, which targets ribosomal protein RpL11, has been studied in the most detail and appears to be present in all bacteria (36). Pseudomonas and certain other species of ␥-proteobacteria and firmicutes possess a 7BS MTase, EftM (EF-Tu-modifying enzyme), which methylates Lys-5 in translation elongation factor EF-Tu, thus promoting bacterial infectivity (42) Similarly, two related 7BS MTases, PKMT1 and PKMT2, that methylate the outer membrane protein OmpB on several Lys residues in Rickettsia subspecies, are also important for bacterial virulence (43,44). Thus, bacterial KMTs seem to primarily target components of the translational machinery as well as determinants of bacterial virulence.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite recent discoveries of extensive methylation in bacterial proteins, including lysine methylations, and their roles in bacterial physiology and infection (4,7,19,20), there still exists a significant gap in our mechanistic understanding of bacterial lysine methyltransferases. Among bacterial lysine methyltransferases, the majority of class I Rossman fold methyltransferases recognize the globular body of their protein substrate and possess a shallow and relatively surface exposed catalytic center.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The human protein SUV39H1, for example, methylates the crucial surface-exposed mycobacterial protein HupB which reduces bacterial adhesion and survival inside the host cell (6). In rickettsia, methylation of outer membrane protein B (OmpB) directly controls virulence (7): virulent species display lysine trimethylation of OmpB, which mediates host adhesion, attachment, and invasion, whereas avirulent strains possess monomethylated OmpB. Finally, our previous work has revealed a role in establishment of P. aeruginosa infection for the trimethylation of translation elongation factor thermo-unstable (EF-Tu) on its Lys5 residue by the EF-Tu methyltransferase, EftM (8)(9)(10).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%