Comprehensive identification of arginine methylation in primary T cells reveals regulatory roles in cell signalling

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Abstract

The impact of protein arginine methylation on the regulation of immune functions is virtually unknown. Here, we apply a novel method - isomethionine methyl-SILAC - coupled with antibody-mediated arginine-methylated peptide enrichment to identify methylated peptides in human T cells by mass spectrometry. This approach allowed the identification of 2,502 arginine methylation sites from 1,257 tissue-specific and housekeeping proteins. We find that components of T cell antigen receptor signal machinery and several key transcription factors that regulate T cell fate determination are methylated on arginine. Moreover, we demonstrate changes in arginine methylation stoichiometry during cellular stimulation in a subset of proteins critical to T cell differentiation. Our data suggest that protein arginine methyltransferases exert key regulatory roles in T cell activation and differentiation, opening a new field of investigation in T cell biology.

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Geoghegan, V., Guo, A., Trudgian, D., Thomas, B., & Acuto, O. (2015). Comprehensive identification of arginine methylation in primary T cells reveals regulatory roles in cell signalling. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms7758

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