Substrate specificity and kinetic mechanism of mammalian G9a histone H3 methyltransferase

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Abstract

Lysine-specific murine histone H3 methyltransferase, G9a, was expressed and purified in a baculovirus expression system. The primary structure of the recombinant enzyme is identical to the native enzyme. Enzymatic activity was favorable at alkaline conditions (>pH 8) and low salt concentration and virtually unchanged between 25 and 42°C. Purified G9a was used for substrate specificity and steady-state kinetic analysis with peptides representing un- or dimethylated lysine 9 histone H3 tails with native lysine 4 or with lysine 4 changed to alanine (K4AK9). In vitro methylation of the H3 tail peptide resulted in trimethylation of Lys-9 and the reaction is processive. The turnover number (kcat) for methylation was 88 and 32 h-1 on the wild type and K4AK9 histone H3 tail, respectively. The Michaelis constants for wild type and K4AK9 (Kmpep) were 0.9 and 1.0 μM and for S-adenosyl-L-methionine (KmAdoMet) were 1.8 and 0.6 μM, respectively. Comparable kinetic constants were obtained for recombinant histone H3. The conversion of K4AK9 di- to trimethyl-lysine was 7-fold slower than methyl group addition to unmethylated peptide. Preincubation studies showed that G9a-AdoMet and G9a-peptide complexes are catalytically active. Initial velocity data with peptide and S-adenosyl-L-methionine (AdoMet) and product inhibition studies with S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine were performed to assess the kinetic mechanism of the reaction. Double reciprocal plots and preincubation studies revealed S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine as a competitive inhibitor to AdoMet and mixed inhibitor to peptide. Trimethylated peptides acted as a competitive inhibitor to substrate peptide and mixed inhibitor to AdoMet suggesting a random mechanism in a Bi Bi reaction for recombinant G9a where either substrate can bind first to the enzyme, and either product can release first.

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Patnaik, D., Hang, G. C., Estève, P. O., Benner, J., Jacobsen, S. E., & Pradhan, S. (2004). Substrate specificity and kinetic mechanism of mammalian G9a histone H3 methyltransferase. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(51), 53248–53258. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M409604200

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