RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Structural Basis of Protein Arginine Methyltransferase Activation by a Catalytically Dead Homolog (Prozyme) JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 776112 DO 10.1101/776112 A1 Hideharu Hashimoto A1 Lucie Kafková A1 Ashleigh Raczkowski A1 Kelsey Jordan A1 Laurie K. Read A1 Erik W. Debler YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/09/19/776112.abstract AB Prozymes are pseudoenzymes that stimulate the function of weakly active enzymes through complex formation. The major Trypanosoma brucei protein arginine methyltransferase, TbPRMT1 enzyme (ENZ), requires TbPRMT1 prozyme (PRO) to form an active heterotetrameric complex. Here we present the x-ray crystal structure of the ENZ-Δ52PRO tetrameric complex with the cofactor product S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (AdoHcy) at 2.4 Å resolution. The individual ENZ and PRO units adopt the highly-conserved PRMT domain architecture and form an antiparallel heterodimer that corresponds to the canonical homodimer observed in all previously reported PRMTs. In turn, two such heterodimers assemble into a tetramer both in the crystal and in solution with twofold rotational symmetry. ENZ is unstable in absence of PRO and incapable of forming a homodimer due to a steric clash of a non-conserved tyrosine within the dimerization arm, rationalizing why PRO is required to complement ENZ to form a PRMT dimer that is necessary, but not sufficient for PRMT activity. The PRO structure deviates from other, active PRTMs in that it lacks the conserved η2 310-helix within the Rossmann fold, abolishing co-factor binding. In addition to its chaperone function for ENZ, PRO substantially contributes to substrate binding. Heterotetramerization is required for catalysis, since heterodimeric ENZ-PRO mutants lack binding affinity and methyltransferase activity towards the substrate protein TbRGG1. Together, we provide a structural basis for PRMT1 ENZ activation by PRO heterotetramer formation, which is conserved across all kinetoplastids, and describe a chaperone function of the PRMT1 prozyme, which represents a novel mode of PRMT regulation.Graphical AbstractHighlightsThe crystal structure of Trypanosoma brucei protein arginine methyltransferase 1 (PRMT1) is reportedTwo enzyme-prozyme heterodimers form a stable heterotetramer essential for catalysisThe catalytically dead prozyme lacks elements essential for AdoMet bindingThe enzyme alone is unstable and cannot form a canonical dimer due to steric clashesT. brucei PRMT1 prozyme adopts a chaperone function conserved across kinetoplastids