PRMT2, a member of the protein arginine methyltransferase family, is a coactivator of the androgen receptor.

J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol

Gynecology & Andrology, MHCII, Schering AG/Jenapharm, Otto-Schott-Str. 15, D-07745 Jena, Germany.

Published: October 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study identifies PRMT2 as a new coactivator that enhances the function of the androgen receptor (AR) but has limited effects on other nuclear receptors.
  • PRMT2's interaction with the estrogen receptor varies based on the cell type, indicating different coregulators are involved.
  • Both PRMT2 and AR are cytoplasmic without androgens but move to the nucleus together when androgens are present, suggesting that PRMT2's activity as a coactivator is dependent on the presence of the right ligand.

Article Abstract

The basal transcriptional activity of nuclear receptors (NRs) is regulated by interactions with additional comodulator proteins (coactivator/corepressor). Here, we describe a new androgen receptor (AR)-associated coactivator, PRMT2, which belongs to the arginine methyltransferase protein family. To search for AR-interacting proteins a fragment of the AR was used in a library screen exploiting the yeast two-hybrid technique and identifying the C-terminal region of PRMT2. We demonstrated that PRMT2 acts as a strong coactivator of the AR, had modest or none influence on transcriptional activation mediated by other NRs. Interestingly, PRMT2 interaction with the estrogen receptor (ER) was strongly dependent on the cellular background, thus, suggesting the involvement of additional, differentially expressed coregulators. We also demonstrated synergistic interaction of PRMT2 with other known nuclear receptor coactivators, such as GRIP1/TIF-2. Potentiation of AR-mediated transactivation by PRMT2 alone and in synergism with GRIP1 was prevented by a competitive inhibitor of methyltransferase activity. The PRMT2 expression profile overlaps with the distribution of AR, with strongest PRMT2 abundance in androgen target tissues. Immunofluorescence experiments showed that the intracellular localization of PRMT2 depends on the presence of the cognate receptor ligand. Under androgen-free conditions, both AR and PRMT2 are confined to the cytoplasm, whereas in the presence of androgens both proteins colocalize and translocate into the nucleus. Treatment with the AR antagonist hydroxyflutamide results in nuclear translocation of the AR, but not the coactivator PRMT2. Thus, it appears that the ligand-dependent AR conformation is essential for the recruitment and nuclear translocation of PMRT2 which acts as AR-coactivator, presumably by arginine methylation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsbmb.2007.05.006DOI Listing

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