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Zebrafish <i>prmt3</i> negatively regulates antiviral responses

Junji Zhu, Xing Liu, Xiaolian Cai, Gang Ouyang, Huangyuan Zha, Ziwen Zhou, Qian Liao, Jing Wang, Wuhan Xiao

2020The FASEB Journal37 citationsDOI

Abstract

Arginine methylation catalyzed by protein arginine methyltransferases (PRMT) is a common post-translational modification in histone and nonhistone proteins, which regulates many cellular functions. Protein arginine methyltransferase 3 (prmt3), a type I arginine methyltransferase, has been shown to carry out the formation of stable monomethylarginine as an intermediate before the establishment of asymmetric dimethylarginine. To date, however, the role of PRMT3 in antiviral innate immunity has not been elucidated. This study showed that zebrafish prmt3 was upregulated by virus infection and that the overexpression of prmt3 suppressed cellular antiviral response. The PRMT3 inhibitor, SGC707, enhanced antiviral capability. Consistently, prmt3-null zebrafish were more resistant to Spring Viremia of Carp Virus (SVCV) and Grass Carp Reovirus (GCRV) infection. Further assays showed that the overexpression of prmt3 diminished the phosphorylation of irf3 and prmt3 interacted with rig-i. In addition, both zinc-finger domain and catalytic domain of prmt3 were required for the suppressive function of prmt3 on IFN activation. Our findings suggested that zebrafish prmt3 negatively regulated the antiviral responses, implicating the vital role of prmt3-or even arginine methylation-in antiviral innate immunity.

Topics & Concepts

ZebrafishProtein arginine methyltransferase 5BiologySindbis virusMethyltransferaseArginineInnate immune systemIRF3MethylationCell biologyAntiviral proteinPhosphorylationDownregulation and upregulationImmune systemBiochemistryImmunologyAmino acidGeneRNACancer-related gene regulationEpigenetics and DNA Methylation
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