AdoMet is a
methyl donor for transmethylation. It gives away its methyl group and is also the propylamino donor in
polyamine biosynthesis. S-adenosylmethionine synthesis can be considered the rate-limiting step of the methionine cycle. As a
methyl donor SAM allows
DNA methylation. Once DNA is methylated, it switches the genes off and therefore, S-adenosylmethionine can be considered to control
gene expression. SAM is also involved in
gene transcription,
cell proliferation, and production of secondary metabolites. Hence SAM synthetase is fast becoming a drug target, in particular for the following diseases:
depression,
dementia, vacuolar myelopathy,
liver injury,
migraine,
osteoarthritis, and as a potential
cancer chemopreventive agent. This article discusses the protein domains that make up the SAM synthetase enzyme and how these domains contribute to its function. More specifically, this article explores the shared pseudo-3-fold symmetry that makes the domains well-adapted to their functions. This enzyme
catalyses the following
chemical reaction : ATP + L-
methionine + H2O \rightleftharpoons
phosphate +
diphosphate +
S-adenosyl-L-methionine ==Conserved motifs in the 3'UTR of MAT2A mRNA ==