| Literature DB >> 21151613 |
Alessia Peserico1, Cristiano Simone.
Abstract
The balance between protein acetylation and deacetylation controls several physiological and pathological cellular processes, and the enzymes involved in the maintenance of this equilibrium-acetyltransferases (HATs) and deacetylases (HDACs)-have been widely studied. Presently, the evidences obtained in this field suggest that the dynamic acetylation equilibrium is mostly maintained through the physical and functional interplay between HAT and HDAC activities. This model overcomes the classical vision in which the epigenetic marks of acetylation have only an activating function whereas deacetylation marks have a repressing activity. Given the existence of several players involved in the preservation of this equilibrium, the identification of these complex networks of interacting proteins will likely foster our understanding of how cells regulate intracellular processes and respond to the extracellular environment and will offer the rationale for new therapeutic approaches based on epigenetic drugs in human diseases.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21151613 PMCID: PMC2997516 DOI: 10.1155/2011/371832
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Mammalian Members of HAT Family.
| Mammalian HATs | |||||
| Class | Subclass | Homology to yeast | Mammalian members | Mechanism of catalysis | Cell localization |
| A | GNAT-family | Gcn5 | GCN5L | Transfer of acetyl group from acetyl-CoA to | Nucleus |
| PCAF | |||||
| MYST-family | Esa1; Sas2; Sas3 | Tip60 | |||
| HBOI | |||||
| MORF | |||||
| MOZ | |||||
| CLOCK | |||||
| NCOAT | |||||
| MOF | |||||
| Others | HATI; Elp3; Hpa2; NutI | p300/CBP | |||
| TFIIIC complex | |||||
| ACTR/SRC-I | |||||
| ATF-2 | |||||
| B | Hat1 | HAT1 | Transfer of acetyl group from acetyl-CoA to | Cytoplasm | |
Mammalian Members of HDAC Family.
| Mammalian HDACs | ||||
| Class | Homology to yeast | Mammalian members | Mechanism of catalysis | Cell localization |
| I | Rpd3 | HDAC1 | Zn2+ ion dependent | Ubiquitous |
| HDAC2 | ||||
| HDAC3 | ||||
| HDAC8 | ||||
| II | Hda1 | HDAC4 | Zn2+ ion dependent | |
| HDAC5 | ||||
| HDAC7 | Shuttle between | |||
| HDAC9 | nucleus and cytoplasm | |||
| HDAC6 | ||||
| HDAC10 | ||||
| III | Sir2 | SIRT1 | NAD+ dependent | Nucleus |
| SIRT2 | Cytoplasm | |||
| SIRT3 | Mitochondria | |||
| SIRT4 | Mitochondria | |||
| SIRT5 | Mitochondria | |||
| SIRT6 | Nucleus | |||
| SIRT7 | Nucleus | |||
| IV | HOS3 | HDAC11 | Zn2+ ion dependent | Nucleus |
Figure 1Physical and Functional interaction between HATs and HDACs regulates gene expression; HATs and HDACs enzymes are simultaneously present on the regulatory regions of target genes, and their opposing activities play a pivotal role for transcriptional competence. The use of selective HDAC inhibitors allows to restore the acetylation balance lost in several pathological conditions.