| Literature DB >> 27356874 |
Tamas Lazar1,2, Eva Schad1, Beata Szabo1, Tamas Horvath1, Attila Meszaros1, Peter Tompa1,3,4, Agnes Tantos5.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Histone lysine methyltransferases (HKMTs), catalyze mono-, di- and trimethylation of lysine residues, resulting in a regulatory pattern that controls gene expression. Their involvement in many different cellular processes and diseases makes HKMTs an intensively studied protein group, but scientific interest so far has been concentrated mostly on their catalytic domains. In this work we set out to analyze the structural heterogeneity of human HKMTs and found that many contain long intrinsically disordered regions (IDRs) that are conserved through vertebrate species. Our predictions show that these IDRs contain several linear motifs and conserved putative binding sites that harbor cancer-related SNPs. Although there are only limited data available in the literature, some of the predicted binding regions overlap with interacting segments identified experimentally. The importance of a disordered binding site is illustrated through the example of the ternary complex between MLL1, menin and LEDGF/p75. Our suggestion is that intrinsic protein disorder plays an as yet unrecognized role in epigenetic regulation, which needs to be further elucidated through structural and functional studies aimed specifically at the disordered regions of HKMTs. REVIEWERS: This article was reviewed by Arne Elofsson and Piotr Zielenkiewicz.Entities:
Keywords: Binding regions; Epigenetics; Histone lysine methyltransferases; Intrinsically disordered protein regions; Linear motifs; MLL proteins; Posttranslational modifications
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27356874 PMCID: PMC4928265 DOI: 10.1186/s13062-016-0129-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Direct ISSN: 1745-6150 Impact factor: 4.540
Fig. 1IUPred profile of four representative HKMTs and CBP. Regions with corresponding PDB structures (red1), SCOP domains (green), conserved predicted binding regions (yellow), known binding regions (orange horizontal lines) and cancer associated SNPs (black diamonds) are indicated. 1List of PDB structures: MLL1: 4gq6_b, 3u88_m, 2mtn_a, 2msr_a, 2j2s_a, 2kyu_a, 3lqh_a, 2agh_c, 2w5y_a; MLL4: 3uvk_b, 3erq_d, 4z4p_a; NSD1: 3ooi_a; DOT1L: 3uvp_a, 2mv7_b; CBP: 1rdt_e, 1lik_a, 2lxt_a, 4n4f_a, 2kje_a
Fig. 2Molecular dynamics simulation of MLL1-menin-LEDGF/p75 complex. a Overlay of 20 structures between 900 k-1100 k steps of DMD of free MLL1 N-terminus. The region between amino acids 120–135 are highlighted in red or orange. b DSSP helix content of the free MLL1 N-terminus per frame versus the amino acid chain. Orange to red lines represent the number of replicas (one, two or three) in any given frame that contain an amino acid in helical conformation (1–2000 k steps). c Structure of the ternary complex as represented in PDB database (3U88). Salmon: MLL1, cyan: LEDGF/p75, green: menin. Side chains of F148 and F151 in MLL1 are red. Intramolecular contacts are shown as yellow-red dots. d Structure of the ternary complex as modeled with the disordered regions of MLL1 based on PDB structures 3U88 and 2MSR. Salmon: MLL1, cyan: LEDGF/p75, green: menin. Side chains of F148 and F151 in MLL1 are red. Intramolecular contacts are shown as yellow-red dots (at 200 k steps)