| Literature DB >> 31747960 |
Zibo Zhao1,2, Ali Shilatifard3,4.
Abstract
The epigenetic modifications of histones are versatile marks that are intimately connected to development and disease pathogenesis including human cancers. In this review, we will discuss the many different types of histone modifications and the biological processes with which they are involved. Specifically, we review the enzymatic machineries and modifications that are involved in cancer development and progression, and how to apply currently available small molecule inhibitors for histone modifiers as tool compounds to study the functional significance of histone modifications and their clinical implications.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31747960 PMCID: PMC6868810 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-019-1870-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Fig. 1Balanced states of transcription maintained by the versatile chromatin proteins and histone modifications. The balanced states of transcription are maintained by the chromatin modifiers and histone modifications. The histone-modifying enzymes are depicted as apples (activation) and oranges (repression) in the two weighing pans respectively. The chromatin states are maintained and balanced by a number of activation marks and repression marks. Histone marks highlighted in bold are considered to be hallmarks of euchromatin (H4K16ac) and heterochromatin (H3K9me3 and H3K27me3) respectively
Fig. 2Pharmacological restoration of the epigenetic balance of gene expression in human cancers. a MLL translocation and SEC promote the leukemogenesis in MLL-rearranged leukemia. Enhancing the wild-type MLL1 recruitment to chromatin by hijacking the IL1/IRAK4 and CKII/tasapse1 pathways displaces the MLL chimera and SEC and inhibits leukemogenesis. b MLL3 mutation in the PHD leads to the loss of function of MLL3/COMPASS and decreased enhancer H3K4 methylation. EZH2 inhibition by small molecules (e.g., GSK-126) inhibits EZH2 enzymatic activity and decreases H3K27 methylation to restore the tumor suppressor gene expression. c H3K27M mutation leads to the global increase of H3K27 acetylation and aberrant gene expression. Inhibition of BRD4 by small molecules (e.g., JQ-1) displaces the protein from chromatin and restores the normal-like gene expression and inhibits DIPG from progression
Chromatin modifiers, binding factors and functions of selected PTMs on histones
| Histones | Modification | Modifiers | Binding factors | Functions | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H2A | K119Ub1 | RING1A/B | BAP1, USP16, USP21, 2A-DUB, USP3, USP22 | Transcriptional repression | [ | |
| H2AX | S139p (γH2AX) | ATM, ATR, DNA-PK | PP2A, Wip1, PP6 and PP4 | MDC1, CRB2 | DNA repair | [ |
| H2B | K120Ub1 | RNF20, RNF40 | USP3, USP7, USP22 | Transcriptional activation, DNA damage response | [ | |
| H3 | K4me1/2/3 | SET1A/B, MLL1-4 | KDM1A/B, KDM2A/B, KDM5A/B/C/D | BRWD2/PHIP, MLL,TAF3, CHD1,RAG2, BPTF, PHF2/6/8, JMJD2 | Transcriptional activation | [ |
| K9me1/2/3 | Suv39H1/2, G9a, GLP, SETDB1 | KDM1A, KDM3A/B, JMJD1C, KMD4A/B/C/D | HP1, ATRX | Transcriptional activation (K9me1), repression (K9me2/3), X-inactivation and imprinting (K9me2) | [ | |
| S10p | Aurora B, MSK/RSK/Jil-1 | PP2A, PP1 | 14–3-3ζ | Mitosis, meiosis, transcriptional activation | [ | |
| R26me2 | CARM1 | PADI4 | Transcriptional activation | [ | ||
| K27 ac | CBP/p300 | HDACs | BRDs | Transcriptional activation | [ | |
| K27me1/2/3 | EZH1/2 | KDM6A/B, KDM7A, PHF8 | EED, PC, CBX7 | Transcriptional activation (K27me1); Transcriptional silencing, X-inactivation, bivalent genes/gene poising (K27me2/3) | [ | |
| K36me1/2/3 | NSD1–3, SETD2/3, ASH1L, SETMAR, SMYD2 | KDM2A/B, KDM4A/B/C/D, JHDM1A | ZYMND11, PHF19, LEDGF | Transcriptional elongation, repression, DNA repair | [ | |
| K79me1/2/3 | DOT1L | ? | p53BP1 | Transcriptional activation | [ | |
| H4 | K20me1 | PR-Set7 | LSD1n | CRB2, p53BP1 | Transcriptional activation | [ |
| K20me2/3 | SUV4-20H1/2 | LSD1n, DPY-21 | CRB2, p53BP1, JMJD2 | Transcriptional silencing, Heterochromatin | [ | |
| K16 ac | MOF | HDACs, Sirt2 | BRDs | Transcriptional activation, DNA repair | [ | |
Examples of inhibitors for chromatin-related proteins
| Mode of action | Target | Compound name | Types of cancer | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enzymatic inhibition | DOT1L | EPZ-5676 | MLL-rearranged leukemia | [ |
| EZH2 | EPZ6438, GSK126, CPI-1205 | Lymphoma, malignant rhabdoid tumor | [ | |
| p300 | C646, A-485 | hematological malignancies and androgen receptor-positive prostate cancer | [ | |
| HDACs | Vorinostat, romidepsin | CTCL | [ | |
| CARM1 | EZM2302 | Multiple myeloma | [ | |
| PPI disruption | Menin-MLL | MI-503, MI-463, M-525 | MLL-rearranged leukemia | [ |
| WDR5-MLL | OICR-9429 | C/EBPα N-terminal leukemia | [ | |
| LEDGF-MLL | CP65 | MLL-rearranged leukemia | [ | |
| Competitive binding | BET family of BRD proteins | JQ1, I-BET, I-BET151 | NUT midline carcinoma, MLL-rearranged leukemia | [ |
| Protein degradation | BRD4 | dBET1, dBET6, ARV-825, ARV-771, BETd-246 | AML, T-ALL, Burkitt’s lymphoma, castration-resistant prostate cancer, TNBC | [ |
Comparison of strategies that selectively target proteins for degradation
| Method | Rate of action ( | Customized or universal ligand | Reversibility | Genetic manipulation required | Real-time visualization | Toxicity in mouse model | Degradation mediator |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thalidomide-targeted degradation | < 1 h | Customized | Yes | No | No | No | CRL4aCRBN RING E3 ubiquitin ligase complex |
| PROTACs | < 2 h | Customized | Yes | No | No | No | CRL4aCRBN and CRL2VHL E3 ligase |
| HaloPROTACs | 4–8 h/1 h | Universal HaloPROTAC3/bestatin 1b | Yes | Yes, HaloTag7 / HaloTag fusion | Yes | N/A | CRL2VHL E3 ligase and IAP E3 ligase |
| SMASh | N/A | Universal asunaprevir | Yes | Yes, self-cleaving NS3pro-NS4A fusion | N/A | No | NS3 protease from hepatitis C virus |
| dTAG | < 1 h | Universal dTAG ligand | Yes | Yes, FKBP12 (F36 V) fusion | No | No | CRBN-dependent E3 ligase |
| AID | < 1 h | Universal auxin (IAA) | Yes | Yes, AID tag fusion and Tir1 F-box protein expression | Yes | Yes | CRL1Tir1 |