| Literature DB >> 33129354 |
Abstract
Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) is a chromatin-modifying enzyme that catalyses the methylation of histone H3 at lysine 27 (H3K27me1/2/3). This complex maintains gene transcriptional repression and plays an essential role in the maintenance of cellular identity as well as normal organismal development. The activity of PRC2, including its genomic targeting and catalytic activity, is controlled by various signals. Recent studies have revealed that these signals involve cis chromatin features, PRC2 facultative subunits and post-translational modifications (PTMs) of PRC2 subunits. Overall, these findings have provided insight into the biochemical signals directing PRC2 function, although many mysteries remain.Entities:
Keywords: CGIs; Cis chromatin features; Facultative subunits; Methylation; PRC2; PTMs; Phosphorylation; Ubiquitination
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33129354 PMCID: PMC7603765 DOI: 10.1186/s13072-020-00369-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epigenetics Chromatin ISSN: 1756-8935 Impact factor: 4.954
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of the assembly of the PRC2 holoenzyme. EZH2 associates with EED and EZHIP. SUZ12 functions as a structural platform that orchestrates distinct sets of facultative subunits to form PRC2.1 and PRC2.2. Circles and arrows indicate the domains of SUZ12 interacting with core PRC2 and facultative subunits. ZnB, zinc finger-binding; WDB1/2, WD-40 binding domain1/2; Zn, Zn finger region; VEFS, VRN2-EMF2-FIS2-SUZ12 domain
Fig. 2Cis chromatin features regulating PRC2 enzymatic activity or genomic targeting. a Features of PRC2-binding regions. In Drosophila, PREs were identified as DNA elements that recruit PRC2 via interaction with other PcG proteins (i.e., PHO) or TFs. In mammals, both the DNA motif sequence and conformation in CpG islands (CGIs) regulate PRC2 recruitment. b DNA methylation and histone modifications affect PRC2 activity. DNA methylation and PRC2 can be mutually exclusive or can coexist, depending on cell context, suggesting that unknown factors remain to be determined (left). Histone modifications H3K4me3 and H3K36me3 constrain PRC2 activity (middle), while H3K27me3 and H2AK119ub1 stimulate PRC2 catalytic activity or direct its recruitment, respectively (right). c Nascent RNAs regulating PRC2 recruitment depend on transcriptional status. PRC2 interacts promiscuously with multitudinous RNAs. For the repressed genes (left), RNA is transcribed at a very low rate, and the majority of the RNA remains attached to chromatin. Thus, PRC2 bound to the RNA is in very close proximity to the chromatin, allowing PRC2 to slowly deposit H3K27me3 despite low activity. Although binding to RNA antagonizes the allosteric activation of PRC2, these inhibitory effects gradually decrease with the accumulation of H3K27me3, ultimately establishing stable PRC2-mediated gene repression. However, in the active genes that are largely free of PRC2 (right), RNA is transcribed at a very high rate, and most of the RNA is freed from chromatin. Hence, any PRC2 bound to RNA is also consequently removed with inhibited activity, and new RNA can be transcribed continuously, eventually expelling PRC2 from the chromosome
Fig. 3Facultative subunits regulating PRC2 activity. (Left) Subunits in PRC2.1 regulate recruitment and activity. All PCLs can recruit PRC2.1 to unmethylated CGI and associate with H3K36me3 for specific targeting. In addition, PHF1 can extend the residence time of PRC2 in chromatin and stimulate its catalytic activity. PALI1 can stimulate the catalytic activity of PRC2.1, whereas its mutually exclusive subunit EPOP is likely to associate with EloB/C to maintain low levels of transcription. (Right) Subunits in PRC2.2 regulate recruitment and activity. Both AEBP2 and JARID2 can stimulate PRC2.2 activity and increase its binding affinity to nucleosomes. AEBP2 is a stabilizing subunit of PRC2.2 and can bind to methylated DNA in vitro, but whether this binding specificity affects PRC2 recruitment remains uncertain. JARID2 can facilitate the recruitment of PRC2.2 through interaction with H2AK119ub. In addition, JARID2 recognizes and binds to GC-rich DNA in vitro, but the function of this preference remains to be determined. Finally, JARID2 can also be methylated by PRC2, which may in turn allosterically activate the enzymatic activity of PRC2. EZHIP exists in both PRC2.1 and PRC2.2 and functions as a robust inhibitor of PRC2 activity
PTMs of PRC2 subunits and their functions
| Type of PTM | Subunit | Condition | Modifying enzymes | Sites (human residue) | Function | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Methylation | EZH2 | PRC2 | K510, K514 and K515 | Facilitates PRC2 access to histone H3K27 substrate, critical for H3K27me3 catalysis | [ | |
| SUZ12 | PRC2 | Unknown | Unknown | [ | ||
| JARID2 | PRC2 | K116 | Allosteric activation of PRC2 | [ | ||
| Phosphorylation | EZH2 | IGF-induced | PKB/Akt | S21 | Disturbs PRC2 interaction with histone H3, inhibits PRC2 catalytic activity, decreases H3K27me3 level | [ |
| CDK1 | T345 (mouse) | Promotes PRC2 interaction with HOTAIR, recruitment, promotes ubiquitin-mediated degradation | [ | |||
| TNFα | p38α | T372 (mouse) | Enhances PRC2 interaction with YY1, recruitment | [ | ||
| CDK2 | T416 | Enhances PRC2 interaction with NIPP1, recruitment | [ | |||
| AMPK | T311 | Disrupts binding to other PRC2 components, inhibits PRC2 catalytic activity | [ | |||
| JAK3 | Y244 | Disrupts binding to other PRC2 components, inhibits PRC2 catalytic activity | [ | |||
| CDK1 | T487 (mouse) | Disrupts binding to other PRC2 components, decreases H3K27me3 level, promotes ubiquitin-mediated degradation | [ | |||
| CDK5 | T261 | Promotes ubiquitin-mediated degradation | [ | |||
| JAK2 | Y641 | Promotes ubiquitin-mediated degradation | [ | |||
| SUZ12 | PLK1 | S539, S541 and S546 | Disrupts binding to other PRC2 components, promotes ubiquitin-mediated degradation | [ | ||
| ESC ( | CK1/CK2 | N-terminus | EED homodimerization and larger PRC2 complex stability | [ | ||
| Acetylation | EZH2 | PCAF | K348 | Enhances EZH2 stability | [ | |
| Ubiquitination | EZH2 | Neuron differentiation | Smurf2 | K421 | Promotes EZH2 degradation and subsequent PRC2 disassociation | [ |
| CDK5-mediated phosphorylation at T261 | β-TRCP (FBXW1) | Unknown | Promotes EZH2 degradation, inhibits PRC2 catalytic activity | [ | ||
| JAK2-mediated phosphorylation at Y641 | FBXW7 | Unknown | Promotes EZH2 degradation, inhibits PRC2 catalytic activity | [ | ||
| SUZ12 | PLK1-mediated phosphorylation at S539, S541 and S546 | Unknown | Unknown | Promotes SUZ12 degradation and subsequent PRC2 disassociation | [ | |
| DZNep treatment | PRAJA1 | Unknown | Promotes EZH2, EED and SUZ12 degradation and subsequent PRC2 disassociation | [ | ||
| SUMOylation | EZH2 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | [ | |
| SUZ12 | PIASXβ | K75 | Unknown, dispensable for PRC2 localization and catalytical activity | [ | ||
| O-GlcNAcylation | EZH2 | OGT | S73, S76, S84, S87 and T313 | Enhances stability of isolated EZH2 | [ | |
| OGT | S729 | Critical for H3K27me2/3 catalysis | [ |
Fig. 4PRC2 subunits are modified by PTMs. The domain architecture of the PRC2 subunits and the schematic mapping of various PTM sites in the protein sequence are shown. PTM sites in EZH2, SUZ12, EED and JARID2 were taken from the indicated publications or public databases in PhosphoSitePlus® (https://www.phosphosite.org) with a minimum of 5 references, while the PTM sites in ESC (Drosophila) were predicted from public databases in SCANSITE 4.0 (https://scansite.mit.edu) with the sites matching the predicted motif sites of Casein Kinase 2 (CK2). SBD, SANT1-like binding domain; EBD, EED-binding domain; BAM, β-addition motif; SAL, SET activation loop; SANT1L/2L, SANT1/2-like; MCSS, motif connecting SANT1L and SANT2L; CXC, cysteine-rich domain; SET, catalytic domain of EZH2; ZnB, zinc finger-binding; WDB1/2, WD-40 binding domain1/2; Zn, Zn finger region; VEFS, VRN2-EMF2-FIS2-SUZ12 domain; UIM, ubiquitin-interaction motif; TR, transrepression; RBR, RNA-binding region; JmiN/C, Jumonji N/C; ARID, AT-rich interaction domain