| Literature DB >> 33571111 |
Sarah A Mosure1,2,3, Timothy S Strutzenberg2,4, Jinsai Shang1, Paola Munoz-Tello1, Laura A Solt3,4, Patrick R Griffin1,4, Douglas J Kojetin5,4.
Abstract
Heme is the endogenous ligand for the constitutively repressive REV-ERB nuclear receptors, REV-ERBα (NR1D1) and REV-ERBβ (NR1D2), but how heme regulates REV-ERB activity remains unclear. Cellular studies indicate that heme is required for the REV-ERBs to bind the corepressor NCoR and repress transcription. However, fluorescence-based biochemical assays suggest that heme displaces NCoR; here, we show that this is due to a heme-dependent artifact. Using ITC and NMR spectroscopy, we show that heme binding remodels the thermodynamic interaction profile of NCoR receptor interaction domain (RID) binding to REV-ERBβ ligand-binding domain (LBD). We solved two crystal structures of REV-ERBβ LBD cobound to heme and NCoR peptides, revealing the heme-dependent NCoR binding mode. ITC and chemical cross-linking mass spectrometry reveals a 2:1 LBD:RID stoichiometry, consistent with cellular studies showing that NCoR-dependent repression of REV-ERB transcription occurs on dimeric DNA response elements. Our findings should facilitate renewed progress toward understanding heme-dependent REV-ERB activity.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33571111 PMCID: PMC7840129 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abc6479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Adv ISSN: 2375-2548 Impact factor: 14.136