| Literature DB >> 34067525 |
Ruicen He1,2, Arthur Dantas1,3, Karl Riabowol1,3.
Abstract
Acetylation of histones is a key epigenetic modification involved in transcriptional regulation. The addition of acetyl groups to histone tails generally reduces histone-DNA interactions in the nucleosome leading to increased accessibility for transcription factors and core transcriptional machinery to bind their target sequences. There are approximately 30 histone acetyltransferases and their corresponding complexes, each of which affect the expression of a subset of genes. Because cell identity is determined by gene expression profile, it is unsurprising that the HATs responsible for inducing expression of these genes play a crucial role in determining cell fate. Here, we explore the role of HATs in the maintenance and differentiation of various stem cell types. Several HAT complexes have been characterized to play an important role in activating genes that allow stem cells to self-renew. Knockdown or loss of their activity leads to reduced expression and or differentiation while particular HATs drive differentiation towards specific cell fates. In this study we review functions of the HAT complexes active in pluripotent stem cells, hematopoietic stem cells, muscle satellite cells, mesenchymal stem cells, neural stem cells, and cancer stem cells.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; chromatin; development; epigenetic; histone acetyl transferases; senescence; stem cells
Year: 2021 PMID: 34067525 PMCID: PMC8156521 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13102407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Examples of known KAT complexes from various KAT families. (A) The PCAF complex is composed of a DNA-binding transcription factor, p300/CBP, and bound to it is the GNAT-family KAT, PCAF. (B) The SAGA complex belongs to the GNAT family and uses GCN5 as the histone acetyltransferase. (C) The HBO1 complex is composed of the HBO1 histone acetyltransferase, ING4/5 as the histone-binding subunit, and JADE1/2/3 for scaffolding. (D) The MOZ/MORF complex is composed of MOZ/MORF acetyltransferase, BRPF1/2/3 for scaffolding, and ING5 for binding histones. (E) The hNuA4/Tip60 complex is composed of the Tip60 acetyltransferase, ING3 histone-binding subunit, and scaffolding subunit EPC1/2. The unlabeled structure behind EPC1/2 refers to variable components that are known to change depending on biological/cellular context. (F) p300/CBP complex is composed of a transcription factor that acts as a DNA-binding element and brings p300/CBP acetyltransferase to the chromatin.
List of KAT inhibitors with known effects on human cells.
| Name on Original Publication | Inhibited Complex | Biological Effects Noted | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anacardic acid | p300 | Targeted tyrosinase, tissue factor VIIa, xanthine oxidase, phosphatidylinositol-specific | [ |
| MG149 | Tip60 | Inhibited the expression of pro-inflammatory genes | [ |
| 2-acylamino-1-(3- or 4-carboxyphenyl)benzamides (small molecule inhibitors) | PCAF | Cytotoxic to several cancer cell lines | [ |
| Curcumin | p300/CBP | Was capable of alleviating ventricular hypertrophy, microangiopathy and heart failure | [ |
| Garcinol | P300 | Takes part in the response to oxidative-stress inflammatory and apoptosis processes, regulation of early growth response protein 1 (EGR-1), proliferation, metastasis and angiogenesis, and in addition epigenetic pathways | [ |
| LTK-14 | P300 | Inhibited the multiplication of the HIV virus while being nontoxic for T-cells. | [ |
| Pro-B3 | p300 60% inhibition | Inhibition of the activation of the androgen receptor (AR) by p300-mediated both in vitro and in vivo; resulted in the suppression of prostate cancer cell growth | [ |
| Delphinidin | P300 | The inhibition of expression of inflammatory cytokines in MH7A cells along with the release of cytokines in Jurkat T lymphocyte cell line. | [ |
| NK13650A | P300 | Supressed the transcription of the AR and slowed the growth of prostate cancer cells | [ |
| WM-8014 | KAT6A | Inhibited cell proliferation and induced senescence | [ |
| TH1834 | Tip60 | Induced DNA damage and cell cycle dysregulation into cancer cells. | [ |