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PDBsum entry 2r0v
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Transcription
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PDB id
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2r0v
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Contents |
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* Residue conservation analysis
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DOI no:
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Mol Cell
27:817-828
(2007)
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PubMed id:
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Autoregulation of the rsc4 tandem bromodomain by gcn5 acetylation.
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A.P.VanDemark,
M.M.Kasten,
E.Ferris,
A.Heroux,
C.P.Hill,
B.R.Cairns.
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ABSTRACT
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An important issue for chromatin remodeling complexes is how their bromodomains
recognize particular acetylated lysine residues in histones. The Rsc4 subunit of
the yeast remodeler RSC contains an essential tandem bromodomain (TBD) that
binds acetylated K14 of histone H3 (H3K14ac). We report a series of crystal
structures that reveal a compact TBD that binds H3K14ac in the second
bromodomain and, remarkably, binds acetylated K25 of Rsc4 itself in the first
bromodomain. Endogenous Rsc4 is acetylated only at K25, and Gcn5 is identified
as necessary and sufficient for Rsc4 K25 acetylation in vivo and in vitro. Rsc4
K25 acetylation inhibits binding to H3K14ac, and mutation of Rsc4 K25 results in
altered growth rates. These data suggest an autoregulatory mechanism in which
Gcn5 performs both the activating (H3K14ac) and inhibitory (Rsc4 K25ac)
modifications, perhaps to provide temporal regulation. Additional regulatory
mechanisms are indicated as H3S10 phosphorylation inhibits Rsc4 binding to
H3K14ac peptides.
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Selected figure(s)
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Figure 1.
Figure 1. Structures of Rsc4 (A) Domain organization of
Rsc4 (top) and crystallized constructs (bottom). Rsc4 structure
is the following: bromodomain 1 (cyan), bromodomain 2 (blue),
wing insertion (orange), and the binding region for RSC and the
RNA polymerases (green) ([Kasten et al., 2004] and [Soutourina
et al., 2006]). First and last ordered residues in the
crystallized constructs are indicated with arrows. Acetylated
lysine residues are indicated with a magenta dot (K14 of H3 and
K25 of Rsc4). (B) Orthogonal views of Rsc4(36–340) ribbon
diagram. Secondary structures are labeled, and termini are
indicated N and C. The asparagine and two tyrosine side chains
from each bromodomain that are important for acetyl lysine
binding are colored yellow. The wing insertion is colored
orange. (C) Rsc4 amino acid sequence with secondary
structures indicated above. Residues not ordered in the
Rsc4(36–340) structure are indicated with a dashed line. The
red squares indicate interface residues between BD1 (residues
36–162) and BD2 (residues 163–320). The magenta circle
indicates the site of acetylation (K25).
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Figure 3.
Figure 3. Binding of Rsc4 K25ac in BD1 Acetylated K25
binds BD1 and orders flanking residues. The F[o] − F[c] map
(3.0 × rmsd, green) and 2F[o] − F[c] map (1.2 ×
rmsd, gray) were phased from the protein model refined in the
absence of residues 19–35. Residues involved in K25ac
recognition are shown in yellow.
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The above figures are
reprinted
from an Open Access publication published by Cell Press:
Mol Cell
(2007,
27,
817-828)
copyright 2007.
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Figures were
selected
by an automated process.
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Literature references that cite this PDB file's key reference
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PubMed id
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Reference
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I.J.Stulemeijer,
B.L.Pike,
A.W.Faber,
K.F.Verzijlbergen,
T.van Welsem,
F.Frederiks,
T.L.Lenstra,
F.C.Holstege,
S.M.Gasser,
and
F.van Leeuwen
(2011).
Dot1 binding induces chromatin rearrangements by histone methylation-dependent and -independent mechanisms.
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Epigenetics Chromatin,
4,
2.
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M.Yun,
J.Wu,
J.L.Workman,
and
B.Li
(2011).
Readers of histone modifications.
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Cell Res,
21,
564-578.
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P.Voigt,
and
D.Reinberg
(2011).
Histone tails: ideal motifs for probing epigenetics through chemical biology approaches.
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Chembiochem,
12,
236-252.
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J.F.Garcia,
P.A.Dumesic,
P.D.Hartley,
H.El-Samad,
and
H.D.Madhani
(2010).
Combinatorial, site-specific requirement for heterochromatic silencing factors in the elimination of nucleosome-free regions.
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Genes Dev,
24,
1758-1771.
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K.L.Yap,
and
M.M.Zhou
(2010).
Keeping it in the family: diverse histone recognition by conserved structural folds.
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Crit Rev Biochem Mol Biol,
45,
488-505.
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Q.Zhang,
S.Chakravarty,
D.Ghersi,
L.Zeng,
A.N.Plotnikov,
R.Sanchez,
and
M.M.Zhou
(2010).
Biochemical profiling of histone binding selectivity of the yeast bromodomain family.
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PLoS One,
5,
e8903.
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Z.Charlop-Powers,
L.Zeng,
Q.Zhang,
and
M.M.Zhou
(2010).
Structural insights into selective histone H3 recognition by the human Polybromo bromodomain 2.
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Cell Res,
20,
529-538.
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PDB codes:
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A.Johnsson,
M.Durand-Dubief,
Y.Xue-Franzén,
M.Rönnerblad,
K.Ekwall,
and
A.Wright
(2009).
HAT-HDAC interplay modulates global histone H3K14 acetylation in gene-coding regions during stress.
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EMBO Rep,
10,
1009-1014.
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C.R.Clapier,
and
B.R.Cairns
(2009).
The biology of chromatin remodeling complexes.
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Annu Rev Biochem,
78,
273-304.
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F.Vollmuth,
W.Blankenfeldt,
and
M.Geyer
(2009).
Structures of the dual bromodomains of the P-TEFb-activating protein Brd4 at atomic resolution.
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J Biol Chem,
284,
36547-36556.
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PDB codes:
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K.F.Verzijlbergen,
A.W.Faber,
I.J.Stulemeijer,
and
F.van Leeuwen
(2009).
Multiple histone modifications in euchromatin promote heterochromatin formation by redundant mechanisms in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
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BMC Mol Biol,
10,
76.
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M.Thompson
(2009).
Polybromo-1: the chromatin targeting subunit of the PBAF complex.
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Biochimie,
91,
309-319.
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N.Dhillon,
J.Raab,
J.Guzzo,
S.J.Szyjka,
S.Gangadharan,
O.M.Aparicio,
B.Andrews,
and
R.T.Kamakaka
(2009).
DNA polymerase epsilon, acetylases and remodellers cooperate to form a specialized chromatin structure at a tRNA insulator.
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EMBO J,
28,
2583-2600.
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R.Sanchez,
and
M.M.Zhou
(2009).
The role of human bromodomains in chromatin biology and gene transcription.
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Curr Opin Drug Discov Devel,
12,
659-665.
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S.Chakravarty,
L.Zeng,
and
M.M.Zhou
(2009).
Structure and site-specific recognition of histone H3 by the PHD finger of human autoimmune regulator.
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Structure,
17,
670-679.
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PDB code:
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S.K.Smart,
S.G.Mackintosh,
R.D.Edmondson,
S.D.Taverna,
and
A.J.Tackett
(2009).
Mapping the local protein interactome of the NuA3 histone acetyltransferase.
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Protein Sci,
18,
1987-1997.
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S.M.Fuchs,
R.N.Laribee,
and
B.D.Strahl
(2009).
Protein modifications in transcription elongation.
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Biochim Biophys Acta,
1789,
26-36.
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Y.Y.Lin,
J.Y.Lu,
J.Zhang,
W.Walter,
W.Dang,
J.Wan,
S.C.Tao,
J.Qian,
Y.Zhao,
J.D.Boeke,
S.L.Berger,
and
H.Zhu
(2009).
Protein acetylation microarray reveals that NuA4 controls key metabolic target regulating gluconeogenesis.
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Cell,
136,
1073-1084.
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C.Carré,
A.Ciurciu,
O.Komonyi,
C.Jacquier,
D.Fagegaltier,
J.Pidoux,
H.Tricoire,
L.Tora,
I.M.Boros,
and
C.Antoniewski
(2008).
The Drosophila NURF remodelling and the ATAC histone acetylase complexes functionally interact and are required for global chromosome organization.
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EMBO Rep,
9,
187-192.
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J.C.Black,
A.Mosley,
T.Kitada,
M.Washburn,
and
M.Carey
(2008).
The SIRT2 deacetylase regulates autoacetylation of p300.
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Mol Cell,
32,
449-455.
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J.Fillingham,
J.Recht,
A.C.Silva,
B.Suter,
A.Emili,
I.Stagljar,
N.J.Krogan,
C.D.Allis,
M.C.Keogh,
and
J.F.Greenblatt
(2008).
Chaperone control of the activity and specificity of the histone H3 acetyltransferase Rtt109.
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Mol Cell Biol,
28,
4342-4353.
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J.K.Choi,
D.E.Grimes,
K.M.Rowe,
and
L.J.Howe
(2008).
Acetylation of Rsc4p by Gcn5p is essential in the absence of histone H3 acetylation.
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Mol Cell Biol,
28,
6967-6972.
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L.Zeng,
K.L.Yap,
A.V.Ivanov,
X.Wang,
S.Mujtaba,
O.Plotnikova,
F.J.Rauscher,
and
M.M.Zhou
(2008).
Structural insights into human KAP1 PHD finger-bromodomain and its role in gene silencing.
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Nat Struct Mol Biol,
15,
626-633.
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PDB code:
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L.Zeng,
Q.Zhang,
G.Gerona-Navarro,
N.Moshkina,
and
M.M.Zhou
(2008).
Structural basis of site-specific histone recognition by the bromodomains of human coactivators PCAF and CBP/p300.
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Structure,
16,
643-652.
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PDB codes:
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R.J.Sims,
and
D.Reinberg
(2008).
Is there a code embedded in proteins that is based on post-translational modifications?
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Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol,
9,
815-820.
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R.K.Biddick,
G.L.Law,
K.K.Chin,
and
E.T.Young
(2008).
The Transcriptional Coactivators SAGA, SWI/SNF, and Mediator Make Distinct Contributions to Activation of Glucose-repressed Genes.
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J Biol Chem,
283,
33101-33109.
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A.J.Ruthenburg,
H.Li,
D.J.Patel,
and
C.D.Allis
(2007).
Multivalent engagement of chromatin modifications by linked binding modules.
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Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol,
8,
983-994.
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S.D.Taverna,
H.Li,
A.J.Ruthenburg,
C.D.Allis,
and
D.J.Patel
(2007).
How chromatin-binding modules interpret histone modifications: lessons from professional pocket pickers.
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Nat Struct Mol Biol,
14,
1025-1040.
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S.Lall
(2007).
Primers on chromatin.
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Nat Struct Mol Biol,
14,
1110-1115.
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The most recent references are shown first.
Citation data come partly from CiteXplore and partly
from an automated harvesting procedure. Note that this is likely to be
only a partial list as not all journals are covered by
either method. However, we are continually building up the citation data
so more and more references will be included with time.
Where a reference describes a PDB structure, the PDB
codes are
shown on the right.
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