Structure of Tetrahymena GCN5 bound to coenzyme A and a histone H3 peptide

JR Rojas, RC Trievel, J Zhou, Y Mo, X Li, SL Berger… - Nature, 1999 - nature.com
JR Rojas, RC Trievel, J Zhou, Y Mo, X Li, SL Berger, CD Allis, R Marmorstein
Nature, 1999nature.com
Gene activation is a highly regulated process that requires the coordinated action of proteins
to relieve chromatin repression and to promote transcriptional activation. Nuclear histone
acetyltransferase (HAT) enzymes provide a mechanistic link between chromatin
destabilization and gene activation by acetylating the ε-amino group of specific lysine
residues within the amino-terminal tails of core histones to facilitate access to DNA by
transcriptional activators,. Here we report the high-resolution crystal structure of the HAT …
Abstract
Gene activation is a highly regulated process that requires the coordinated action of proteins to relieve chromatin repression and to promote transcriptional activation. Nuclear histone acetyltransferase (HAT) enzymes provide a mechanistic link between chromatin destabilization and gene activation by acetylating the ε-amino group of specific lysine residues within the amino-terminal tails of core histones to facilitate access to DNA by transcriptional activators,. Here we report the high-resolution crystal structure of the HAT domain of Tetrahymena GCN5 (tGCN5) bound with both its physiologically relevant ligands, coenzyme A (CoA) and a histone H3 peptide, and the structures of nascent tGCN5 and a tGCN5/acetyl-CoA complex. Our structural data reveal histone-binding specificity for a random-coil structure containing a G-K-X-P recognition sequence, and show that CoA is essential for reorienting the enzyme for histone binding. Catalysis appears to involve water-mediated proton extraction from the substrate lysine by a glutamic acid general base and a backbone amide that stabilizes the transition-state reaction intermediate. Comparison with related N-acetyltransferases indicates a conserved structural framework for CoA binding and catalysis, and structural variability in regions associated with substrate-specific binding.
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