Histone Recognition and Large-Scale Structural Analysis of the Human Bromodomain Family
Author(s) -
P. Filippakopoulos,
S. Picaud,
Maria Mangos,
Tracy Keates,
JeanPhilippe Lambert,
Dalia Baršytė-Lovejoy,
I. Felletar,
Rudolf Volkmer,
Susanne Müller,
Tony Pawson,
AnneClaude Gingras,
C.H. Arrowsmith,
Stefan Knapp
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2012.02.013
Subject(s) - bromodomain , acetylation , biology , brd4 , histone , computational biology , genetics , structural similarity , bet inhibitor , epigenetics , biochemistry , dna , gene
Bromodomains (BRDs) are protein interaction modules that specifically recognize ε-N-lysine acetylation motifs, a key event in the reading process of epigenetic marks. The 61 BRDs in the human genome cluster into eight families based on structure/sequence similarity. Here, we present 29 high-resolution crystal structures, covering all BRD families. Comprehensive crossfamily structural analysis identifies conserved and family-specific structural features that are necessary for specific acetylation-dependent substrate recognition. Screening of more than 30 representative BRDs against systematic histone-peptide arrays identifies new BRD substrates and reveals a strong influence of flanking posttranslational modifications, such as acetylation and phosphorylation, suggesting that BRDs recognize combinations of marks rather than singly acetylated sequences. We further uncovered a structural mechanism for the simultaneous binding and recognition of diverse diacetyl-containing peptides by BRD4. These data provide a foundation for structure-based drug design of specific inhibitors for this emerging target family.
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