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Alternative splicing and allosteric regulation modulate the chromatin binding of UHRF1
Author(s) -
Maria Tauber,
Sarah Kreuz,
Alexander Lemak,
Papita Mandal,
Zhadyra Yerkesh,
Alaguraj Veluchamy,
Bothayna Al-Gashgari,
Abrar Aljahani,
Lorena V. Cortés-Medina,
Dulat M. Azhibek,
Lixin Fan,
Michelle S. Ong,
Shili Duan,
Scott Houliston,
C.H. Arrowsmith,
Wolfgang Fischle
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkaa520
Subject(s) - biology , allosteric regulation , chromatin , nucleosome , histone , rna splicing , microbiology and biotechnology , linker , histone code , plasma protein binding , linker dna , biochemistry , dna , enzyme , rna , gene , computer science , operating system
UHRF1 is an important epigenetic regulator associated with apoptosis and tumour development. It is a multidomain protein that integrates readout of different histone modification states and DNA methylation with enzymatic histone ubiquitylation activity. Emerging evidence indicates that the chromatin-binding and enzymatic modules of UHRF1 do not act in isolation but interplay in a coordinated and regulated manner. Here, we compared two splicing variants (V1, V2) of murine UHRF1 (mUHRF1) with human UHRF1 (hUHRF1). We show that insertion of nine amino acids in a linker region connecting the different TTD and PHD histone modification-binding domains causes distinct H3K9me3-binding behaviour of mUHRF1 V1. Structural analysis suggests that in mUHRF1 V1, in contrast to V2 and hUHRF1, the linker is anchored in a surface groove of the TTD domain, resulting in creation of a coupled TTD-PHD module. This establishes multivalent, synergistic H3-tail binding causing distinct cellular localization and enhanced H3K9me3-nucleosome ubiquitylation activity. In contrast to hUHRF1, H3K9me3-binding of the murine proteins is not allosterically regulated by phosphatidylinositol 5-phosphate that interacts with a separate less-conserved polybasic linker region of the protein. Our results highlight the importance of flexible linkers in regulating multidomain chromatin binding proteins and point to divergent evolution of their regulation.

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