Allosteric regulation of protein 14-3-3ζ scaffold by small-molecule editing modulates histone H3 post-translational modifications

Histone post-translational modifications (PTMs) are involved in various biological processes such as transcriptional activation, chromosome packaging, and DNA repair. Previous studies mainly focused on PTMs by directly targeting histone-modifying enzymes such as HDACs and HATs. In this study, we dis...

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Veröffentlicht in:Theranostics 2020, Vol.10 (2), p.797-815
Hauptverfasser: Wan, Yan-Jun, Liao, Li-Xi, Liu, Yang, Yang, Heng, Song, Xiao-Min, Wang, Li-Chao, Zhang, Xiao-Wen, Qian, Yi, Liu, Dan, Shi, Xiao-Meng, Han, Li-Wen, Xia, Qing, Liu, Ke-Chun, Du, Zhi-Yong, Jiang, Yong, Zhao, Ming-Bo, Zeng, Ke-Wu, Tu, Peng-Fei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Histone post-translational modifications (PTMs) are involved in various biological processes such as transcriptional activation, chromosome packaging, and DNA repair. Previous studies mainly focused on PTMs by directly targeting histone-modifying enzymes such as HDACs and HATs. In this study, we discovered a previously unexplored regulation mechanism for histone PTMs by targeting transcription regulation factor 14-3-3ζ. Mechanistic studies revealed 14-3-3ζ dimerization as a key prerequisite, which could be dynamically induced via an allosteric effect. The selective inhibition of 14-3-3ζ dimer interaction with histone H3 modulated histone H3 PTMs by exposing specific modification sites including acetylation, trimethylation, and phosphorylation, and reprogrammed gene transcription profiles for autophagy-lysosome function and endoplasmic reticulum stress. Our findings demonstrate the feasibility of editing histone PTM patterns by targeting transcription regulation factor 14-3-3ζ, and provide a distinctive PTM editing strategy which differs from current histone modification approaches.
ISSN:1838-7640
1838-7640
DOI:10.7150/thno.38483