HBO1 is a versatile histone acyltransferase critical for promoter histone acylations
Yanhui Xiao,Wenjing Li,Hui Yang,Lulu Pan,Liwei Zhang,Lu Lu,Jiwei Chen,Wei Wei,Jie Ye,Jiwen Li,Guohong Li,Yong Zhang,Minjia Tan,Jianping Ding,Jiemin Wong +14 more
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the minimal HBO1/BRPF2 complex can accommodate acetyl-CoA, propionyl CoA, butyryl CoA and crotonyl coA.
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Abstract: Recent studies demonstrate that histones are subjected to a series of short-chain fatty acid modifications that is known as histone acylations. However, the enzymes responsible for histone acylations in vivo are not well characterized. Here, we report that HBO1 is a versatile histone acyltransferase that catalyzes not only histone acetylation but also propionylation, butyrylation and crotonylation both in vivo and in vitro and does so in a JADE or BRPF family scaffold protein-dependent manner. We show that the minimal HBO1/BRPF2 complex can accommodate acetyl-CoA, propionyl-CoA, butyryl-CoA and crotonyl-CoA. Comparison of CBP and HBO1 reveals that they catalyze histone acylations at overlapping as well as distinct sites, with HBO1 being the key enzyme for H3K14 acylations. Genome-wide chromatin immunoprecipitation assay demonstrates that HBO1 is highly enriched at and contributes to bulk histone acylations on the transcriptional start sites of active transcribed genes. HBO1 promoter intensity highly correlates with the level of promoter histone acylation, but has no significant correlation with level of transcription. We also show that HBO1 is associated with a subset of DNA replication origins. Collectively our study establishes HBO1 as a versatile histone acyltransferase that links histone acylations to promoter acylations and selection of DNA replication origins.
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Citations
Post‐translational modifications of histones: Mechanisms, biological functions, and therapeutic targets
Ruiqi Liu,Jiajun Wu,Haiwei Guo,Weiping Yao,Yanwei Lu,Yongshi Jia,Xiaolong Liang,Jianming Tang,Haibo Zhang +8 more
TL;DR: The role of histone post-translational modifications (PTMs) in cell life activities is very important for preventing and treating human diseases as discussed by the authors , and several most thoroughly studied and newly discovered histone PTMs are introduced.
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Oncometabolites drive tumorigenesis by enhancing protein acylation: from chromosomal remodelling to nonhistone modification
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors focus on the nine aforementioned novel lysine acylations beyond acetylation, which can be classified into two categories: histone acylation and nonhistone acyclation.
HBO1 catalyzes lysine lactylation and mediates histone H3K9la to regulate gene transcription
Ziping Niu,Chen Chen,Siyu Wang,Congcong Lu,Zhiyue Wu,Aiyuan Wang,Jing Mo,Jianji Zhang,Yanpu Han,Ye Yuan,Yingao Zhang,Yong Zang,Chaoran He,Xue Bai,Shanshan Tian,Guijin Zhai,Kai Zhang +16 more
TL;DR: The study reveals HBO1 serves as a lactyltransferase to mediate a histone Kla-dependent gene transcription, which can promote key signaling pathways and tumorigenesis, and is supported by evaluating the malignant behaviors of HBO1- knockout (KO) tumor cells, as well as the level of histone H3K9la in clinical tissues.
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HBO1 catalyzes lysine benzoylation in mammalian cells
Doudou Tan,Wei Wei,Zhen Han,Xuelian Ren,Cong Yan,Shankang Qi,Xiaohan Song,Y. George Zheng,Jiemin Wong,He Huang +9 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors identified and validated the lysine acetyltransferase (KAT) HBO1 as a "writer" of Lysine benzoylation (Kbz) in mammalian cells.
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HDAC1/2/3 are major histone desuccinylases critical for promoter desuccinylation
Jialun Li,Lu Lu,Lingling Liu,Xuelian Ren,Jiwei Chen,Xingzhi Yin,Yanhui Xiao,Jiawen Li,Gang Wei,He Huang,Wei Wei,Jiemin Wong +11 more
TL;DR: It is reported that histone desuccinylation is in fact primarily catalyzed by the class I HDAC1/2/3, and integrated analysis revealed that promoter histone succinylation positively correlates with gene transcriptional activity.
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TL;DR: A model is proposed to explain the present understanding of how differential histone acylation is regulated by the metabolism of the different acyl-CoA forms, which in turn modulates the regulation of gene expression.
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